[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: Voting for a Third Party Candidate Is NOT a Wasted Vote Preface: Many Americans are waking up to the fact that the Republican and Democratic candidates are incredibly similar. Many people are starting to realize that Obama and Romney are virtually indistinguishable on war, jobs, freedoms and favoring fatcats instead of the little guy. Judge Napolitano explained today why voting for a third party is not wasting ones vote: Can one morally vote for the lesser of two evils? In a word, no. A basic principle of Judeo-Christian teaching and of the natural law to which the country was married by the Declaration of Independence is that one may not knowingly do evil that good may come of it. So, is a vote for [a third party] or no vote at all wasted? I reject the idea that a principled vote is wasted. Your vote is yours, and so long as your vote is consistent with your conscience, it is impossible to waste your vote. On the other hand, even a small step toward the free market and away from
central economic planning would be at least a small improvement for every Americans freedom. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. The liberal former chief aide to progressive Congressman Alan Grayson Matt Stoller agrees. After demonstrating how similar Obama and Romney are on most major issues, Stoller concludes: I think its worth voting for a third party candidate, and Ill explain why below. There are only five or six states that matter in this election; in the other 44 or 45, your vote on the presidential level doesnt matter. It is as decorative as a vote for an American Idol contestant. So, unless you are in one of the few swing states that matters, a vote for Obama is simply an unabashed endorsement of his policies. But if you are in a swing state, then the question is, what should you do? The people themselves, what they believe and what they dont, can constrain political leaders. And under Obama, because there is now no one making the anti-torture argument, Americans have become more tolerant of torture, drones, war and authoritarianism in general. The case against Obama is that the people themselves will be better citizens under a Romney administration, distrusting him and placing constraints on his behavior the way they wont on Obama. As a candidate, Obama promised a whole slew of civil liberties protections, lying the whole time. Obama has successfully organized the left part of the Democratic Party into a force that had rhetorically opposed war and civil liberties violations, but now cheerleads a weakened America
. We must fight this thuggish political culture Bush popularized, and Obama solidified in place. But can a third-party candidate win? No. So what is the point of voting at all, or voting for a third-party candidate? My answer is that this election is, first and foremost, practice for crisis moments. Elections are just one small part of how social justice change can happen. The best moment for change is actually a crisis, where there is actually policy leverage.
Saying no to evil in 2012 will help us understand who is willing to say no to evil when it really matters. And when you have power during a crisis, theres no end to the amount of good you can do. How do we drive large-scale change during moments of crisis? How do we use this election to do so? Well, voting third party or even just honestly portraying Obamas policy architecture is a good way to identify to ourselves and each other who actually has the integrity to not cave to bullying
. We need to put ourselves into the position to be able to run the government. After all, if a political revolution came tomorrow, could those who believe in social justice and climate change actually govern? [If we had had more courage, we could have] reorganized our politics. Instead the oligarchs took control, because we werent willing to face them down when we needed to show courage. So now we have the worst of all worlds, an inevitably worse crisis and an even more authoritarian structure of governance. The reason to advocate for a third-party candidate is to build the civic muscles willing to say no to the establishment in a crisis moment we all know is coming. Right now, the liberal establishment is teaching its people that letting malevolent political elites do what they want is not only the right path, it is the only path. Anything other than that is dubbed an affront to common decency. Just telling the truth is considered beyond rude. We can do this. And the moments to let us make the changes we need are coming. There is endless good we can do, if enough of us are willing to show the courage that exists within every human being instead of the malevolence and desire for conformity that also exists within every heart. Systems that cant go on, dont. The political elites, as much as they kick the can down the road, know this. The question we need to ask ourselves is, do we? Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 12.
#1. To: X-15 (#0)
I voted GaryJohnson2012.com - Live Free...so can many of you.
I as well. This afternoon. Not a straight Libertarian ticket, pretty close though. But my true sentiments are closer to this:
#14. To: Buzzard (#12)
Mine neither. Yet we're "trusting" electric votes to be counted in Espana...come'on. It is a joke, on US.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|