Mentalist, on 05 June 2018 - 04:01 PM, said:
No one needs to justify their vote.
However it'd be nice if people realized that they should be making rational, informed decisions when voting. In a perfect world. Because (on paper), that's the basic premise of how democracy is supposed to provide society with the most practical, utilitarian decision-makers that best address the society's concerns.
But we've been gradually losing this sense of... civic responsibility? (For lack of better word), where all (or most) citizens have the sense of "we're all in this together" , and we're moving towards the sports fans-like tribalism in politics where it's "our guys" against "their guys"
And I'm not sure how you get back to that. I mean, it should be education, but (from personal experience), the "civics" mandatory half-course in high school was a joke.
I'll weigh in a little bit here and also on Emps point.
Civic responsibility has been on the wane for years if not decades. Its not a new phenomena. It's disillusionment with the current system. A system where regardless of voting red or blue nothing much changes in your day to day life. I am a busy guy. I do not have time to be a polotical junky or start studying the shit out of politcs. My rationale for voting was
Wynne is incompetent:see Energy contracts we are locked into for how many years,
Ford: When i cared to follow politics, Ford was Trump lite, and him being in power was to everyone detriment. I can't see his brother being all that different.
I quite frankly don't have the time to follow i have many more priorities in my life and given how little politics impact my life and how little as an individual i can influence it, its time not well spent. And i'd like to think I am a very well educated individual, with an open mind as well as being a professional. So it comes as little surprise that so many would like to vote for ford. Ford appeals to the emotion and pathos trumps logos almost always.
And in regards to emps point, the CBC has some very real biases and spins in its news. Outwardly it may appears unbiased but its not that way in reality. Most conservatives hate CBC as well as the fact that knowing people who've worked there, the writers were always worrying about how to spin stories in order to get approved. While CBC is not as overt and does try an present alternate views, its not always considered the same.
Finally, JT was my last real hope for democracy with his promise of abolishing FPTP. That in hindisght was a blatant lie as no politician is going to go for electoral reforms if it makes it harder to get a job. Politicians are like anyone else. they have interests and agenda whether its putting a vision into place or they simply like the job for itself. I can easily see our democracy turning into the binary system the US have where both parties only really represent maybe 20-30% of the total population and everyone else votes out of a lack of alternatives in a few decades.
This post has been edited by LinearPhilosopher: 06 June 2018 - 01:21 AM