Moose-tache wrote: ↑Thu Apr 29, 2021 4:55 am
The fact is, there are no economic issues. There are no social issues, except one: tribal loyalty. That's ultimately the only thing that motivates 99.9% of voters. All the rest of it, bathrooms, minimum wage, capital gains taxes, refugee quotas, is just a bunch of flags and banners that we use to mark each tribe so we can keep track of who the good people are. If you could convince Conservatives that true conservatism means raising the minimum wage, they would support it. If you could convince Liberals that true liberalism means lowering minimum wage, they would do that.
This is not entirely wrong, according to political scientists, but I think like most nerds you're overly dismissive of non-nerds.
It's true that particular issues are politicized for no reason other than history. As just one example, in 1999 political people had pretty much zero opinion on recounts, so they could be left to a largely apolitical process. In Dec. 2000, Republicans suddenly felt that recounts were
completely evil and had to be stopped by the Supreme Court.In Dec. 2020, Republicans suddenly felt that recounts were their
God-given right and had to be demanded by the Supreme Court.
It's stupid to politicize recounts, but it's not irrational or merely symbolic: Republicans in both cases wanted their guy to win.
And that in turn is because the constellation of issues that make up a US political party are not
all arbitrary or symbolic. Capital gains taxes are very important to people who make capital gains. Minimum wages are very important to people who make only that. It's not some random allotment of issues that could have all gone the other way.
What poli sci will tell you, IIRC, is that political junkies (e.g. all of us who argue in this thread) are rare— most people are not very well informed and don't vote by "considering the issues". And most of the time, they've made up their mind long ago and vote as they always have.
For issue junkies, that's stupid and baffling. But I would put it to you that a) most of the time, The People are pretty good at deciding, by whatever non-issue intuitions they have, which party will do better for them; and b) politics junkies often get so caught up in the issue-of-the-moment that their political decisions become irrational.
So, maybe some dude in the north of England comes from the working class, and votes Labour because his father did and his mates do, and his impression is that the Tories are a bunch of wankers. Is it your contention that he is
wrong and that the Tories would serve his interests better? I invite you to look at the last 40 years of Toryism. By intuition and caring for things that you don't think he should care about, he votes for his interests and saves all the time that political junkies spend on reading and arguing about the news.
The people
can be fooled— but so can the intellectuals, and probably far more dangerously. For proof, just look at politicians you disapprove of in the last hundred years.