Friday, June 24, 2011

Voting Guide

There seems to be some confusion 'out there' about the reason and rational for (a) voting and (b) voting for somebody in particular. This handy pocket guide is intended to help dispel confusion and is suitable for writing on your hand for cribbing inside the sanctity of the voting booth.
  1. Vote.

If you don't vote, don't complain. The saying “I don't vote; it only encourages them” is funny but stupid, because it leaves the choice in the hands of the zealots. Don't think you have to read all their position papers to vote intelligently; the public persona is what will guide the policy. Before the 2000 election, George W Bush said he believed in controlling greenhouse gasses but talk is cheap and his whole campaign was laissez faire capitalist, which dominated post-campaign.

  1. Vote for the better candidate.

Don't expect a saint because they rarely appear on the ballot. If you are a ecologically minded, you may be disappointed if the incumbent hasn't made, or the candidate doesn't promise to make, the US more sustainable. But if the opponent denies climate change, scoffs at greenhouse gasses, and doesn't value increased efficiency over “drilling and burning”, then you should vote for your guy despite the disappointment.

Think of a long journey. It is better to head in the correct general direction and fine-tune later that not start at all, or head in the wrong direction.

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