Why do we seem to vote against our best interests!

HugalHugal Shipmate
Today (7th May) there are local elections in England and national government elections in Wales and Scotland. A certain right wing party is set to do well over all and very well in the Welsh Senedd. The policies of said right wing party are not good for working class people, yet working class people will vote for them.
Brexit caused no end of problems and made things worse for us. It was well known that that would happen. Why do we seem to vote against our best interest? I am sure shipmates in other countries have a similar experience.
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Comments

  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    Hugal wrote: »
    <snip>
    Brexit caused no end of problems and made things worse for us. It was well known that that would happen. <snip>
    Some people were very clear that it would make things worse for us. Others, however, believed the message that we would stop paying all that money to Europe, and have plenty to spend to improve our NHS.

    Still others, who had been very much on the underside of austerity, simply felt like giving a kicking to the smooth-talking politicians who they felt were responsible for that, and didn’t really believe it would make much difference whether we were in or out of Europe.
  • There were also those who believed (and presumably still do) that independence from the EU was desirable in and of itself, regardless of the economic consequences.
  • As the youngsters say it's all "vibes".
  • In fact, that’s a pretty good answer to the OP question as well.

    Simply put, many people do not consider economic or financial considerations to be more important than any others.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    There were also those who believed (and presumably still do) that independence from the EU was desirable in and of itself, regardless of the economic consequences.

    If people were bonehead stupid enough to think the EU is/was something you could gain independence from there's little to be said.
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    edited May 7
    So this is probably fine - electoral commission guidance - but please be mindful of polling day rules. For example, it's fine to post on social media you have voted, but don't post images of your ballot paper, don't campaign near polling stations etc.
  • Is this one of those “there’s no such thing as an independent country, they are all linked in a myriad of different ways” arguments?
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    In fact, that’s a pretty good answer to the OP question as well.

    Simply put, many people do not consider economic or financial considerations to be more important than any others.

    Until their own financial or economic situation is threatened. Then they tend to flock to a “quick fix” like Brexit or your know who, sold on the basis of scapegoating and the need to apportion blame to a minority.

  • HugalHugal Shipmate
    I will say what one commenter has said. Leave gave a positive show at first. Remain seemed to be saying only negative things that may have swayed a few people.
    It just seems voters are drawn to parties who they know mess up all the time. Who play the dead cat game (immigrants immigrants out front, getting rid of the NHS over here in the corner).
    It is also a fact that some use local elections to give the Westminster leaders a bloody nose. Leading to parties who are inadequate for the job being picked.
  • HelenEvaHelenEva Shipmate
    edited May 7
    BroJames wrote: »
    Hugal wrote: »
    <snip>
    Brexit caused no end of problems and made things worse for us. It was well known that that would happen. <snip>
    Some people were very clear that it would make things worse for us. Others, however, believed the message that we would stop paying all that money to Europe, and have plenty to spend to improve our NHS.

    Still others, who had been very much on the underside of austerity, simply felt like giving a kicking to the smooth-talking politicians who they felt were responsible for that, and didn’t really believe it would make much difference whether we were in or out of Europe.

    There's a lot in this last bit of the post - I think it's human nature to get angry and to vote to giving a kicking to whoever you're angry at. I think I'd get more of a dopamine kick out of that than making a reasoned decision about long term best interest, and I dare say other people are the same.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Is this one of those “there’s no such thing as an independent country, they are all linked in a myriad of different ways” arguments?

    No, it's a "if we weren't independent already how did we hold a referendum about leaving treaties that were freely entered into?" argument. Nobody talks about independence when discussing leaving NATO, even though that involves foreign troops on British soil. It's a fundamental misunderstanding of what "independence" means.
  • EigonEigon Shipmate
    Locally, a Certain Right Wing Party paid for a wrap around advert in our local paper for the day before the election, which I thought was a bit cheeky (and possibly against electoral law??) The lady in the paper shop said she'd had lots of complaints, and she now has a big bag of recycling where customers left the advert behind.
  • Watching from Australia, do these local elections really make much difference when the national (or federal - not sure what you call it there) election is years away?
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    edited May 7
    Local government makes a difference to how often the bins get emptied and which potholes are filled in. They have absolutely no direct effect on immigration policy, except as an excuse for the government to be even more beastly to immigrants than they are being already. A difficult challenge, but I'm sure they will measure down to it.

    As to the question in the OP? People vote against their own best interests for all sorts of reasons. I was half-convinced that the Brexiters' economic arguments (such as they were) were plausible, but I still voted against Brexit because I believe that international cooperation is a Good Thing. I also know a number of otherwise rational middle class people who voted for Brexit, mainly because they read the Telegraph and had been subjected to pro-Brexit propaganda for the best part of forty years. Propaganda works.

    I find it staggering that the same people who were responsible for the shambles of Brexit are now apparently the most likely ones to be trusted to sort out the mess they created. But propaganda works.
  • SandemaniacSandemaniac Shipmate
    Im England only in the sense of a barometer of feeling as to the party in charge at a national level. Its pretty much a given that that party will get a kicking in local council elections generally.

    This isn't stopping Nigel Farage - because, let's face it, he is the engine of Reform - from campaigning as though its a general election and voting will change who is in 10 Downing Street.

    Which fits with his previous modus operandi of selling a lie disguised as a dream.

    It's different in Wales and Scotland where the voting is for the devolved parliaments, and in both where the party in national power is extremely unlikely to win. A loss in Wales will probably have more effect on Labour's mood in Westminster as they've not had a majority in the Scottish Parliament for some time, if ever.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Watching from Australia, do these local elections really make much difference when the national (or federal - not sure what you call it there) election is years away?

    Local elections mean very little normally, as local authorities are constrained by legal obligations to provide certain services and a desparate shortage of funds to do anything beyond that. In this case there is a real possibility of Reform engaging in DOGE-style ideologically-motivated destruction that will kill elderly and vulnerable people.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    As the youngsters say it's all "vibes".
    In fact, that’s a pretty good answer to the OP question as well.

    Simply put, many people do not consider economic or financial considerations to be more important than any others.
    Or to look at it from another angle, specific voters might not assess and weigh their “best interests” the same way an observer would, or think they should.


  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    As the youngsters say it's all "vibes".
    In fact, that’s a pretty good answer to the OP question as well.

    Simply put, many people do not consider economic or financial considerations to be more important than any others.
    Or to look at it from another angle, specific voters might not assess and weigh their “best interests” the same way an observer would, or think they should.


    I am with Nick on this one. The good news is in democracies any term is time limited. They can be voted out eventually.
  • chrisstileschrisstiles Hell Host
    In general there's a fairly significant body of work suggesting that people are very bad at understanding things like risks or how particular economic policies will benefit them.

    This is generally ignored when economists are calculating what a perfect rational actor might do.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    As the youngsters say it's all "vibes".
    In fact, that’s a pretty good answer to the OP question as well.

    Simply put, many people do not consider economic or financial considerations to be more important than any others.
    Or to look at it from another angle, specific voters might not assess and weigh their “best interests” the same way an observer would, or think they should.


    I am with Nick on this one. The good news is in democracies any term is time limited. They can be voted out eventually.

    Assuming you keep electing (small d) democrats. The problem with both the GOP and likely Reform (if they get their hands on power) is that they are not committed to the democratic process. Their view is that elections are there to put them in power and if they don't they must be made to.
  • GwaiGwai Epiphanies Host
    If you will pardon what may seem a digression, I work in proposals. In other words, I write and edit long strings of text to persuade people--in my case U.S. states or parts of them--to hire my company. We are not the cheapest, so that can be a challenge since lots of parts of government are supposed to take the lowest bidder who can do the job. And we always remind each other that people don't choose based on facts, they choose based on how the proposal makes them feel. In other words, on vibes. If we make them feel safe and understood by addressing their concerns in a persuasive way? They will probably feel seen and decide they should choose the better company over the cheapest, and that that's us.

    I think people choose their politicians and parties on vibes too. If Trump or Reform or whoever makes people feel seen? They'll vote for them.
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    While many people have mentioned Brexit, one might also think of the 2014 vote on Scottish independence.

    I live in the US, in Illinois. A few years ago there was a vote about a graduated income tax, I thought it was a good idea, but it was voted down. As I recall, many people (and not only the rich) were afraid the legislature might raise their taxes, which of course could happen anyway.
  • sionisaissionisais Shipmate
    Another aspect that concerns me is that the concept of democratic government as one elected by the people is no longer in effect, as many of the Western democracies no longer act in the interests of the people who vote for them but are constrained to act in the interest of corporate and business interests, especially the multinational corporations. I believe the drift to this state of affairs began with global monetarism in the 1980s.
    YMMV.
  • BullfrogBullfrog Shipmate
    edited May 7
    Hugal wrote: »
    Today (7th May) there are local elections in England and national government elections in Wales and Scotland. A certain right wing party is set to do well over all and very well in the Welsh Senedd. The policies of said right wing party are not good for working class people, yet working class people will vote for them.
    Brexit caused no end of problems and made things worse for us. It was well known that that would happen. Why do we seem to vote against our best interest? I am sure shipmates in other countries have a similar experience.

    "If we destroy enough other people's economies, then globalization will collapse and all of those consumers who have flocked to foreign markets will be forced to shop local again! It'll bring the jobs back to our backwater economy!"

    That's one of my impressions. No, it's not pretty. Yes, it's rather mean on multiple levels, and I'm not endorsing it.
  • Jane RJane R Shipmate
    It only works if your economy is self-sufficient, and the UK doesn't even produce enough food for the whole population, let alone anything else. Also, the architects of Brexit were aiming to destroy whatever's left of our heavy industry. They didn't seem to have any plans for what to do next, unless 'we'll be so rich it won't matter' counts as a plan.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    Gwai wrote: »
    If you will pardon what may seem a digression, I work in proposals. In other words, I write and edit long strings of text to persuade people--in my case U.S. states or parts of them--to hire my company. We are not the cheapest, so that can be a challenge since lots of parts of government are supposed to take the lowest bidder who can do the job. And we always remind each other that people don't choose based on facts, they choose based on how the proposal makes them feel. In other words, on vibes. If we make them feel safe and understood by addressing their concerns in a persuasive way? They will probably feel seen and decide they should choose the better company over the cheapest, and that that's us.

    I think people choose their politicians and parties on vibes too. If Trump or Reform or whoever makes people feel seen? They'll vote for them.

    My son writes proposals for affordable housing in the Portland Metro area. He finds it is much harder to convince people a proposal is the right thing for the area when people fear what is happening in the economy, Has had to shelve a few ideas lately Not to worry, he is busy enough with the projects the people have already agreed to fund.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    I've been seeing anti-immigrant comments on Facebook which are so clearly monumentally stupid that I struggle to believe anyone is posting them in good faith.

    An example - a local sandwich shop posted a video of someone, clearly white, who came into their shop, asked the server a question about allegens then, while the server was checking, helped himself to the contents of the tip jar.

    Within a couple of comments, people had named the man , who had a very local name. Lots of comments from people who had had previous encounters with him. And then there were "probably an immigrant, no longer safe in our own country" comments which, in fairness, were ridiculed. But someone is posting this complete mince which seems to use the theme of "no longer safe in our own community" on repeat.

    I'm not on right-wing sites but I'm seeing this fear-mongering stuff on "normal" Facebook sites, in contexts which make no sense.
  • LouiseLouise Epiphanies Host
    edited May 8
    Facebook isnt 'normal' though, in terms of not being 'right wing'. It is widely-used but that's not the same thing as not being a tool of the far right. It is owned and led by people who are a key part of the contemporary fascist project - by a Trump enabler and helper who removed fact checking and loosened moderation on hate speech. It's already been responsible for fanning at least one genocide and via its algorithms cooks many users brains in racist and other sorts of propaganda. But people won't come off it because their local history group or family members are there and so progressively more people get their brains cooked. [ There's also a lot of bots and other artificial or astroturfed content there which is also used by bad actors which helps do this]

    I came off years ago when its role in the Rohingya genocide came out but I'm a weird autistic person. I did lose touch with some peripheral friends which I'm a bit sad about but it was that, or be part of normalising something deeply sinister and dangerous.

    The problem is that due to institutional capture and surrender many 'normal' media outlets and social media sites have mainstreamed racism, misinformation and the far right, but people still think of them as mainstream/ 'normal' and many soak up this stuff. Twitter/ X is a classic example - there is research on the extent to which it shifts the Overton window and radicalises people who stay on it.

    But nobody will do anything about it because the fascists cry ' freedom of speech' against any regulation, as if they are but smol beans on a level playing field. But the reality is that there are enough billionaires who share those politics or see profit from them controlling algorithms and buying media outlets or far right politicians threatening media, that they are actually monstrously powerful and cooking many people's brains with weapons of mass propaganda. When their politicians get into power, they wield the cudgel mercilessly and do even more to tilt the playing field in their favour.

    What we're currently calling 'freedom of speech' in media and social media is far more akin to seal clubbing where we think it's fair for the killer to have a great massive fucking club against a vulnerable target without comparable means of resistance.

    And here we are - people are duly having their brains cooked because we've let this happen and it will be very hard to deconvert them.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    For a small, local sandwich shop, what alternative is there to Facebook to post their footage of the tip-thief? It did result, very quickly, in a name, an approximate address "top end of George Street" information about his drug use, and previous small-scale thefts. The racist posts stood out as ridiculous, and were ridiculed accordingly.

    Lost cats? Found cats? Volunteers needed for a litter-pick? Butcher's Special Offers?

    When our village flooded in 2016, everything was co-ordinated through Facebook. After several desperate messages to my husband to COME HOME FROM WORK NOW! he finally accepted the situation was serious when the main road home was closed. I was only able to navigate him home by back roads because of Facebook updates on the roads. If he had spent the night sleeping in his office, it wouldn't have been the end of the world, but I needed the car home so that I could collect sandbags! (I could have asked for sandbags to be delivered, but those requests were also being made through Facebook!)
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    edited May 8
    The problem is when it's not a petty theft from a sandwich shop. The problem now is that every indecent assault, every arson attack, every swan found dead, and a whole host of things that actually didn't happen instantly crops a massive harvest of posts claiming it was done by asylum seekers and/or muslims, and indeed that these groups are always the perpetrators. The same isolated cases are reported and re-reported so people think there's an epidemic when it's the same small number of incidents over and over.

    Coupled with that there is a slew of AI generated content designed to rile, anger and mobilise. Fake pictures of Muslims holding up signs demanding we stop eating bacon and walking dogs (yes, really) and people absolutely lap it up because their brains are already cooked.

    I don't know what to do about it. I can laugh at the stupider end like the Flat Earthers and the Tartarian Empire people, but even there there's a sinister side - science denial uses the same mindsets and methods whether it's claiming that the shape or age of the earth is a Satanic plot to lead people away from the Bible, or that net zero is a sinister plot to keep everyone in their homes, take away their freedom to travel and impose a New World Order.
  • LouiseLouise Epiphanies Host
    edited May 8
    Yes @North East Quine I hear that, and its also a fascist tool that has amplified genocide and is amplifying racism and all the other far right stuff that when acted upon can and does destroy our communities - perhaps even physically because it helps climate disaster deniers and those that push policies and attitudes that fuel climate disaster, so more floods and worse down the line.

    People can get their sandbags now but after Reform or other fascist friendly parties backed by fossil fuel interests have won here and in other countries, they're going to need a lot more sandbags in the future or in the worst case not have a village to come back to as the climate emergency deepens.

    Broadcasting is reserved to Westminster but the internet isnt - one solution might be for governments to build alternative online infrastructure for communities instead of relying on deeply dangerous politically-compromised commercial solutions. Another might be to rejoin the EU and become part of doing things to regulate these companies at a scale that can have results or to look at what other European countries trying to reduce US tech domination are doing.

    But until people realise how dangerous it is there wont be demand to do something about it and it can be a key driver of radicalisation.

    If a community relies on one well and it's regularly polluted/ contaminated with sewage that eventually has effects. It doesn't matter how convenient and vital the well is - if people don't have the power to keep the contaminants out because it doesn't actually belong to them and the owners dont care about their health, then people get poisoned. Those with the most compromised immune systems are affected first and those with good immune systems later or indirectly as the others around them fall victim but it's still a poisoned well and a water-supply under local control with good health standards is still what's needed.
  • chrisstileschrisstiles Hell Host
    KarlLB wrote: »
    The problem is when it's not a petty theft from a sandwich shop. The problem now is that every indecent assault, every arson attack, every swan found dead, and a whole host of things that actually didn't happen instantly crops a massive harvest of posts claiming it was done by asylum seekers and/or muslims, and indeed that these groups are always the perpetrators. The same isolated cases are reported and re-reported so people think there's an epidemic when it's the same small number of incidents over and over.

    And even when it's disproved, people will continue to believe it because 'of course you would say that'.

    Similarly nextdoor - at one point the local group was full of complaints from one particular woman about the 'gangs of teenagers' hanging around her street every afternoon - as people repeatedly pointed out to her, there's a secondary school on her road. She eventually took her nonsense elsewhere, but there's a high probability she still believes she was right.
  • BullfrogBullfrog Shipmate
    Jane R wrote: »
    It only works if your economy is self-sufficient, and the UK doesn't even produce enough food for the whole population, let alone anything else. Also, the architects of Brexit were aiming to destroy whatever's left of our heavy industry. They didn't seem to have any plans for what to do next, unless 'we'll be so rich it won't matter' counts as a plan.

    Note, I'm not saying these people are smart. I just think that's the thinking.

    I also think there might be some "Well, if I'm going down, I'm going to take all y'all with me!" logic to it. Some places can carry a lot of spite when they see their local economy tanking while other places thrive. It can be a very hardening feeling.
  • BullfrogBullfrog Shipmate
    KarlLB wrote: »
    The problem is when it's not a petty theft from a sandwich shop. The problem now is that every indecent assault, every arson attack, every swan found dead, and a whole host of things that actually didn't happen instantly crops a massive harvest of posts claiming it was done by asylum seekers and/or muslims, and indeed that these groups are always the perpetrators. The same isolated cases are reported and re-reported so people think there's an epidemic when it's the same small number of incidents over and over.

    And even when it's disproved, people will continue to believe it because 'of course you would say that'.

    Similarly nextdoor - at one point the local group was full of complaints from one particular woman about the 'gangs of teenagers' hanging around her street every afternoon - as people repeatedly pointed out to her, there's a secondary school on her road. She eventually took her nonsense elsewhere, but there's a high probability she still believes she was right.

    I've heard this complaint about local online communities in general. If they're not very disciplined, they seem to devolve into racist paranoia and fear.

    The whole thing makes me think one of the most insidious qualities of social media, even as it's one of the most convenient, is that it connects people's online personae to the real world. And I'm a hypocrite because I have certainly used it to build deep connections to people IRL.
  • EnochEnoch Shipmate
    Who are this 'we' and 'our' in the original question, please? They are both pronouns that mean 'a group of more than one person which includes 'me'.

    I, for one, no longer identify with any collective 'we', and certainly not with any that stand for or vote for the OP's 'a certain right wing party' - or, for that matter several other corporate entities with other sets of opinions which also purport to invoke my presence among those who agree with them. I repudiated any such usage several years ago.

    Some people are all too ready to wheel out this objectionable usage, either without thinking or as an intellectual sleight of hand. They think they have won your agreement without your having noticed that they have never bothered even to try to persuade you, yet alone considered that you might not wish to be persuaded or to be associated with them or their ilk.

    As far as I am concerned, I do not wish to associate with any of these people, and that's it. There is no 'we' or 'our' that has both them and me in it. That is it.

  • HugalHugal Shipmate
    edited May 9
    Enoch wrote: »
    Who are this 'we' and 'our' in the original question, please? They are both pronouns that mean 'a group of more than one person which includes 'me'.

    I, for one, no longer identify with any collective 'we', and certainly not with any that stand for or vote for the OP's 'a certain right wing party' - or, for that matter several other corporate entities with other sets of opinions which also purport to invoke my presence among those who agree with them. I repudiated any such usage several years ago.

    Some people are all too ready to wheel out this objectionable usage, either without thinking or as an intellectual sleight of hand. They think they have won your agreement without your having noticed that they have never bothered even to try to persuade you, yet alone considered that you might not wish to be persuaded or to be associated with them or their ilk.

    As far as I am concerned, I do not wish to associate with any of these people, and that's it. There is no 'we' or 'our' that has both them and me in it. That is it.

    A general observation mostly about Brits who seem as a nation to vote against our own best interest. This includes otherwise sensible people. I did open it up to other countries. As an individual you are free to act as you wish. That doesn’t mean the OP is not true
  • The OP assumes people are "reasonable" as per the idea of a liberal democracy.

    I think the Enlightenment was wrong. I don't think people are reasonable.
  • EnochEnoch Shipmate
    Hugal wrote: »
    A general observation mostly about Brits who seem as a nation to vote against our own best interest. This includes otherwise sensible people. I did open it up to other countries. As an individual you are free to act as you wish. That doesn’t mean the OP is not true
    I agree with quite a lot, but by no means all, of what you say in your OP. It's the title of the thread, your use of 'we', and your expectation of an uncritical acceptance of your other solidarities that I am challenging.

    As I said, and uncharitable though you may regard this, 'There is no 'we' or 'our' that has both them and me in it''.

    And @WhimsicalChristian, I think you are also wrong. 'People' as you lump them are neither reasonable, nor unreasonable. Some people are reasonable, some are unreasonable, many are reasonable about some things but not others., or some of the time but not all of the time.

    If you do not agree with me, ask yourself. 'Are you reasonable or unreasonable?' Are you happy to be classified by others in such a simplistic way?


  • HugalHugal Shipmate
    Enoch wrote: »
    Hugal wrote: »
    A general observation mostly about Brits who seem as a nation to vote against our own best interest. This includes otherwise sensible people. I did open it up to other countries. As an individual you are free to act as you wish. That doesn’t mean the OP is not true
    I agree with quite a lot, but by no means all, of what you say in your OP. It's the title of the thread, your use of 'we', and your expectation of an uncritical acceptance of your other solidarities that I am challenging.

    As I said, and uncharitable though you may regard this, 'There is no 'we' or 'our' that has both them and me in it''.

    And @WhimsicalChristian, I think you are also wrong. 'People' as you lump them are neither reasonable, nor unreasonable. Some people are reasonable, some are unreasonable, many are reasonable about some things but not others., or some of the time but not all of the time.

    If you do not agree with me, ask yourself. 'Are you reasonable or unreasonable?' Are you happy to be classified by others in such a simplistic way?


    So how do you show the progress of a nation or any kind of group without saying we or us. We may not like it but we are part of a nation and we have responsiblities with in that structure. You can be individual, I certainly am but you also need to express how the country or group works. It is usual in the English Language to use we and us at those times.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    The OP seems to me to represent a fairly common synecdochic use of we.


  • EnochEnoch Shipmate
    edited May 9
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    The OP seems to me to represent a fairly common synecdochic use of we.
    I don't think that is strictly a synecdoche, or if it is, it is a misuse of one. A synecdoche is using one noun to express another, as in 'hands' to mean 'manual workforce'. Because of what 'we' means, a 1st person plural to describe a a group of people which includes 'me', using it as a pronoun in the way @Hugal has used it is importing something else. He/she is insisting that he/she includes 'me' whether I regard myself as belonging to to that group or not, or that there is a social or national unity of identity where to me, it is obvious there is not. Or else, it is tacitly enlisting me whether I want to be enlisted or not, as in 'we need to stop people smoking', which usually means 'this is what I want and I think you ought to want it to.

    When it comes to the thread title and the OP, the Reform Party is something on which people are very divided here. I detest them and so do most of the people I know. Many people think that it is deplorable that anyone should choose to vote for them. Even I know from over here and several thousand miles away, that your President is a divisive man and that many people in your country detest him. Unless you were a supporter of his, you might well feel outraged by a thread entitled 'Why do we vote for Mr Trump?'


  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    Enoch wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    The OP seems to me to represent a fairly common synecdochic use of we.
    I don't think that is strictly a synecdoche, or if it is, it is a misuse of one. A synecdoche is using one noun to express another, as in 'hands' to mean 'manual workforce'.
    A synecdoche is a noun that constitutes a smaller part of the whole and that is used to represent the whole. In this case, “we” is using the prevailing faction of an electorate to refer to the electorate as a whole.

    No one would understand “The British people have voted for x” or “The American people have voted for x” to mean that every voter in either group voted for x. We understand it to mean the majority of the electorate voted for x.

    And if one is part of that electorate, one is included in this use of “we,” regardless of how one voted.


  • ChastMastrChastMastr Shipmate
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”
    We could. But I take the question in the OP to be a different question—why do electorates made decisions not in the interests of the electorate or of the society in which they’re the electorate.

    So, not why did some in the electorate vote for Trump, but why did the electorate as a whole elect Trump? Not why did some in the electorate vote for Brexit, but why did the electorate as a whole approve Brexit?


  • ChastMastr wrote: »
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”

    To which the answer is, and always has been: “They don’t. They just disagree with you about what their own interests are and/or should be”.
  • ChastMastrChastMastr Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”
    We could. But I take the question in the OP to be a different question—why do electorates made decisions not in the interests of the electorate or of the society in which they’re the electorate.

    So, not why did some in the electorate vote for Trump, but why did the electorate as a whole elect Trump? Not why did some in the electorate vote for Brexit, but why did the electorate as a whole approve Brexit?


    I’m sorry, but I don’t know what you’re trying to say here that makes it different. Could you elaborate?
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”

    To which the answer is, and always has been: “They don’t. They just disagree with you about what their own interests are and/or should be”.

    You're neglecting that people are often horrifically uninformed about the policies and temperament of the people they're electing and the likely impact of them.
  • ChastMastrChastMastr Shipmate
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”

    To which the answer is, and always has been: “They don’t. They just disagree with you about what their own interests are and/or should be”.

    Well, in some cases, I do think that the “leopards eating faces” thing is relevant—some people voted for something that they never imagined would affect them, and then it does. And in some cases, people realize that they did vote for something/someone terribly wrong. There’s actually a group called “Leaving MAGA,” for example, in which people talk about how that happened to them.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    We could just say, “Why do people vote against their own interests?”
    We could. But I take the question in the OP to be a different question—why do electorates made decisions not in the interests of the electorate or of the society in which they’re the electorate.

    So, not why did some in the electorate vote for Trump, but why did the electorate as a whole elect Trump? Not why did some in the electorate vote for Brexit, but why did the electorate as a whole approve Brexit?


    I’m sorry, but I don’t know what you’re trying to say here that makes it different. Could you elaborate?
    One question asks why an individual made the choice that individual made.

    The other question asks why a group of people made the decision that group made.

  • ThunderBunkThunderBunk Shipmate
    edited May 9
    The leopard was supposed to eat THEIR face. Not mine. Mine is sacred. Are you seriously saying that voting in a way which leads to people losing their face is in their interest, because it's the decision they made?
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