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@ShingoMouse wow, It sounds like this outfit doesn't really even know how the Supreme Court works if it's asking questions like these.

Or, more likely, it probably knows how the Supreme Court works but it's trying to influence people towards its interests by promoting these nonsensical perspectives.

This outfit is taking advantage of you. You need to know that.

@antares The key is that if your state has given you a vote, well then that's your vote to use however you wish for whatever goal you wish to pursue, and one voter's goal can be entirely different from another voter's goal.

So the idea about throwing your vote away relies on the premise of what the goal is and whether the voting choice does or does not contribute to that goal.

Maybe one of your neighbors has a goal of using his vote to affirmatively promote the candidate of one of the major parties, while your other neighbor has a goal of using his vote to support one of the parties themselves regardless of the specific candidate, and another neighbor has a longer term goal of wanting to influence what future candidates may be on the ballot.

Those, and many others, are entirely reasonable goals, and they would advise completely different voting strategies, none of which would be throwing the vote away.

@wjmaggos I 100% agree that this issue is exactly where philosophy meets reality. The problem is that I think you're on the wrong side of it 🙂

You're doing an awful lot of speculating about what's in the jailer's head. In reality people have a ton of different motivations, that vary from person to person, but we don't have to make any assumptions about it, as we can simply say he's acting in his best interests to do it, using his personal power to do it based on whatever might be in his head, and we don't have to assume any more than that. We don't have to philosophize any farther than that reality.

The politician has asked him to use his power to jail a person, and for whatever reason he has agreed to use his power that way, with the end result being exactly what I'm trying to stress, that the politician himself isn't exerting any particularly significant political power in the jailing.

And so it is that politics has no power in itself, but rather, it invites us to use our own power in ways that we agree to use it.

The threat of being jailed is not an expression of political power but of the power of the jailer, even if the jailer decides to cooperate with a political decision.

@JeffC1956

The problem is that I think you guys are talking about philosophy when we are talking about application.

You can philosophize all you want about what might be or what could be or what should be, but at the end of the day, you might also be more concerned with what is as you may or may not be led into a jail cell.

And that is emphatically my point here. It doesn't matter what politicians might say, the power rests with the jailer leading the person into the cell.

The abstract is not so important when it comes to that sort of thing.

@wjmaggos @JeffC1956

@selea The problem is that it's so leaky.

And again let me say that this is just part of the way this system was designed. It's not about bad administration or anything else, I think it is absolutely a flaw in the design of this system.

If you have a single instance that you haven't blocked that misbehaves, that's it. The content is liable to be out there.

Unless you're willing to lock down your instance so that you only allow other instances that you personally trust and can vouch for not running any sort of compromising software, even by accident, well then your users need to know what they are getting into here.

Yes, take steps to reduce it, but even if you reduce it, a lot of users are just not aware that the option exists here.

@shellheim

@wjmaggos No I would reverse that.

It's not that the society we take for granted requires that most people agree to go along, but the opposite: the society we see before us is required by what the people have agreed to go along WITH.

The society is what the people have come up with. It doesn't require the people, but the people created it. It doesn't exist separate from the people.

In the same vein, it's not true that otherwise we need totalitarianism to make it function at all, because it doesn't exist separate from us. We wouldn't need totalitarianism to enact society, rather we would require a different society based on what we agreed to create in a distributed way.

Because politics is not power. We each contribute power as we see fit, with politics being just one expression of how we are ourselves organize our own use of our own power.

We don't need this, we don't need totalitarianism, we don't need super bowl tickets, we don't need Yoko Ono albums 🙂

We decide what we want from society collectively and what society ends up being is the reflection of what we all decide to do with our power.

It's not the other way around.

@freeschool @volkris@mastodon.sdf.org @amerika @JeffC1956

@freeschool

This is a great illustration of what I'm talking about.

You go to jail? How does that happen exactly? Think about it literally.

If a politician declares that you go to jail, what happens? Nothing. He writes it on a scrap of paper or he says it into a microphone, but pfft, those are just words.

Now you might decide to voluntarily go to jail, I guess, but that's your own power that you're executing, not the politician's.

Or maybe an officer of some sort comes around and picks you up and puts you in jail, but again, that wasn't the politician, that wasn't the politician's power, that was the power of the individual officer who decided to use that power to put you in jail.

So it all comes back to, politics really doesn't have power. It isn't power. It can help organize power, it can help to get you to submit a tax payment that is then offered to the officer in return for his agreeing to use HIS OWN POWER to round you up and put you behind bars.

But that's his power, that's your power, that's not politics, that's our agreeing to accept the political invitation to use our power in such a way.

Politics is not power. It's only an invitation for us all to contribute our power in ways that represent the political consensus, if we want to.

@volkris@mastodon.sdf.org @amerika @wjmaggos @JeffC1956

@sammi you keep making assumptions about me that are just wrong.

I have a problem with that? No. I really don't care.

You might, though, if you don't want to sound like a nut who's just spouting propaganda in the course of arguing for something pretty extreme.

But that's not my problem. I have no problem with that.

@Lazarou

@shellheim I mean, you probably are!

Like I said, the way this platform works, your instance is broadcasting your posts to a lot of people who are perfectly able to take those posts and sell them to data miners.

With all of the posts being out there for the taking like this, I would be amazed if companies aren't out there collecting and reselling already, and haven't been doing it for a while.

The way this platform is set up, it makes it really easy for them to do that, so why wouldn't they? They get the benefits of data mining without having to bother marketing their platform building it themselves or anything like that.

We have set up a system that is ripe for exploitation, so it would be amazing if it wasn't being exploited that way.

@olives It's crucial to keep in mind that elected officials play a role in this. All too often they escape accountability as people get upset with courts.

@olives I mean... I'd say there are very key lessons in political science, not tech, to learn from that.

Yeah, they pioneered regulations. And showed why some paths shouldn't be uncritically followed.

@hesgen Yeah, but I think that second part really captures the problem with the first part as well.

Humanity eventually will always prevail? No, it will only prevail right until it doesn't.

But that kind of flowery language seems to be what the guy is selling, going right back to this seams is a war against humanity itself.

No, that's also wrong.

@sammi Oh, I couldn't care in the least whether you take me seriously.

However, the things that you're saying here are contradicted by numerous reporting outfits from around the world all independently looking into the claims you're making and finding that they're mere propaganda.

Like I said, if you don't care that you sound like a nut job, great! But if you want other people to come around to your perspective, then you need to realize that you're going to have to make stronger arguments and actually deal with the fact that what you're saying is being debunked on a daily basis by international news organizations.

You have a tall hill to climb here if you want to sound like anything other than a kook.

@Lazarou

@shellheim Well for example, your post was broadcast to me, and I'm not on your instance.

Your post just as well could have been (and maybe was!) broadcast to companies set up on other instances who will vacuum up everything they receive from you and monetize that as they wish.

Once your content leaves your instance it's a free for all. No matter what policies your instance may have, most of the activity here is being publicly broadcast without restrictions on monetization.

@freeschool but a politician ONLY has power to the extent that his rhetoric is accepted by others.

A politician can say whatever he wants to the public, can pass whatever laws he wants, can sign whatever proclamations he wants, but if others don't buy in to what he's saying, he's utterly powerless. Like so many laws that are blatantly ignored, so the politician is blatantly ignored.

Because politics doesn't have power on its own.

So it's not really about politicians telling people to do things like listen to each other, but about politicians seeing people willing to listen to each other, and maybe acting on that to invite them to follow that urge that they would accept, if that's really what you want them to be doing.

But mainly I don't think politicians have all that much room to act in that space. It's a lot different for a politician to ask people to pay taxes than to get people to have a chat. One is public, the other private.

When you mentioned violence and consent, I don't think it's really so much about consent. It's more that the politician cannot instigate any violence, consent or not, if others aren't interested in whatever the politician has asked them to do. It's more than consent to political violence, it's active participation in that use of force.

I emphasize that to emphasize the point: politics and politicians don't have power, power is a separate thing that politics and politicians can try to engage with based on the interest of members of the public in what they have to say.

Politicians only have the power that we are interested in lending them, and one instance at a time. We have the power in the end.

@volkris@mastodon.sdf.org @amerika @wjmaggos @JeffC1956

@Hiker seems to me that if you're the one blocking things on your instance, you have the answer to the question of why it has to be destroyed.

That sort of slicing and dicing and blocking is pretty much the closest thing we have to destruction, so I guess the answer is, some people would rather watch it burn?

@PamCrossland@lgbtqia.space
@Gargron

@shellheim Well it's so important for users who don't want monetization to realize that companies ABSOLUTELY CAN monetize what you post here, and arguably can do it much easier and more effectively since everything you post is probably being delivered directly to them.

A person like me doesn't care, so it doesn't really matter to me, but if it matters to you, then you need to know that it's how this works here.

@selea

@shellheim basically, the instance that you signed up to is censoring what you can see.

Hopefully that is a policy that the particular users of that instance want in place, but that's how it works on this platform, it's all up to the instance.

You go directly to matdn.social then you are bypassing your instances' restrictions.

@selea

@fkamiah17 but then, he's not really known for having chosen particularly competent senior officials...

@derbruesseler I would suggest that the focus on instances instead of users that is fundamental to this platform reflects exactly that sort of space for subcultures.

@randahl

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