rio wrote:
No, look, this is what you always miss about what I'm saying. (Don't mean that in a nasty way; it's probably me expressing it wrong).
In terms of politics, I believe in directness. So yes, operating entirely outside the government, which is based on elected representatives and is therefore by definition an indirect mode of political action.
Let us look again at the example of China. A Chinese worker is a victim of the (de facto) anti-Freedom of Association laws in that country, and is also a victim of the employer-friendly environment which means his wages can easily be kept from him. Does he think "ah well, maybe some reformers will take over the CCP and give us some limited electoral rights, then I can vote for the slightly more liberal one, then perhaps they will introduce some legislation that benefits me". Or, does he contact colleagues and take direct action against the employer that is exploiting him?
You might say this is pie-in-the-sky or whatever, but it is what thousands and thousands of people are doing every day, in an environment that is entirely seperate from the hedging nonsense of representative politics.
This is why I will vote for trade unionists ahead of full-time politicians, even if they do have a short-sighted platform. But, ultimately, the question is not one of voting in the first place. It is a question of action within our everyday environments.
Fine, fair points all. Is it not a seperate issue, though? Looking at Britain, I'm all in favour of trade unions, but come on, we're not going to have citizen's councils deciding legislation, we're going to have a Conservative government deciding it, and unless the country goes Poll Tax-Riot on Cameron's ass, then it's grin-and-bear-it time. You call representative politics hedging nonsense, and a lot of the time it is, but without revolution it's the system we have. I don't agree that working within the system is as useless as you think it is.
DM wrote:
also, your 'realpolitik' stance precludes any form of political change not enacted at the ballot box by the usual players, what a sadly defeatist attitude for someone in their 20's to have.
Such as? Come on, convince me here. And I disagree with that 'realpolitik' tag, btw.