Room for
a View
Editorial
Rejecting
the Politics of Fear
By now, youre sick of anything having to do with this stupid election.
Bush repulses you, Gore disappoints you and so far nobodys succeeded
in getting a none of the above choice on the ballot that
would force the parties to put up better candidates for a second vote.
Youve been wooed, pandered to, scared and manipulated by the Democrats
and the Republicans and youre just about convinced that a vote
for anyone other than Bush or Gore is a vote for Bush or Gore. Right?
Dont buy it. Thats just Orwellian doublspeak. If the majority
of eligible voters in this country, who traditionally sit on their keisters
Election Day, actually went to the polls and voted, nobody could predict
the outcome. Nader could win. Buchanan could win. Hell, Mickey Mouse
could win. Dont forget, even the fabled Reagan Landslide
represented a small fraction of the total electorate. If we werent
all so jaded, so cynical, so disgusted and so depressed, we could elect
anyone we wanted. Anyone.
Personally, Id vote for a potted plant if I thought doing so would
stick it to the Dems and Reps who think theyve got us under their
money-fatted thumbs. Fortunately, theres a more qualified candidate.
This November 7, my vote goes to Ralph Nader.
Do I really think hell win? No. Does it matter? No. If Im
going to vote for someone I dont like out of fear that someone
I like even less might win, theres no point in voting at all.
And thats what the majority of Americans have been doingnot
voting at all. By voting for Nader, I vote my conscience and reject
the politics of fear. I also help the Green Party qualify for federal
matching funds in the next election cycle. Without money, the Greens
will never be able to get their message out. Even if Nader doesnt
winand even if a Green Party candidate doesnt win four years
from nowa good showing for Nader will force the Dems and Reps
to adopt Green ideas in order to try to get my vote next time.
So this year, my vote might actually make a difference. What about yours?
Todd Paul
Voting
Rights, Voting Responsibilities
I cant wait for election day, if only to be relieved from
the constant chatter of freinds, foes and political pundits debating
the big question of who to vote for and why.
There is no relief in sight as friends, foes and political pundits,
debate the big question of who to vote for and why. There was a time
I would vote based on an admitted surface knowledge learned in a variety
of college classes and skimmed from the crap fed to me by the media.
Now I am the media. Surface knowledge has been replaced by unending
minutia of too many harrowing facts. Texas is a mess. Dead bodies fly
out of a prison system that has executed more prisoners than any other
state in the US has in the past two decades. Breeding a class of working
poor people, poverty is strewn from one end of the state to the other
with 12.9 percent of the households not having enough food to meet basic
needs.
In terms of poverty, Tennessee does only a bit better. Among its rolling
hills, only 10.9 percent of its households go to bed on less than a
full stomach. A recent George article reported on a 57-year-old worker
who lacked health insurance when he had a heart attack following a series
of strokes. He sold everything he owned in order to become Medicaid-eligible.
His last job? Working 80 to 100 hours per week on the Gore family farm
for five dollars per hour.
Historically non-enrolled, last time around I registered as a Democrat
to help Clinton become President. I now fully regret that choice. This
time around I get to choose between two corporate-birthed Bobsy-twins
and someone who nobody believes has a chance of being elected.
So what do we do? Im not going there. But Ill tell you what
not to do. Dont sit home on the couch like yesterdays news
and leave the voting up to others. Dont you dare. The freedom
to vote in this country was hard fought for. Not by those white-faced
founding fathers of ours who neatly arranged that they only should have
the vote. It was fought for later, after the Civil War, when agitation
by women fighting for the right to vote joined with the voices of black
men and women and demanded that the basic rights of citizenship be extended
to all.
In 1868, the 14th Amendment defined citizenship, among other things,
as a male condition. In 1870, the 15th Amendment stated the right to
vote could not be denied on account of race, color, or previous
condition of servitude. This allowed all males, including blacks,
to vote. Yet it wasnt until 1920 that women, black and white,
were allowed to vote in the US. And now that we all have this right
to vote, I would bet that it is the least used right of all.
They say if you dont use it you lose it. I dont care who
you vote for.
Just get out there and vote.
Lorna Tychostup
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