[Winona Online Democracy]



While I agree with Bob Sebo that many people don't vote out of laziness I have to say that many people I know that do not vote tell me their 'one' vote doesn't 'really' matter.  This is so frustrating to me!  Of course your one vote counts I want to scream. But screaming at people will not get them to the polls.
How fantastic would it be (not to mention interesting) if 80+percent of our population actually voted.  In some countries we have seen people standing in line for days to vote.
We are too spoiled a nation to ever think we should have to wait in line for even an hour to vote, much less days.
I do not always ' vote' if I do not like any of the candidates, but I always register to vote on election day. 
  My reason being all the years women had no voice in how the government was run, when they were not allowed to vote.  My registering to vote is for them and all future women.
 
Linda Fort

[Winona Online Democracy]


Well, its been a while since I've gotten wet in the pool...I might as well jump in here.  Greetings, everyone...I hope you've managed to enjoy this practically non-existant summer...although today was a nice day for me...not sure how town fared.
 
In my humble opinion the abysmal voter turnout numbers have a single root cause, multiplied by what I will call enabling causes.  Let me elaborate.
 
The number one reason voters don't turn out is sheer laziness.  It is the same phenomenon that occurs when I feel that I should attend a wake, for example, but do not because I'd rather stay home after dinner.  This is not apathy (see enablers).  It is laziness.
 
People are too lazy to become involved in the issues and the candidates themselves.  I don't mean working on campaigns, I just mean figuring out who is running and why.  I acknowledge that this is real work...to dig through the ads and campaign literature and actually read interviews and analysis pieces. 
 
Lord knows I don't read policy papers, but I read reviews.  I'm an old debater and public speaker at heart...I'm fascinated by politics and current events...most people arent.  I will read papers on-line for a couple of hours a day given the chance...most people wouldn't.
 
If people educated themselves on the races and the stakes, we would avoid the first of the enabling factors in low voter turnout, I believe...that being apathy.  Traditional disenfranchisement is an additional enabling factor as well, of course...but none of these factors are excuses.
 
I've even seen it in my own family (the man has a doctorate, for crying out loud).  'I don't vote...I don't learn enough about the issues...I'm not interested.'  Apathy is believing that you don't have a dog in this fight...that the candidates are the same, all good apparatchiks...that forces larger that you control the outcome.
 
Perhaps I am naive, but I don't think we've gotten there yet.  If he was anything, Jesse Ventura was evidence of fair and honest elections in the great state of Minnesota...smiles...all votes do count.
 
And then, or course, are the factors which enable apathy...big money...negative campaigning...sure, corruption to a point, although I think most of what is called corruption is more like inside baseball.  These are factors which society, and government, can try to control to minimize apathy, but do not directly address the laziness nor apathy factors.  Nobody can haul the voter off the couch or out of work except themselves.
 
This is why so many other traditionally Christian countries vote on Sunday...most people at least aren't working and are more likely to be driving past their polling station and decide to stop.  Other nations use multi-day voting to make it more convenient.  Our voting day is in our constitution.
 
Is this a good thing?  Maybe only the truly motivated should vote...as they probably have two ideas to rub together.  By the same token, get out the vote drives on both sides bring many voters to the polls who might be found wanting on the 'two ideas' test.  I don't have the answer.
 
I do know I don't think it's a lack of choices we are suffering from.  This nation is too big and too diverse...we could theoretically elect a president with a, say, thirty percent popular vote and then let the electoral college decide who should take office?  Don't get me wrong, I like the electoral college as a fundmental tradition of our federal republic, but I think we 300 million of us need an either or choice when it comes to CEO...just my thinking.
 
I do go on don't I?  But when push comes to shove, people are lazy...that is why they don't vote...and the world belongs to those who show up.
 
As for Randy Kelley...this goes out to you Bob K (we disagree on a lot of things but we are both patriotic Americans so we're also still buds, I hope).  He is playing a political game of 'Can I Be The Next Norm Coleman?,' and it ain't gonna work.  The Mayor of St. Paul won his office as a Democrat, he shouldn't be endorsing Republicans.  In reality is it more complicated than that, yes, but if it walks like a duck...
 
I am actively working to defeat Goerge Bush in this November's election.  Anyone who wishes to impugn my patriotism is invited to do so in this forum.
 
Bob Sebo
Winona
 


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