clv101 wrote:YossarianUK wrote:johnhemming wrote:If you don't vote then you cannot blame anyone but yourself.
Thats a poor argument, especially with our voting system.
...voting for them would make no sense because they would be unlikely to ever gain a seat.
This is also a poor argument.
So voting makes sense even though the end result is that your vote is ignored?
When the 3 main parties in Britain all stand for varying flavours of the same thing, what are we to do? Voting, say Green, or, even, BNP, makes no sense because they will not win a seat. What's the point of feeling gratified because the green guy gets a cheer for having 323 votes.
How does voting for the guy with 323 votes make you better suited to complain about government?
If we had actual democracy, with PR, in this country it might be a different question, but we don't.
Even with PR, we have the unbelievable situation where two of the main parties in Scotland (Tories and Lib Dems) do not want any part in coalition government in PR, so we are left with minority government.... The parties which were, just a few weeks ago, campaigning for their manifestos for government, have absolutely no interest in implementing their policies.
Its madness.
If you went into a restaurant and they only served broccoli or brussel sprouts, you'd vote with your feet and head somewhere else. Why is this different because its different flavours of privatisation/capitalism we're being sold in "our" "democracy"?
"Heard about the guy who fell off a skyscraper? On his way down past each floor, he kept saying to reassure himself: So far so good... so far so good... so far so good. How you fall doesn't matter. It's how you land!"
La Haine, 1995