History of voter turnout in the US:
Too many people think they have a duty to "stay informed" and "their vote matters". So they spend 100s of hours a year consumed with the current thing just so they can cast their ballot with confidence.
Getting the "correct" group of people into the broken system is not going to make your life any better.
You can improve your own situation 1000x more effectively by ignoring the clown show and focusing on what you can control.
i never would have guessed voter turnout was on the rise, i thought for sure people were voting less than ever before
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You've got to factor in that historically most people didn't have the right to vote. Women only got the vote in the 1920s, mandatory (and often discriminatory) literacy tests for voting rights only abolished in 60s, big disenfranchisement in the post reconstruction era etc.
You can also map the suppression of unions (which gave working people direct means to improve their working conditions), with the shift towards the idea that "only your vote matters".
It was a deliberate narrative shift to persuade people they shouldn't take direct power, but hand it to federal representatives on their behalf.
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The founding fathers of America probably intended for voting to be an activity for "right bell curve" citizens. Over the centuries, voting has been opened to more and more "middle and left bell curve" populace.
Now, voting doesn't matter and the game is all about lobbying, which is a "right bell curve" game. But with less transparency than a ballot box.
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Agree, lobbying is to the right on intelligence, to the left on ethics and totally behind the scenes
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they spend 100s of hours a year consumed with the current thing just so they can cast their ballot with confidence.
But taking 10 hours to try to learn the very basics of Bitcoin is too much for them of course.
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Exactly.
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