Sure, there’s no legal requirement.
Can you acknowledge that this hypothetical problem has never come up as progressive candidates have never won the majority of votes? (Because, yup, the progressive youth vote doesn’t show up.)
Yes or no.
No. What meaning is there in talking about votes in an election with no guarantee of fairness?
I just held an election where I got 100% of the votes (just one vote, me). If you don’t like it, it’s your fault for not showing up to it.
This is an impressively dumb argument.
“We shouldn’t vote because I can imagine a scenario in which they don’t count the votes!”
“Has that happened?”
“Well, no, but it could!”
I doubt you’re old enough to have seen Billy Maddison but you remind me of the bus driver:
Bus Driver : That Veronica Vaughn is one piece of ass, I know from experience dude. If you know what I mean.
Billy Madison : No, you don’t.
Bus Driver : Well, not me personally but a guy I know. Him and her got it on. Wooo-eee!
Billy Madison : No, they didn’t.
Bus Driver : No, but you can imagine what it’d be like!
Cool.
Do you apply that standard consistently? If Kim Jong Un announces his party got 100% of the vote, are you going to say that’s on his opponents for not showing up?
Also, I never said “we shouldn’t vote.” What I said is that the process isn’t legitimate. As I mentioned, there were plenty of shenanigans that the democratic establishment used to ensure that Sanders wouldn’t get the nomination, so this isn’t just a hypothetical about what I can imagine or what might happen.