this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2024
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This comment supports the notion of a larger symptom: false dichotomies boosted by a flawed FPTP electoral system. Because opinions vary, it's highly possible, as demonstrated by your argument, to have pluralistic views. But due to the effective nature of the two-party system it forces hands into two camps. In alternative systems it would allow this person with their rental properties to hold their social values and the nuance of their economic requirements (symptom of the economic system) without alienation. That's not the current reality, so I understand it's simply not where we're at. But ultimately if the social pressures "make them feel bad" so that they choose "to become a Nazi" then that still says more about their personal belief systems, suceptibility to bullying, and unwillingness to affect change. Ultimately, choosing a polticial system that persecutes immutable characteristics of individuals because those that would be victims of said persecution (or those sympathetic to their plight) are impolitely defensive is akin to, "I'm not on fire, so why are all the people for whom the fire encroaches upon screaming at me? It is mean and makes me uncomfortable and feel bad. Let them burn."
I agree with fptp sucking ass, but the rest to me seems to imply an inevitable call to violence. I don't think it has to be a dichotomy with some common ground and realizing that the Internet has amplified the political effects.