I understand how you could misunderstand what I'm saying that way, but this
"Compromise" is not a dirty word. If a policy that does 80%, or even 60% of what you want it to do can get passed, it is better than a 90% or 100% policy that has no chance. It is even worse when you're in a situation where you'd be able to get 70% or 80% if you hadn't been screaming "GIVE ME 100% OR GO TO HELL!", which is far from an uncommon situation. Deciding that "well, Candidate A isn't everything I want a candidate to be, but Candidate B who I like better will probably lose, so I'll support A" is basic logic - you won't get anywhere if you don't make the best effort to make some forward progress.
is not the reality of the last 20 years.
I would be fucking over the moon ecstatic like you wouldn't fucking believe to see my interests even 60% represented in politics. I would celebrate like I just won a million dollars if a president was elected who represented me that well.
What we've seen in reality:
Pros
- Modest, gradual progress on the culture war (i.e. women's and LGBT rights). That's a good thing.
Cons
Continuous, bleeding-from-the-neck magnitude of horrendous losses on the fronts of
- mass surveillance
- government and corporate secrecy/corruption
- the militarization and unaccountability of law enforcement
- economic inequality
- war profiteering/war crimes
- social programs
- infrastructure
- education policy and funding
- the environment
Democrats have sufficiently represented me on like 10-20% of my political interests. And that's if I generously disregard the political interests I have which I understand to be far outside the realm of establishment politics, such as transitioning away from capitalism completely, where I know looking for representation is an impossible expectation. Everything else has been sacrificed on the altar of pragmatism in legislative strategy and appealing-to-moderates in election strategy. On the promise that winning comes first, and then all that other stuff comes second.
Well... in the last 20 years, the appealing to moderates strategy lost us more elections than it's won. Arguably, the only Democrat president since 1996 was also the least moderate-seeming candidate. (compare Obama's optics to Gore, Kerry, and Hillary) And even when we won elections AND CONTROLLED BOTH HOUSES, our legislative strategy STILL saw us losing ground on every single one of those bullet points above.
So tell me again why I should believe in it?
If what you say is true - that doing other than appealing to the minority while screeching that "ANYONE WHO DOESN'T AGREE WITH ME IN ALL WAYS IS FAR-RIGHT" will lose us all elections forever. Then why even care? If you're willing to decide that giving any consideration at all to the interests of 68% of the population is unthinkable, why are you even pretending that you believe in democracy instead of demanding Imperial rule by whoever you think is The God-Savior of Humanity?
And my argument has nothing to do with who we appeal to or how we label those who disagree with us. I'm not looking for 100% purity, and I am absolutely not the type to label someone far-right over any disagreement.
My argument was that the environment is collapsing, and we have a very limited time to do anything about it. We are at a point where it will take radical action to prevent apocalypse-level bad stuff from happening within our lifetimes. We either succeed in radical action, or we all die. This is not hyperbole. Do or die. Scientific certainty.
In this context, does winning an election even matter anymore if we give up our chances of survival in the process? How is that winning?