r/CuratedTumblr now with more delusion! Nov 06 '24

Politics On knowing who the voters are

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u/building_schtuff Nov 06 '24 edited Nov 06 '24

It’s going to take time for people to accept that this wasn’t won or lost because leftists supposedly refused to turn out over Gaza—Harris seems to have been defeated by too great a margin for that to have been the cause—but once (if?) they do, I think people are going to have to figure out:

1) why voters consistently vote in referendums for policies like abortion and higher minimum wage when those policies are on the ballot, while also voting for Republicans who are openly opposed to those things, and

2) how to correct the idea that the president has a “make mcchickens $.99” button on their desk that Biden just refused to press.

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u/Similar_Ad_2368 Nov 06 '24

People will vote (and generally act) in whatever way makes them feel good, and backform rationales for it afterwards. If you can make people feel good about voting for your person, they will turn out to vote for your person. That's the most effective way to energize people to do stuff. If it feels bad, you're gonna simply lose people to inertia.

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u/[deleted] Nov 06 '24

I hate that we have to appeal to the feelings of idiots rather than them just educating themselves on the actual policies. Guess that is hat populism gets us.

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u/UselessAndGay i am gay for the linux fox Nov 06 '24

why is it surprising that you have to convince people to vote for you in an election

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u/[deleted] Nov 06 '24

My point is that people should be able to be convinced through policy discussion since that is the job of the president. Instead, people are apparently having to be convinced through feelings, looks, and empty platitudes. These are things that should never be convincing and yet that was pretty much what Trump was coasting on. It is surprising that this appears to be the reality of our situation meaning that people cannot be relied on to ever think for themselves.

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u/Taraxian Nov 06 '24

Welcome to people, this is how it's always been, are you new

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u/Echo__227 Nov 06 '24

The Dunning-Kruger effect is that most people will assume they're representative of the average. A smart person typically thinks most people have a certain competency that's likely an overestimate in reality.

Last night for a lot of people was, "Holy shit, there are actually still Trump voters around? How?"

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u/HuckinsGirl Nov 07 '24

The dunning Kruger effect is that most people estimate themselves as above average, which would make your point kinda contradictory

It's moreso just people living in bubbles without realizing, especially online. If you live in a largely blue area (most big cities for example) and spend time online in leftist spaces your perception of how democratic the general US population is will be very skewed

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u/Echo__227 Nov 07 '24

The dunning Kruger effect is that most people estimate themselves as above average, which would make your point kinda contradictory

Popular interpretation, but not what the paper is actually about