💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › william-gillis-the-case-against-voting.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 14:43:56. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: The Case Against Voting
Author: William Gillis
Date: November 20th, 2018
Language: en
Topics: voting, anti-voting
Source: https://c4ss.org/content/51460

William Gillis

The Case Against Voting

So we’ve survived another election cycle and the inevitable surge of

libertarian socialists like Chomsky lecturing anarchists about our

abstention from voting.

I want to be clear: it is certainly true that the results of elections

can matter. Unless you’re gonna roll the very long odds on a type of

accelerationism, a bumbling centrist would be better than literal

Hitler. Today, as the republican party lurches to the furthest white

nationalist extremes, the “eh the parties are the same” rhetoric no

longer cuts it for many. However. Just because the results of an

election matter, doesn’t remotely mean that your individual vote

matters.

The odds of your single vote swinging an important election are

astronomical. There is no getting around this reality. Elections in

representative democracies are all or nothing affairs: either a

politician or piece of legislation wins or it doesn’t. Up until you can

tip the balance one way or another your vote is of no causal consequence

on the outcome. A typical election in my home state is settled by voting

margins in the hundreds of thousands. Voting with the winning or losing

side is inconsequential in such cases.

Yes, the stakes of the election’s results may be high for millions, but

the odds of influencing the few elections with such stakes are, for

most, usually smaller than one in a trillion. You can do far more net

good handing out a twenty to a homeless person, caring for those in your

life, organizing meaningful alternative infrastructure that directly

helps others, or just doing the daily work of sustaining your own mental

health.

Voting is thus far more irrational than buying a lottery ticket. At

least with the lottery ticket there are plausible utility functions and

economic conditions for impoverished people where the one in a billion

chance is a good investment. There are exceptions where hyper-tight

races with huge stakes are known about in advance, but this is almost

never the case and certainly wasn’t the case for the vast majority of

ballots cast this year.

Your act of voting doesn’t matter, but the fact that so many leftists

think it does reveals deep collectivist irrationalities that DO matter

and affect other actually relevant forms of activism and strategy.

The argument for voting is very Kantian: “act so that if everyone acted

so…” and “if no literally one voted then voting would matter again” but

if literally no one voted the government wouldn’t maintain legitimacy.

And in any case this is not an actual causality. When you vote you don’t

magically cause everyone else like you to vote, you are a distinct agent

with distinct internal thoughts. Your individual actions have only very

weak externalities beyond the direct consequences of your choice/vote.

You could very well campaign to influence how others vote by deluding

thousands and then not vote yourself since your personal vote would

still be irrelevant, indeed I know some sharp-minded liberals who’ve

done precisely this.

Unfortunately the delusional thinking behind voting crops up in leftist

inclinations in general. They want to build giant organizations, giant

armies, with individuals all acting in low return-on-investment ways, in

hopes of aggregate impact. They don’t search for opportunities of high

impact individual direct action. Thus, leftists gravitate towards “you

have an obligation to show up for a meaningless protest” type stuff.

Sure the demonstration only had a thousand something people milling

about in hidden embarrassment, but if it had a hundred thousand then

maybe they could storm some building and change something! If you just

keep voting, keep attending demonstrations, keep buying lottery tickets,

then maybe just maybe…

Democratic thinking seeks to build numbers first and foremost. It

considers “having” more people to be the very definition of success.

When this lens gets applied to organizing it detaches activism from a

direct evaluation of consequences.

We are asked to keep showing up for meetings in an organization in hopes

that one day this ritual of civic participation will transmute into

potency and positive consequences. But very quickly the participation

becomes the end in and of itself. The size of membership becomes the

sole metric of success. The feeling of “community” sustained by these

rituals becomes our real payoff.

Just as democracy teaches us to defer accomplishing things until after

The Election, leftist politics slides into deferring accomplishing

things until after The Revolution. The party is to be built up until one

big breaking moment where the investment suddenly pans out.

Of course, until that moment, one more person joining doesn’t really

accomplish anything. And so leftists become obsessed with instituting

the same suppression of individual rationality among their members as

democratic governments do to their citizens. Participation becomes a

moral good in and of itself, acts are policed and rewarded in ways

increasingly divorced from their consequences. The rituals are what

matter, all talk of goals or efficiency be damned.

Collective action like voting often requires top-down enforcement and/or

precommitments and sacrifice of continual individual agency so that you

all march lockstep into action.

But anarchists — as opposed to leftists — don’t accept giving up

personal agency and constant clearheaded evaluations. And we refuse to

embrace systems, institutions, or strategies that necessitate that.

Instead we advocate direct action and finding ways of getting the goods

without first having to scale up to a giant mass of people. Our projects

are generally geared to slope upwards in impact rather than being all or

nothings, so that every additional bit of energy or time people invest

directly accomplishes something real, like feeding the homeless or

arming trans women. Unlike voting — which is channeled through a

centralized chokepoint and makes your involvement meaningless until a

very specific amount of people are involved — this approach allows

someone’s involvement to directly pay off in positive consequences.

Rather than pouring energy into fighting sweeping universal abortion

laws, we can simply build networks of abortion provision that are

ungovernable, every new facility or cell a win. This gives individuals

getting involved informed agency in their participation, in that they

know the payout from their investment, and it gives them actual payout

every step of the way. In this process our strategies and projects

cultivate active engagement every step of the way, rather than

perpetuating a culture of passivity and complicity in larger

institutions and habits beyond reproach.

Even when we do work towards very distant goals like social

transformation, the work that we do ideally moves that transition

closer, sooner. We may not yet have sufficient numbers to normalize a

new social norm or launch a project, but we hasten the day it will

arrive and thus minimize the time people will have to live under the

interim state of affairs. In our democracy a ballot measure isn’t passed

the moment enough names sign a form, even if a measure is put on a

ballot years later a whole new election with new acts of voting are

required.

But most importantly, in our rejection of the democratic psychology,

anarchists open ourselves to being on the lookout for opportunities of

individual action. When agency is correctly grounded back in the

individual minds that constitute the only true agents in the world,

anarchism restores a personal responsibility often occluded or avoided

by democratic thinking. Anarchism demands that we ask at every moment,

“what should I do to best liberate all?” It requires constantly

reevaluating our model of the world and our personal context within it.

This is why it’s almost always anarchists who seize opportunities for

high-impact action like hacking corporations, coding tools that will be

used by millions, or assassinating dictators. We continually build high

impact tools, art, and are the ones happy to go to prison to stop a

pogrom affecting hundreds. When it comes to making a huge difference

there’s a ton of low hanging fruit, as a friend of mine said, “in this

broken society there’s no excuse for not personally saving thousands.”

If democratic thinking is Kantian, a blueprint of habits and rituals to

be unthinkingly stuck to regardless of effectiveness, indoctrinating us

to operate like a slave with a cop in our head, anarchism is by contrast

act consequentialist — demanding active consideration of causes and

impact at all moments, and staying open to unique contexts.

There are of course rare situations where a vote has some higher chance

of being meaningful. And the stakes can be quite high. Anarchist purity

police are not going to arrest you for voting. But such situations are

starkly rare and, for most of us in America, living in states and

counties solidly one color or another, almost never something we’ll see.

This is important because countering democratic thinking is critical to

turning the tide.

The appeal “yes but if everyone thought the same as you” is meaningless

first of all because our individual decision to vote or not has no

magical casual impact on others’ decisions. At best by objecting to the

democratic psychology and irrational arguments we can carve out some

cultural space for people to gain more agency and clearheaded

evaluations, maybe persuade a few. But second of all, if more people

thought like us they’d help pluck the remaining low-hanging fruit.