Get Out the Vote???
Today is Election
Day. Oddly, I am not going to ask you to
vote. [More on that later.]
Voting
patterns are interesting; some are predictable, others present a mystery. For example, why do Minnesotans vote more
than anyone else in the country? Why are
Texas and West Virginia , two states with nothing in
common in size, geography or demographics, at the bottom of that list of
voters? If you are female, older, and
well educated you are more likely to vote.
Eighteen to 29 year-olds are the least engaged—strange for people who
are sure they know it all. Hispanics
vote the least, followed closely by blacks.
Why
would any citizen not vote?
If I had my way, every eligible citizen would be given a
free picture ID, periodically updated with no more than a 7 year old picture
and a valid address which they would use to vote. Voting should be easy and convenient. Early voting is wonderful, absentee ballots are
great, and I welcome the day that I can vote on line. That being said, the sanctity of the vote is
of paramount importance.
Let’s
take the example of an Iowa
woman who voted twice this year. She justified her criminal actions by saying she
wanted her man to win and the system is rigged. The irony of her being the one who is "rigging" it and that she was also caught seemed lost on her, but judging from the mug shot I'm guessing this is not the first intellectual concept that has zipped right past this cutie. Ignoring the,
“one man, one vote” principle, she voted both by absentee and at the
polls. Her first vote was hers to cast
as she wished. But her second vote costs good
Americans (those who believe in obeying the law) three votes.
Think of voting as a number line. We have Smith on one side and Jones on the other. You, the voter, sit on the middle of the line at point O. If you vote for Smith it puts him at + 1. But it also puts Jones at - 1. A dishonest vote needs one honest one to put Jones back at O, a second to put him at + 1 where he should have been with the correcting vote and a third to replace the one needed to negate the illegitimate vote. Ms. Slimeball, through her criminal actions, has out voted the good guys by a 3-1 ratio. But, guarding the vote is the law’s problem. [Personally, I want each one of these insects found out and their right to vote rescinded for the rest of their sneaking, lying lives. But I digress.]
Think of voting as a number line. We have Smith on one side and Jones on the other. You, the voter, sit on the middle of the line at point O. If you vote for Smith it puts him at + 1. But it also puts Jones at - 1. A dishonest vote needs one honest one to put Jones back at O, a second to put him at + 1 where he should have been with the correcting vote and a third to replace the one needed to negate the illegitimate vote. Ms. Slimeball, through her criminal actions, has out voted the good guys by a 3-1 ratio. But, guarding the vote is the law’s problem. [Personally, I want each one of these insects found out and their right to vote rescinded for the rest of their sneaking, lying lives. But I digress.]
What
I am really thinking about is the massive effort to register voters and then
beg them to get to the polls. One
intellectually challenged Congresswoman from the Houston area actually offered voters a chance
at a raffle for voting. This is, off
course, illegal (no different than the frontier days when a shot of whiskey was
offered for a vote). The thing that
shatters my faith in Congress is that Rep. Mushforbrains, didn’t know (or care)
that it was illegal, until confronted by the press.
As
I said, I want everyone who is eligible to vote. I am ready to make it as easy as protection
of the integrity of the process allows.
But, it is time to stop cajoling these slackers to get to the
polls. I have registered to vote when I
had to walk several blocks to get to City Hall.
I have hauled my girls in a wagon behind me to get to the polls. I have stood in freezing lines covered in sleet
to vote. If you are too lazy, too
ignorant, too self-absorbed to haul your sorry ass to the local library and
register, or the neighborhood church to vote, I am neither going to beg for your participation or
regret your absence. Do what is right,
or shut up.
Reminding
an adult to vote is like reminding them to wash their hands after using the
toilet. If you have to ask, you’ve already lost
the battle. Personally, this entire election cycle has convinced me that maybe we do need an intelligence for voting.
I
voted, because I keep the faith.
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