For one thing, before you assume that “not sharing your passion for keeping Trump out of office” must equal moral culpability for “all the damage you are sure Trump will cause,” remember a couple of important aspects of American politics.
The first is that electoral politics presents a crummy indivisible package deal. You can’t pick and choose specific aspects of any national leader. (Even if you think you know what a politician will do, there is little chance that they will actually do it.) Someone who didn’t vote for Clinton may indeed have felt that someone with Trump’s history with expressed attitudes toward woman, haunted by accusations and confessions of sexual assault, should not be president.
But maybe they wanted someone who promised to bring jobs back to America. Or wanted someone they thought was less likely to start a war with Russia over Syria, and were willing to overlook that he was a bad man, even a criminal, for those reasons. (If you voted for Clinton and think everyone who didn’t is directly responsible for every bad thing Trump might do, or does, or did, do you accept that your Clinton vote would have made you responsible for the carnage and chaos of any future war with Syria?)
Maybe that voter fell for the constant drumbeats in our culture that told you your responsibility to democracy was to, absolutely for sure vote, and yet also to only vote for someone who “had a chance to win.”
And lacking any choice that voter could actually stand behind in good conscience, made a choice based on a perceived least-bad option, not able to give every separate aspect of the candidate’s records full weight in and of itself.
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