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At least in this post, I'm not advocating for any particular political position; I mean for this to be a more generalized discussion.

I have never understood what prompts people to attend political rallies. None of the current US political candidates 100% align with my views, but I am very confident that I made the right choice in who I voted for. That is to say, I'd consider myself a strong supporter of [name here].

To me, it feels like attending a political rally is like attending a college lecture. You have a person giving you information, but you don't gain anything by hearing it in-person as opposed to reading it or watching a recording. If I want to learn something, it's much more comfortable for me to read and article or watch a video in the comfort of my own home. If I want to understand what a political candidate stands for, I'd much rather watch a recording of a town-hall meeting or read something she (oops) wrote rather than taking the time to drive to a rally, get packed in with a bunch of other people, and simply stand and listen.

I understand concerts. Hearing live music sounds vastly different than listening to a recording. Same with movies; most of us don't have an IMAX theater at home. When you're trying to gather information, though, what's the draw in standing outside in a crowd at listening to it in person?

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[-] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 33 points 2 weeks ago

I get what you're saying, I think there's something to hearing it from the horse's mouth. However, yeah most people don't go to have their opinions changed, now they go to cheer and chant and show support.

However, I'll also say, in these smaller states, there really isn't a lot of going on. A politician is essentially a celebrity to a lot of people, and so having a big event like that in your town of 15,000 is a pretty big deal.

[-] dan1101@lemm.ee 5 points 2 weeks ago

That's true, I wouldn't travel 100 miles to attend one but if it happened 5 miles from me and I liked the candidate I might go for the novelty.

[-] barsquid@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

It's like attending a concert. An additional similarity is I wouldn't attend any of the popular bands' but might even travel a bit to see one of the indies.

[-] corroded@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

I think at least for me, you really nailed it when you said that politicians are like celebrities to a lot of people. I personally have just never had any interest in celebrities. Music is a big thing for me, but if I had the opportunity to go meet one of my favorite artists, I wouldn't. What am I going to do, say "hey, I really like your music," and that's the end of it? There's no point. I enjoy the art that they make, but meeting them briefly in-person isn't going to change anything for them or for me. It'd be a better use of my time to stay home and do just about anything else, maybe even stay home and listen to one of their albums.

Politicians are the same. I'm not buying their album, I'm voting for them. They don't produce an entertainment product, but they produce a change in my country (be it good or bad) that directly affects me. It still doesn't make the slightest bit of difference to me or to them if I meet them in-person or not. I can respect what they they do professionally without having a desire to shake hands.

[-] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 1 points 2 weeks ago

Ah we're different there. There are 2 celebrities I would love to sit down and have a chat with, I would love to know more about them. It will never happen, but it's there.

I think people are that way with politicians in this country, they are giddy and obsess, and it's a fun euphoric state where you forget about reality. During Covid I fell down the parasocial relationship ladder a few rungs because it was more fun than staring at my wall for hours on end, but when Covid ended I pulled myself back out. Not everyone does though.

this post was submitted on 03 Nov 2024
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