I have two articles coming out this week that focus on criticizing Kamala Harris and the Democrats. I aim to explain how, if Trump wins, much of the fault would lie with Harris and the Democratic Party. So I'm no partisan liberal. I'm not even American, so it's not my fight.
But the issue before you isn't the whole history of the two parties. Your choice is between Trump and Harris, and the fact remains that whatever problems you find in Harris, those same problems and more apply in a much more egregious fashion to Trump. That's why Americans' choice is clear.
This article dismisses the concerns of so-called undecided voters because the deeper issue is the nonvoting part of the electorate that's cynical about American politics. You seem cynical in that respect, and I certainly share that cynicism. I believe Trump has such huge support despite his odiousness because he's tapping into a reservoir of resentment. Many Americans just want to lodge a protest vote, so they're using Trump to take vengeance on the establishment.
Voting that way is strategic, but the judgment must still be made about whether such a protest is worth it. Is it more important to punish the Democrats and the deep state by sending a bull into the China shop, or to prevent the bull from wreaking havoc and disgracing American values and institutions? Voting for fascist Trump is essentially an act of collective suicide, the implication being that America isn't worth fighting for. If that's what you think, maybe you should move to another country.