Revisiting my earlier diary on "Lesser of Two Evils" voting

Nearly ten years ago I wrote a diary titled "Some thoughts on 'Lesser of Two Evils' voting," originally posted to DailyKos.com but preserved for posterity in a WordPress file at that point in 2016 at which DailyKos.com became an instrument of evil. In this piece, I hoped to revisit that diary and add some important reflections it left out. I can see in retrospect that I was entirely too soft on the concept. Lesser of two evils voting is the potential atrocity that everyone routinely endorses, in the same way in which people routinely voted for Paul von Hindenburg in the 1932 Presidential election in Germany. (Nine months later von Hindenburg appointed his opponent Hitler, thus revealing to the world the uselessness of certain types of lesser-evil voting.)

This week my Facebook feed is full of people bellyaching about Trump. Some of the bellyachers also complain that, instead of Trump, we need to get back to "normalcy," which can be accompanied by any death-toll one feels free to ignore. The bellyachers about Trump routinely ignore the enormous level of collusion which one sees within the daily rituals of the political class, with or without Trump. The political class in the United States is currently at a high point for such collusion, which is sometimes dolled up in political discourse as "bipartisanship." Before she donated her efforts to Joe Biden's candidacy, onetime Presidential candidate Amy Klobuchar touted her ability to work with Republicans as such.

In the US political context, however, "bipartisanship" looks like "collaborationism." Lesser-evil voters do not take collaborationism seriously; in this regard they would have made good subjects of the Vichy regime which ruled a part of France between 1940 and 1942. The Vichy regime was as evil as the Nazis, because they worked with the Nazis. The point of the French collaboration at Vichy was to disguise (for obedient French) who was really in power, or who was being granted power through the power of those who represented the public faces of power. Vote Demovichy, because the Republinazis are worse. One recalls, for instance, that in Barack Obama's tenure as President the Democrats ceded all branches of the Federal government and 900+ state legislative seats to the Republicans. Such a record-setting surrender of power cannot be regarded as arbitrary or coincidental; it must, therefore, have been a result of the actions of one or more Democrats. What comes to mind first is Barack Obama's mishandling of the DNC during his tenure as President. I will unfortunately not go further in this essay with this line of reasoning; the data will have to stand for themselves.

The identity between "bipartisanship" and "collaborationism" can be seen in the fact that it's the Democrats who do it. The Republicans don't participate in bipartisanship because they are in charge; this is done in the same sense in which Hitler was allowed to insist, repeatedly, that if Franz von Papen wanted to create a coalition government with the NSDAP as a "junior" partner, it had to be with him as chancellor. For this reason Hitler was in charge even before his 30 January 1933 appointment as Chancellor. This is not to say that the Republicans are Hitler, but rather that they employ the same tactic as the one Hitler employed -- refusing bipartisanship until one is actually placed in charge.

The "lesser evil" voters ignore the extent to which politics in the United States is a team sport. Politics is typically a team sport dressed up as an individual sport; even the kings of old had to participate in teams if they were to hold their kingdoms. For our present-day politics, the key players are financiers, who do not seem to care which team they join, as evidenced by their contribution to various organizations representing both Democrats and Republicans. "Lesser evil" voters, blinded by their hatred of the so-called "greater evils," would like to ignore their implicit support for America's election financiers and the teams which they in fact lead.

The difference represented by Bernie Sanders is that of someone who assembles a team to oppose the financiers, a difference reproduced (unfortunately) in only a half-baked way by Elizabeth Warren. "Lesser evil" voting might mean voting for flawed individuals on better teams, but usually it doesn't.

My one major point in the 2010 essay was (as I said) that "If you vote “lesser of two evils,” then, your politicians are beholden to you for nothing." This is true, although I also pointed out that your politicians may spontaneously do good things for you. As I suggested in the essay, you will be voting your interests if you vote for politicians who, in some way, create some overlap between their interests and yours, even if these politicians are evil. However, the overlap of interests is not necessarily important; veals, for instance, "have an interest" in eating food and drinking milk as provided by their butchers, and slaves "had an interest" in kind treatment by their masters. Veal and slavery still necessarily involve evil. In our case the fossil fuel interests necessarily involve evil, for their stock-in-trade is making the amplification of climate change (and thus the proliferation of climate disasters) into an asset to be protected through the purchase of ALL of your favorite politicians. Our interests do not overlap with theirs, neither the fossil fuel interests nor the bought politicians' interests, regardless of how much you want to pretend that their guardian Joe Biden will otherwise do good things for you.

Lesser-evil voters do not empower themselves or others. Their justification for doing what they do involves a bad choice -- vote for the Democrat, typically, or the Republican will win. The idea of the bad choice is simple: vote for bad things, otherwise other bad things will happen. The Nazis typically presented Jews with bad choices: we will either kill X, or Y. You choose. The bad choice says: never mind the environment of coercion in which you are made to believe that your choices will have to be bad ones.

Lesser-evil voters are of necessity blind to the evil that they do. It's not an original thought to say that voting for a "lesser evil" is voting for evil. But the evil of "lesser evil" voters doesn't stop there. "Lesser evil" voters typically take the high ground in criticizing those who don't do as they do -- and this criticism is typically only levied at those who vote for better candidates than the "lesser evil" ones. Evil is thusly made into an imagined virtue. "Lesser evil" voters in the United States, for instance, typically argued in 2000 that a vote for Ralph Nader was a vote for George W. Bush. They blamed Nader for Bush's victory. What prompted this reaction was the perceived likelihood that Ralph Nader would have made a better President than Al Gore, the Democrat. Nobody cared that Al Gore lost in Florida by such a thin margin that, had a very small portion of the 200,000 Democrats who voted for George W. Bush voted instead for Gore, he would have won the election. Gore could also have won the election in Florida, and thus in the United States, had voters for the Reform or Libertarian candidates in Florida voted instead for Gore. But Reform and Libertarian candidates didn't have the perceived virtues which Nader had, so they aren't made into pariahs. Lesser-evil voting is thus a sanction against perceived good. The educational lesson taught by lesser-evil voters is clear: If you want cover against them and their collective anger, don't even pretend to do good in the world. Stay away from politics altogether, until the elections are over and the lesser-evil voters are quiet.

In short, lesser-evil voters don't take evil seriously. One thinks of lesser-evil politician Barack Obama, for instance, siding with the banks in their foreclosure crimes and heading the team which evicted Occupy while prolonging Dick Cheney's war on the world and becoming one of the most popular Presidents ever (as reflected in poll after poll). Obama's winning margin in the 2012 election, however, was contributed through a campaign of attack ads against his opponent Mitt Romney in swing states -- to be sure, through fortification of the "lesser evil" vote. Lesser-evil voters contribute to the general political drift into evil, as the Republicans used Obama's lesser-evil energy to position themselves as a greater collective evil than he was.

Without hope, there is no point in ethics, aesthetics, therapy, righteousness, or justification. Any action is as good as any other if the end result is merely going to be bad. Vote for hope. Work for hope. Live hope. Don't bother with the rest.

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Cassiodorus's picture

@FutureNow that I missed when it was cold and dark.

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"The war on Gaza, backed by the West, is a demonstration that the West is willing to cross all lines. That it will discard any nuance of humanity. That it is willing to commit genocide" -- Moon of Alabama

Sadly, ten years later things have gotten worse for so many, and we're still admonished to vote for those who spend their political campaign attempting to suppress us.

Lesser evil voters are status quo voters. For many of the "meritocracy" either way is good for them. They're the donors. They can take advantage of the same loopholes as the well off republicans. It's more fun, and lucrative, to be in charge, but they'll still prosper.

Very true it's the democrats that practice bipartisanship and the republicans don't. Every compromise brings the dems closer to the right. Compromise enough and most people don't see much difference between the parties in making their day to day lives better. Abortion, migrants, ID politics yes, the rest mostly no. SS, Medicare, Medicaid are things the dems have already proved willing to compromise away to some degree.

As horrified as TOP gets they fail to see, or understand that. So they paint everyone as racists, or dupes, or Russian trolls or bots....or socialists. Like the Nevada union that wanted Medicare for All to fail because when it comes to health care, they got theirs.

Nafta was great, the stock market is great, the economy is great, and if you fall by the wayside, well you should just reinvent yourself. They have good jobs, so can you. So c'mon folks, work on those bootstraps. And remember, vote the lesser of two evils. You can trust us. Even though neither side will work for you, the dems are better. It's your duty to the party.

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Wally's picture

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Lesser Evilism means the oligarchy always wins.

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RantingRooster's picture

To me, there are "believers" and "non-believers" and they exist in every party if you will, and there are varying degrees of "belief".

Believers - are those that "believe" in the "system", that it is mostly working properly with a few hick-ups here and there, but that the "system" basically works properly and justice will prevail. Just keep your head down, work hard, vote when you can and everything will be ok.

Non-Believers - are those that fundamentally do not believe in the system. They don't believe for one second the "system" is sound, or working properly, but "know" the "system" is fundamentally rigged. They can "see" with their own eyes what "believers" block out with their "blind faith" in the "system".

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C99, my refuge from an insane world. #ForceTheVote

I’m already seeing people making the justifications for voting for Biden. This isn’t over yet. Biden hasn’t won. But the whole “fear Trump” thing is kicking in, no consideration that Biden will just be a more polite Trump, with less mental facilities. It’s really depressing.

I think this is the biggest issue facing “the movement” and frankly we have a long way to go on this.

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Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper really likes you.

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

@Dr. John Carpenter

before I woke up feeling sick. We've decided not to sequester me, on the grounds that Kate would already have picked up whatever virus it is from me if I have it. So maybe I will write that essay anyway.

Anybody who thinks that Biden will have a greater chance of defeating Trump than, well, anybody, is deliberately evading the truth. The only candidate who could have done worse against Trump than Biden is Bloomberg, because he shares a lot of Trump's characteristics without Trump's showmanship. Biden against Trump is going to be unutterably painful, especially the debate. The only hope for Biden supporters is that Trump's attacks on Biden will make Trump look mean to the electorate, instead of making Biden look weak. Their serious weak spot is that Biden's weakness is real and undeniable to everyone who isn't lying to themselves real hard.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

@Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal

The only hope for Biden supporters is that Trump's attacks on Biden will make Trump look mean to the electorate, instead of making Biden look weak.

Trump is mean. That’s all it amounts to for so many. Never mind that Biden has some horrific and cruel politics. Never mind that Biden is a long time liar and plagiarist. Never mind that he’s yelling at potential voters, telling them he won’t do anything for them and they should vote for someone else. But Trump is mean. Sigh.

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Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper really likes you.

@Dr. John Carpenter there is also the drumbeat of "you have no choice but to vote for Biden". I'm tired of no choices. Almost like it was planned this way, d'ya think?

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Daenerys's picture

@Dr. John Carpenter of being admonished to vote for Biden should he be the nominee, because reasons. Look at his record; he is NOT better than any Republican. Dammit, I will NOT be shamed or brow-beaten into voting for someone who has no chance of beating Trump, actively disparages my generation, doesn't know where he is half the time and can't keep his hands to himself. For all of that he might as well BE Trump.

What ever happened to not telling people who to vote for? That's the candidates' jobs, to tell us why we should vote for them. Anybody who tells me who to vote for, or 'vote blue no matter who' can fuck right off.

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This shit is bananas.

tikifire's picture

@Daenerys agreed - I lost several friends and acquaintances in 2016 because they kept telling me I had to vote for Clinton and I kept asking them to stop telling people who to vote for

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SnappleBC's picture

@tikifire

In 2016 I was berated by my family for not voting for Clinton. My response was to ask why that seemed like such an obvious choice to them. Needless to say, their reasons were vacuous as MSM reasoning always is. They are simply little drones caught in the propaganda matrix. They believe Obama was a good guy and any facts to the contrary are simply dismissed out of hand... even when proven via well-sourced arguments.

"Why?" is my answer this time around too. How, exactly, will things improve if we have Biden over Trump? I'm waiting for anyone to answer that question with some fact-based answer.

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A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard

Raggedy Ann's picture

Details to come.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

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4 users have voted.

"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

Bob In Portland's picture

I am back from a long trip, spent 12 hours yesterday flying. I am an arthritic old man with two bad knees and one bad shoulder. I would have felt better if I'd stayed home and a gang of Young Republicans punched and kicked me on the front lawn.

But one thing I did notice was how much fear was unloosed in the world over the weekend. Beyond the increased fear-mongering the the DNCers about socialism and how the Russians love BOTH Trump and Sanders, the media was 24/7 about the looming black plague of coronavirus.

I don't know if coronavirus is really as dangerous as is being told, but I do know that the reporting on it proclaims that we're all gonna die.

Generating fear always pushes the electorate to the right. Being afraid tells low information voters, which is probably 75% of the electorate, to take it slow. So while undecided voters in most states on Tuesday said that they wanted socialized medicine many turned around and supported the very candidate that couldn't and wouldn't give them socialized medicine.

I'm not saying that coronavirus is a creation of our Deep State (though it was might be) but the reporting on it was certainly correct for the circumstances of the day (pushing the electorate to the right). Plus, I haven't seen the numbers but I get the feeling that coronavirus did not increase voter turnout.

Perhaps we'll begin having outbreaks of the plague, or another disease will sweep over the globe from one of our economic enemies. Russian flu, Russian anthrax, Iranian poisonous pistachios. Right now there's probably a virus that will be blamed on Cuba or Venezuela.l Maybe we'll have a wave of mass shooters. Want to generate hate and fear of minorites? Unleash the black lone nutters. Fear of guns? Have kids shoot up a few schools.

Or unleash them all. Depends on what's needed.

Now, since I've traveled three time zones I'm going to take a nice long nap and rely on the rest of Caucus99percent to handle things today.

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have to speculate like this, but we are where we are, and this could be over soon -- I hope not but it's possible. A lot of states coming up strongly favor Biden, and Bernie has a must win state soon in Michigan.

So, Biden could greatly benefit in the LOTE calculation with the left by naming a dynamic younger pol with at least one foot in the prog wing, or is widely perceived as such. I don't think he can afford to lose so many Bernie backers with a dull pick like Tim Kaine. And preferably it would be someone not in her 70s, like Liz. Maybe a WOC who could bring the Bernieites back into the fold.

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@wokkamile
Because Sanders voters are all about Identity Politics...

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@FutureNow flying flip on IdPol grounds if he picked the right person. Especially considering the fact that AAs were so instrumental in getting Joe the nom, if that does happen.

He could make far worse choices than a much younger WOC-AA, and in any case there are limited ways to keep the prog wing on deck. He isn't likely to budge much leftward on policy, although if coronavirus does quickly spread in this country and begin to be a major campaign issue, he may have to rethink his staunch opposition to major healthcare reform.

Just my two cents, as this looks to be 60% in favor of Biden at this point and we all deal with grim reality in our own ways. But for someone in Biden's mental state, the VP pick is a huge factor, and I would wait to make a decision based on that. And it would have to be a very solid pick, not doubling down on more bland Demo centrism.

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Anja Geitz's picture

@wokkamile

Especially considering the fact that AAs were so instrumental in getting Joe the nom,

Let's see how many of those younger AA voters, along with all the other Bernie supporters actually show up at the polls come November for Biden.

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

SnappleBC's picture

@wokkamile

The game is rigged. No amount of voting was ever going to see Sanders as the nominee.

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2 users have voted.

A lot of wanderers in the U.S. political desert recognize that all the duopoly has to offer is a choice of mirages. Come, let us trudge towards empty expanse of sand #1, littered with the bleached bones of Deaniacs and Hope and Changers.
-- lotlizard

Raggedy Ann's picture

@wokkamile
Sanders supporters anyway - no matter who he picks. Biden as POTUS after hoping for a Bernie? Sorry - he will not get their support. Not mine either.

As SnappleBC says - they were never going to let Bernie get the nomination. NEVER.

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Wally's picture

That is all.

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snoopydawg's picture

They insist that we have to choose Biden because Trump is so bad. So I've been linking this essay for them to ponder. Doing what I can to keep Biden down.

Cheers.

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

Anja Geitz's picture

But this, for me, is the crux of LOTE voting.

The bad choice says: never mind the environment of coercion in which you are made to believe that your choices will have to be bad ones

In any other kind of situation this kind of negotiating would seem insane. How is it that so many don't see it as such?

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There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier

Cassiodorus's picture

@Anja Geitz It's as insane as the prospect of Bernie Sanders endorsing Joe Biden.

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"The war on Gaza, backed by the West, is a demonstration that the West is willing to cross all lines. That it will discard any nuance of humanity. That it is willing to commit genocide" -- Moon of Alabama