Of course Nader can't win--I understand that--but that doesn't mean I'm voting for him to merely "express my conscience", as some people like to put it. The truth is that no candidate, including Nader, comes close to representing my conscience. That choice, in our pretend democracy, is off the table. Our representative democracy doesn't allow me to vote "for" anything, because the voting process doesn't, on a personal level, offer me anything of value. What I can do, though, thanks to Nader and other third party candidates, is vote against something. I can vote against the system.
Obama is one of the more reliable sellouts to ever run for office. Due to political pressure, he now supports off-shore drilling for oil, has voted numerous times in support of subsidizing corn-ethanol (the position that won him the Iowa primary), has clearly voiced his approval of "free" trade policies, has said that he won't withdraw American troops from Iraq before 2013, and has back-tracked on campaign finance reform and coal subsidies since it became politically advantageous to do so. He has solicited for and received millions of dollars in corporate campaign support, from the likes of Goldman Sachs, Excelon, UBS, Citigroup, and Morgan Stanley, many of the same corporations who directly benefited from the 420 dollar bailout he approved. And his support of Tort "reform" (making it more difficult to sue corporations), his rejection of single-payer health care, his vote to cap the damages that victims of malpractice could receive, and his vote against an ammendment to cap credit card interest rates at 30% show very clearly that he intends to pay back his supporters with policy decisions that represent corporate interest at the expense of everyone else. It's pretty clear that you can't work "within" the system, a system that is evil to its core, and expect non evil results. And Obama unquestioningly represents the system.
A vote for Nader, on the other hand, represents an honest critique of what our country is doing to the natural environment and to the developing world and to the non-elites within American borders. A vote for Nader represents an honest voice of protest against corporate-dominated America. In short, it represents a protest against abuse.
Let me put it this way: what if someone said that you had to be in an abusive relationship with a person who would beat and molest you every day or a person who would beat and molest you, more mildly, only once a week? That, to me, is the choice we're being given by our two party system. The fact that both Obama and McCain supported a 420 billion dollar robbery--a continuation, in other words, of the American government's practice of taking money and resources from the poor and middle classes of the world and giving it to the elites--only proves my point. And I don't want to cast a vote in favor of abuse, a vote that sanctions and authorizes and legitimizes that abuse. My vote for Nader, who opposed the bailout and who favors placing severe restrictions on the abusive power of corporations, sends the message that I don't want to be in a relationship under abusive circumstances (even if I don't agree with many of the socialistic ideas of Nader). A vote for either Obama or McCain, on the other hand, represents a vote for an abusive system--a tacit approval of exploitation--which, by my definition, is not merely a wasted vote but an unethical one.
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6 comments:
Shane,
Here. Here! I, again (for the fourth time) would vote for Nader. However, I have decided not to vote in this election.
America is lost and wandering. That I live in Utah (land of the most hopeless moronic Repulican Voters from the bowels of Hell)makes it that much worse. I have learned- helplessness about it all.
My stock portfolio is in the shitter, funding for education sucks, the environment is starting to shit back on us, and my children's future looks bleaker and poorer by the day. Sweden looks pretty F*ing great right now.
sigh.
Trav
I'm not a big believer in voting, either. I think it can make a small difference in local matters, but that's about it. It doesn't make a big enough difference for me to fault your apathy.
As far as America being "lost and wandering" goes, I'm with you. As you know, I've been saying that for awhile. Here's a link that only confirms that viewpoint: http://www.chrismartenson.com/crash-course
It takes awhile to get through, and much of it was dealt with in some videos I linked to in an earlier post about our monetary system, but this does a good job of putting together all of the pieces (a monetary system that has to keep growing, inflation, peak oil, social security, environmental degradation, etc.). Well worth the time, I think.
And actually, when you really get a feel for this crisis and its international implications, I'm not sure Sweden will look so great, either. What looks good to me is an organic farm where I can grow my own food and that uses solar and permaculture methods for creating electricity and heat and where I'm surrounded by a cooperative community with knowledge and skills I don't have and which I can contribute to--a place, in other words, where I can become independent of the system.
Anyway, sorry about the stock portfolio. If it makes you feel any better, I'll bet you've lost more money than I've ever had!
Later, amigo.
I generally agree. I get so frustrated how our system forces every candidate to become vanilla in the national elections--both McCain and Obama have sponsored bills I agree with but in most cases (less with Obama) they have backed off those positions.
Still, I will vote for Obama. If I weren't in Utah, I might not but voting for Obama, for me, is a way to do some work on a local level where we have a ONE party system. And, while I agree that both parties have sold out (note that under Clinton we got the deregulation that allowed credit default swaps, basically legalizing gambling for banks and which help lead to the credit crisis) I still find I agree more with the democratic platform. But even with the Dems, we are only getting a few more crumbs--we will never be asked to sit at the table.
CI, so are you saying that voting for Obama in Utah is similar to my voting for Nader in Colorado--i.e. a vote that we know will ONLY have protest value? If so, that's a great point. In Utah, a vote for Obama is a vote AGAINST the status quo.
Well, I voted. I voted for Nader, and did a straight Democratic (FU) vote on everything else.
Thanks for the motivation Shane. Angie Voted too. She voted, like Ron, for Obama.
I was most disappointed in Prop 8 in California. I hate that bigotry is still alive and well in one of the most progressive states in the nation. Sad...
See you in a few weeks compadre.
Trav
Oh, I hear ya about proposition 8 in California. I just heard about all the money the LDS church used to support it. Amazing that an institution who suffered years of persecution because its definition of marriage didn't match with the legal definition of the county is now spending millions of tithing dollars to prevent the legal definition from changing. Amazing. Would someone please tell the Mormon higher-ups that they don't have to be afraid of those homoerotic dreams they've been having!
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