anotherguy said:
Not voting at all or voting for a third party that doesn't have a chance as a protest doesn't make much sense to me because you're basically letting everyone else who voted Republican or Democrat decide the election, which in a close one could change who wins and you lose either way.
I am fond of referring to our country, our government, our system, our culture as "a 230-old experiment in self-government".
We don't have it perfected yet. We haven't figured out how to keep the political conversation up on the roadway and out of the ditches.
If you never vote for someone who is obviously going to lose,
what vehicle are you left with to let those who won the election know that there are citizens who disagree with the platform of the winner? If you never vote for someone who is obviously going to lose,
what vehicle are you left with to let those who lost know that there is support for their platform and that they should continue to promote their concepts?
If we are going to post our own personal "wish list ideas" on how to improve the political system in our country, I throw these two ideas into the soup-pot.
1. All political advertising should reveal WHO is paying for it. In the days when our country was founded, and all of these attributes of "free speech" were being put into the recipe of our national soup, politics tended to me much more oriented to the local scene, and it was darned near impossible to do much electioneering and remain anonymous in the long term.
2. Political advertising funding should not cross state lines. Why should a billionaire who is based in Nevada or Kansas be allowed to spend enough money in a Wisconsin congressional district or in the state of Florida to "suck all the oxygen out of the room". What is American about that?
When we get back to the place where "ugly language advertising" is locally funded and I have a chance to run into the person paying for the attack ad in the meat market at the supermarket, then my neighbors and I can handle politics more in line with what took place at town hall meetings in the original colonies that had become states.
If I go to choir practice on Wednesday night at church and I am sitting behind the wife of the guy who is paying for negative attack ads, I can get them stopped!
There are some dark sides to that kind of face-to-face communication, but so far, we haven't grown up enough in this country to the point we can agree on how to keep political discourse out of the road ditches in the 21st Century.