I think these are all good points, but I don’t see how climate change (or other similarly enormous problems) are going to get addressed without taking over the formal levers of government.
i don't disagree, i guess what i'm trying to get at is that electoralism and a few social democrats in office aren't going to get you the 'formal levers of government' in time to actually address specifically the issue of climate change.
it doesn't hurt to have people in office be sympathetic to the cause, but it's simply not enough, and seems to contribute to this liberal idea that all you have to do is vote. we've drifted further and further to the right for the last 40 years, and a lot of that has to do with people not protesting nearly enough, and specifically not in an effective enough manner, because they feel that if they just cast a ballot that it's going to make the difference needed.
electoralism and a few social democrats in office aren’t going to get you the ‘formal levers of government’ in time
Well, we don't know that, and we don't know if a non-electoral strategy (if it's viable at all) will work in time, either. No one knows how to build socialism in the imperial core, so we shouldn't write anything off completely. We especially shouldn't write off what the vast majority of Americans think of when they think of politics.
We should be working every angle that might feasibly provide a solution. One might pop up where we're not expecting it, and modest gains in one area might help another area considerably.
i don't disagree, i guess what i'm trying to get at is that electoralism and a few social democrats in office aren't going to get you the 'formal levers of government' in time to actually address specifically the issue of climate change.
it doesn't hurt to have people in office be sympathetic to the cause, but it's simply not enough, and seems to contribute to this liberal idea that all you have to do is vote. we've drifted further and further to the right for the last 40 years, and a lot of that has to do with people not protesting nearly enough, and specifically not in an effective enough manner, because they feel that if they just cast a ballot that it's going to make the difference needed.
Well, we don't know that, and we don't know if a non-electoral strategy (if it's viable at all) will work in time, either. No one knows how to build socialism in the imperial core, so we shouldn't write anything off completely. We especially shouldn't write off what the vast majority of Americans think of when they think of politics.
We should be working every angle that might feasibly provide a solution. One might pop up where we're not expecting it, and modest gains in one area might help another area considerably.