Voting for the lessor of two evils is more of a consent to be governed by they greater of the two evils should they fairly win the electoral college than non-voting.
Crimes are what the person in office may or may not commit, not voting does not consent to crimes, but it does consent to the potential criminal being in the office that gives them the opportunity to commit crimes.Given what is denoted by the concepts of consent, robbery, and rape, one cannot consent to being robbed or raped.
Any claim that either voting or not voting can somehow make robbery or rape consensual is a bizarre and self-contradictory non sequitur.
Voting and not voting are expressions of preferences, not grantings of consent.
If I express a preference for being punched in the gut over being shot in the head, I have not thereby granted consent to be punched in the gut.
Likewise, if I decline to express a preference for being kicked in my left nut over being kicked in my right nut (or vice versa), I have not thereby granted consent to be kicked in the nuts.
Crimes are what the person in office may or may not commit, not voting does not consent to crimes, but it does consent to the potential criminal being in the office that gives them the opportunity to commit crimes.
Stage six of the Eight Stages of Voting (Think: Kübler-Ross Model of Grief)Voting for the lessor of two evils is more of a consent to be governed by they greater of the two evils should they fairly win the electoral college than non-voting.
Crimes are what the person in office may or may not commit, not voting does not consent to crimes, but it does consent to the potential criminal being in the office that gives them the opportunity to commit crimes.
Voting - or not voting - is an expression of a preference. Nothing more, nothing less, and nothing else.
I dunno about that. If you vote for someone with the expressed intention that they commit a certain crime, and then that person goes on to do that crime, that's not much different than aiding/soliciting someone to do a crime on your behalf (which is usually illegal).
I dunno about that. If you vote for someone with the expressed intention that they commit a certain crime, and then that person goes on to do that crime, that's not much different than aiding/soliciting someone to do a crime on your behalf (which is usually illegal).
My vote in that case is still just an expression of a preference. That doesn't mean that I don't also consent, in addition to endorsing the preference. But it doesn't mean that I do, either.
For example, given a choice between being punched in the gut and being shot in the head, a masochist can both prefer and consent to the former, while someone else can prefer the former without also consenting to it.
IOW: Mere voting (or not) cannot alone be construed as consent.
That's the thing though because in our system a crime isnt a crime when its your government doing it since you are the one letting your government do it and its the people who ultimately decide what a crime is and any crime that isn't enforced is effectively legal.
Sometimes i think people hate our country so much they vote for the government that will destroy it the fastest.
By whom?Voter participation is a commonly used metric of a government's "legitimacy".
By whom?
Because what I see is that when there's low turnout, they attribute it to either voting restrictions (we need to loosen the voting requirements!) or satisfaction with the status quo (people just weren't "energized"). I don't think I've EVER seen them say, "yeah, this government isn't legitimate".
Sometimes i think people hate our country so much they vote for the government that will destroy it the fastest.
By whom?
Because what I see is that when there's low turnout, they attribute it to either voting restrictions (we need to loosen the voting requirements!) or satisfaction with the status quo (people just weren't "energized"). I don't think I've EVER seen them say, "yeah, this government isn't legitimate".
By whom?
Because what I see is that when there's low turnout, they attribute it to either voting restrictions (we need to loosen the voting requirements!) or satisfaction with the status quo (people just weren't "energized"). I don't think I've EVER seen them say, "yeah, this government isn't legitimate".
It is still a signalof consent though.
Voter participation is a commonly used metric of a government's "legitimacy".
And now I'm wondering if there are places in the world where you areexpecteddemanded to vote [for pre-approved candidates] - or else.