-Caveat Lector-

~~for educational purposes only~~
[Title 17 U.S.C. section 107]

To Vote, Or Not To Vote That Is The Question
by Linda Schrock Taylor

My apologies to Shakespeare, but the phrasing so
clearly expresses the dilemma that I have faced
since the mid-sixties, when my friends and I
discussed our objections to boys too young to vote
on matters of war, being drafted and sent to
Vietnam. By the time voting rights for 18 year olds
had been passed, I was so disillusioned with the
government that I, personally, took the stance of
refusing to vote.

As a young child, living just twelve miles from
where I currently reside, many of my earliest
memories are of voting and party choices. A
favorite family story told of how my
great-grandfather and his brother, one a Democrat
and one a Republican, would constantly argue about
politics, then ride together to the polls. Their
commitment to voting, even though they knew that
one's vote would cancel that of the other, never
wavered. If it was time to vote, one was honor
bound to do it. In my home, the whole family rode
to the township hall so that my parents could vote. I
am often reminded of those excursions, for that
township hall is where we have our family
Christmas and special occasion parties. The same
voting booths are there, varni shed and gleaming.

For many, many years I did not vote; my decision
stemming from my gut level distrust of the State. In
silence I accepted the stern reprimands from my
father, as he attempted to drive home the point that I
had no right to criticize anything that the government
did since I refused to make my preferences known
by voting. Since the schools had only provided me
with rewritten history, I lacked the facts and
insights with which I might have defended my
decision and myself. Still I refused to vote for
Twiddle Dee or Twiddle Dum.

Recently, while reading Murray Rothbard's, The
Case Against the Fed, I was reminded of my
father's blind loyalty to his Party…

    For the "Third Party System," which had
    existed in America from 1856 to 1896, was
    comprised of political parties, each of which
    was highly ideological and in intense conflict
    with the opposing party. While each political
    party, in this case the Democratic, the
    Republican and various minor parties,
    consisted of a coalition of interests and forces,
    each was dominated by a firm ideology to
    which it was strongly committed. As a result,
    citizens often felt lifelong party loyalties, were
    socialized into a party when growing up, were
    educated in party principles, and then rode
    herd on any party candidates who waffled or
    betrayed the cause. (Pg. 9091)

Rothbard continues,

    For various reasons, the Democratic and
    Republican parties after 1900…were largely
    non-ideological, differed very little from each
    other, and as a result commanded little party
    loyalty. In particular, the Democratic Party no
    longer existed, after the Bryan takeover of
    1896, as a committed laissez-faire,
    hard-money party. From then on, both parties
    rapidly became Progressive and moderately
    statist." (Pg. 91)

Even had I been able to put evidence such as this
before my father, it would not have modified his
thinking. It is almost as if such individuals are
caught in some kind of a time warp. They have been
socialized to party loyalty without being taught the
facts and the intellectual reasoning behind the
original stances held prior to 1896. Any belief that
they should hold a party to a 'firm ideology' has
been bred out of them, or simply lost along the way.

I did, finally, become a voter, although never for my
father's party. Still I never felt comfortable about
voting, but neither did I feel comfortable about not
voting. Possibly I dreaded old messages from
childhood returning to haunt me. During the last
election I did go to the polls, but I cast only one (1)
vote  against a candidate I despised. I have
continued to fret  to vote, or not to vote.

Recently I received a brochure from the "Sons Of
Liberty" in Central Florida, entitled, VOTING
STRATEGY  2004  WHEN "THE LESSER OF
TWO EVILS" IS NO LONGER AN OPTION. The
title caught my eye, and their rationale for voting
makes a great deal of sense. They begin with this:

    The most effective argument to convince
    patriotic Americans to support the Republican
    Party has been that "The Republicans will do
    less damage to the Constitution than the
    Democrats will  and besides, what other
    choice is there?" The conservative vote is
    taken for granted by the Republican leadership
    because they believe that we have nowhere
    else to turn; from a purely pragmatic
    short-range view, perhaps they are correct.
    The result has been a Republican Party that
    ignores conservative values because it has no
    incentive to do otherwise. The time has come
    to provide that incentive.

I had to agree with this summation, and I continued
reading,

    The Republican Party is the dominant party
    today because it has the conservative vote.
    Let's look at what Republicans have done with
    the power that conservatives entrusted to them.

    President George W. Bush has presided over a
    dramatic increase in the size, cost, scope, and
    power of the federal government that would be
    the envy of even the most radical socialist. He
    has stated his support of the clearly-
    unconstitutional Clinton gun ban and has
    vowed to sign a replacement into law (the
    current law has a sunset provision that expires
    in 2004) should it reach his desk. His Attorney
    General has made it his personal crusade to
    get ever-greater power for the government to
    snoop into the private lives of citizens. Bush
    has used the military to invade a sovereign
    nation that had no realistic chance of
    threatening America, while at the same time
    encouraging a flood of illegal third-world
    immigrants across our borders. Yet many
    conservatives continue to support this
    administration. Why? Because they believe
    they have no other choice  the alternatives are
    even worse.

Please excuse me as I continue to quote from this
pamphlet, for a summary would not do it justice:

    Conservatives have fallen into the trap of only
    looking at the short range. It is probably (but
    no longer certainly) true that America would
    be better off with a Republican administration
    than with a Democratic administration  in any
    given year. However, that completely misses
    the point. The direction that the country is
    headed in must be looked at in terms of
    decades and generations  not as a four-year
    presidential term.

The Sons of Liberty list four options:

    1) Continue to vote for the Republican Party
    candidates. Maybe we won't end up with a
    Democrat  or maybe we will. Either way, the
    Republican Party learns once again that they
    have the conservative vote no matter what they
    do.

    2) Vote for the Democratic candidates. Some
    on the far edges of conservatism have
    suggested this as a way to hurry along what
    they see as the inevitable collapse of America,
    and see a rebuilding as freedom's opportunity.

    3) Don't vote at all. This is a common strategy
    in other parts of the world. The objective is to
    demonstrate that the elections are not valid by
    boycotting the election. Another objective of
    this strategy is to voice dissatisfaction with all
    the candidates  effectively saying "None of
    the above."

4) Vote for a third-party candidate.

The pamphlet points out that Option 1 has already
been discussed and points out that a vote for the
Republicans will assure a drive off the same cliff,
but at a speed within the posted limit. They believe
that Option 2 should be dismissed as not lending
itself to rational discussion. Regarding the last two
options, they have this to say,

    Option 3 is based on the assumption that
    anyone would notice that people were not
    voting. It is also based on the assumption that
    the parties would know why people were not
    voting. Not voting at all simply means that the
    political strategists ignore you. Being ignored
    is not our intent.

    Option 4 is what we believe to be the best
    choice at this point. The objective is to show
    that there are votes available that the
    Republican Party will not get until they change
    their ways. The objective is not to find and
    support a third party candidate who can win an
    election. For the foreseeable future, that just is
    not going to happen. Instead, the objective is to
    demonstrate to the Republican Party that voters
    will leave the party if they are not represented
    by that party. The working assumption by the
    Republican Party has always been that
    conservatives have nowhere else to turn, and
    that they are pragmatic enough to not "waste
    their vote" by voting for a third party. Our
    objective is to show that assumption to be
    false.

Again, the point of this option is not to find a third
party with any chance of winning, but that the voters
"take a long range view and sacrifice in the short
term if needed. We are working for future
generations, not for ourselves."

The Sons of Liberty end with, "The only important
point in making your decision is that your vote must
be clearly seen as one that the Republicans should
have gotten. Choose your party/candidate wisely."
They list conservative political parties: Libertarian
Party; Constitution Party; America First Party; and
the Southern Party.

Hmmm…"your vote must be clearly seen as one that
the Republicans should have gotten." Yes, I think
that it is time that we, in the words of Murray
Rothbard, "ride herd" on any candidate, and the
party as a whole, for "waffling" and for betraying
America. We voters have been taken for granted
for far too long. We have gone with our interests
misrepresented or un-represented, since that long
ago era when the various political parties "were
dominated by a firm ideology to which it was
strongly committed." When political parties again
truly and honorably represent the real wishes of the
people, then and only then, should we again loyally
support one particular party.

So, I will vote in the next election, but the
Republicans have definitely lost my support. I will
go to the polls and cast my votes for candidates
from one or more of the four conservative groups
listed. I will be sure to inform every Republican
fundraiser of my decision, asking that they convey
my message accurately to their supervisors. Why, I
will even send each Republican caller a copy of my
Letter to Ken Mehlman, should they profess an
interest. Yes, I am relieved to finally have a voting
strategy!

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