Poll: Do you vote?

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AlexOliver
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Post by AlexOliver »

If so, why? If not, why not?


HSpencer
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Post by HSpencer »

viewtopic.php?t=409
Yes, every time.


jacob
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Post by jacob »

No.
I can't vote in the US.

I haven't lived in my home country for the past decade.


jasoninmississippi
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Post by jasoninmississippi »

Yes, every time, I feel like it's my duty. I have had friends that have served in armed force, and some have died, so I could have many freedoms. I think by voting, I show that, I care about the freedoms that I have.


Cashflow
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Post by Cashflow »

I always vote.
I vote against anything that will raise taxes.


gibberade
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Post by gibberade »

I know my vote hardly matters, and the I find all the parties equally useless**, but I vote anyways.
*With the exception of Ron Paul (Although I am Canadian not American). Sometimes the Green Party too.


Maus
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Post by Maus »

@gibberade

As I've said in a previous post, the most important reason to choose even one of the lesser of two (or more) evils, i.e. crappy candidates, is because he or she will choose the least problematic judges. Federal judges serve for life. If a wingnut gets appointed, it can be doing damage fifty years later. I don't know if that's true in Canada, but you also share a common law system and judges have a huge impact on that through the precedent value of their case decisions.
Since I turned 18, I have missed only one by-election that determined only local candidates and issues. I regret that a bit, but at least it didn't concern anyone who could appoint a wingnut judge.


Chad
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Post by Chad »

I vote. Though, not much to vote for in this election where I'm located.
I vote for anyone willing to out spend everyone else and who wants to raise taxes...a lot.


Kevin M
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Post by Kevin M »

Yes, even if it doesn't matter, I still want my voice heard.


AlexOliver
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Post by AlexOliver »

Now that election day is over (for the most part), here's my answer: I turned 18 a few weeks ago, so I could have voted today, but I didn't, and I don't think I will in the future.
People more eloquent than I have written an explanation here: http://www.deathandtaxesmag.com/33587/w ... vote-ever/
excerpt:

"Do not let others saddle you with guilt for exercising your right of refusal. Instead of voting, why not take a more direct path of action in your community by volunteering your time by helping a literacy organization, for instance. Teach creative writing so a generation will rise who can speak truth to power. Educate others about the real stories behind history that our education system cannot and will not (by government sanction) teach. Volunteer your time at a food pantry. Work for lower rent in your neighborhood, like James Sullivan would have you do. Organize with others to combat racial or other social injustices in your neighborhood."


photoguy
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Post by photoguy »

Yes i voted. It takes very little time to vote especially if you do it absentee.
The link you posted wasn't very convincing and just seemed like needless whining (or grandstanding to get web traffic). I consider voting to be both an obligation and a priveledge. No the system isn't perfect but not voting isn't going to make it any better. And voting doesn't prevent you from being a good citizen in any of the other ways commented in the article.


AlexOliver
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Post by AlexOliver »

Obligation?
How is voting going to make the system better? If you vote, you work from within the system. If the system's broken fundamentally...voting doesn't change anything.


photoguy
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Post by photoguy »

"Yes, even if it doesn't matter, I still want my voice heard."
In the past few elections, there have been some extremely close decisions. Coupled with the winner-take-all design, this means that every vote is important. For example, Florida in 2000 was decided by 537 votes and new mexico by 366 votes (see http://www.fec.gov/pubrec/2000presgeresults.htm ).


djc
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Post by djc »

Even though just about everybody I voted for lost I take perverse pride in the fact that I vote my beliefs and the results be damned.
djc


Chad
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Joined: Fri Jul 23, 2010 3:10 pm

Post by Chad »

What sucks is not being able to vote for anyone with your values, and it's not like I have weird values. I would happy with someone who cuts spending, creates a balanced budget, and keeps us out of useless wars. Not a lot to ask for, but still impossible to find.


AnneBentham
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Post by AnneBentham »

In theory, I'd consider voting on a local issue if it's something direct like a yes or no to backyard chickens. I will not vote for a person to "represent" me.


Bakari
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Post by Bakari »

I not only vote, I started running a local polling place as well.
Not voting does not harm the system. Refusing to do a tiny amount of good just because it isn't solving all problems is a ridiculous excuse. There is no reason a person couldn't be actively involved in the community AND vote. If you don't vote for someone to represent you, someone will still represent you - it just may be someone you like even less.
More and more places are adopting alternative voting systems, such as ranked choice voting, just instituted in my home town (Oakland) which allows you to vote your conscious AND vote for the lesser of two evils. How did a system as entrenched as primary followed by winner-take-all general elections get charged? Yep, the voters decided to put it in place. And the first time it was put to the test, it worked - the corrupt career politician with a massive budget was beaten by a low-budget progressive by the 2nd place votes.
No, one vote doesn't count. Just like one person driving one car doesn't create air pollution or deplete oil. But elections are decided by a whole lot of individuals. That's what society is. A lot of individuals.
On the other hand, all of you who don't vote make my vote count that much more, so, thats ok, don't bother.


AlexOliver
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Post by AlexOliver »

How does voting do a tiny amount of good?


jerry
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Post by jerry »

" How does voting do a tiny amount of good? "
Regardless of what they say, R's and D's do pretty much the same thing when they are elected. The controversial issues that politicians use to define themselves and generate excitement seldom if ever get voted into law. From that perspective, it is useless to vote.
However, you can impose term limits on them by always voting against the incumbent regardless of party. This would actually work if a large chunk of non voters did this. I think government would then be substantially better.


mikeBOS
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Post by mikeBOS »

I don't understand you guys who are complaining about limited choices. Every time I have voted there has always been a blank line where I can write in an infinite number of choices.
The limitation is collectively self-imposed.


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