• Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    How come rural, under educated voters are able to make it out every election without problems.

    I’m not going to defend people failing to do a simple task once every four years.

    You have four years to prepare for the event. And there are only two states that don’t offer early voting, and those states allow absentee ballots for people who won’t be home, have disabilities, or would otherwise struggle to vote in person. We have more resources available than ever, it’s easier than ever to vote, generally, thanks to widespread mail in voting adoption (which was demonstrated by a 6% higher turnout in 2020)

    I am sure you can find excuses for people here and there who were really truly unable, but 90 million eligible voters failed to do their civic duty. Even assuming every single homeless person was unable to vote, which is unlikely, that’s still 88.5 million that didn’t show up, and let’s take EVERY single person with a disability and assume they somehow couldn’t vote, that’s still 45 million people that didn’t show up. And let’s take EVERY single person under the poverty and assume they were unable to vote, then let’s assume there is absolutely zero overlap, you still have 10+ million people who didn’t show up, and that’s assuming not a single of the above people voted.

    Failing to prepare for something doesn’t excuse you from the failure of doing it.

    • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      5 hours ago

      I hope you understand you reek of privledge with the way you talk. Rural voters have an easier time of voting, typically, because of the lower population density. In fact, urban areas are often intentionally short-staffed.

      At the end of the day, people vote if they feel like it makes a difference. The fact of the matter is that it largely doesn’t outside of swing states, and even in swing states the differences between the two candidates was not as high as it was in 2020, when Biden at least pretended to be progressive.

      You have to take a real, systemic analysis and stop blaming individuals for broader societal problems.

      • Takumidesh@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        I don’t give a shit if I reek of anything, I give a shit about the millions of people who fail to fulfil their civic duties.

        I’m blaming individuals for individually not doing their individual part.

        Deciding not to vote because it ‘feels’ a certain way is just stupid, I don’t care.

        I’ll add, rural people have no transit systems or infrastructure, they have to have running and maintained cars, and the ability to drive them, which would disproportionately affect disabled people and others that would have difficulty getting to physical polls.

        • Cowbee [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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          4 hours ago

          You can continue to blame the oppressed for the system that oppresses them, and all you’ll have is personal frustration and an inability to fix anything.

          When you come across a problem, you must be careful to accurately identify the levers that can be pulled and the mechanisms behind the moving parts. The fact is, voter turnout is tied to ease of access to vote, and the chance for real change to come from voting. Currently, voting is difficult for millions of people, and voting doesn’t enact change. You’ve failed to identify the source of the problem, and are blaming those downstream from the source, and as such will fail to get what you want.