I just returned from voting in Ohio’s primary. I cast my ballot for Dennis Kucinich, as my choice for both the presidency and the 10th Congressional District’s representative. And thus my conscience is clean.
I know, I know. “You just wasted your vote,” many of you shall say. To that I give you this simple response: Horse shit. The only votes wasted, dear readers, are those not cast and those cast for a candidate who doesn’t represent you. Anyone who tells you differently is either lying to you, or doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
These are not things I write lightly. I know quite well that what I’ve just typed shall piss off a number of people. The truth, however, was never designed to make people happy.
Primaries are precisely the time when we as voters are supposed to stand up and vote our beliefs. Why in God’s name would anyone vote for someone who doesn’t represent him? “Pragmatism”? That’s a bullshit excuse, one designed to justify keeping the status quo intact. And for far too long, far too many Democrats have succumbed to that argument. We voted “pragmatically” in 2004, cast our ballots for a candidate who wasn’t worth the toilet bowl he shat into, and what did it get us? Nothing, except four more years of crap raining down upon our country. Four more years of craven capitulation — two of them under a Democratic Congress — to a boy tyrant who in a sane world would have been removed from office and convicted of treason during the first year of his reign.
Neither Hillary Clinton or Barack Obama have earned so much as a single Democratic vote. But for the desperation of Americans to elect anyone other than a Republican, the adulation and scorn of the corporate media, and the humongous egos of the two prima donnas themselves, they are the candidates we have been saddled with in this primary season.
There is an admonition against allowing the “perfect” to be the enemy of the “good”. But really, how many people do you know who ask for or expect perfect? I and everyone I know is fully aware that nothing and no one is perfect. All we want are good policy and good representatives. Yet each and every election cycle, we’re forced to accept the mediocre and the downright bad.
It doesn’t, and shouldn’t, have to be that way. However you intend to vote in the general election, is this or is it not the time to vote your beliefs — to cast your ballot for the presidential candidate who represents you? Not Big Business, not the DLC, but you. Mr. and Ms. Average American. To hand your ballot to someone who doesn’t represent you is to surrender it to the status quo, to send a message that, no matter how much you may complain about the way things are, you’re perfectly content to leave it as is.
That isn’t democracy, ladies and gentlemen. It’s a monarchical system, one in which the will of the public is subjected to the greed and ambition of a political minority whose interests are to keep you beaten down and in service to the economic elite. And I don’t know about you ladies and gentlemen, but I refuse to give in to that bullshit. Politicians are supposed to work for us, to be our voices in the halls of power. We are not supposed to subject our interests and political beliefs to those we employ.
Maybe your state’s primary or caucus has already been held. Maybe it’s today, or has yet to be held. For those of you who fall into the latter categories,ask yourselves if it isn’t worth it to challenge this fucked up system by voting for the candidate who represents you, just to see what would happen.
But you didn’t vote for Dennis.
You voted for Obama.
Since he’s in the lead, the only vote that would have made a difference would have been a vote for Hillary. If she were in the lead, I would have said this in reverse.
But make no mistake.
When you vote for someone who is not the in race you are rubber stamping the leader, whether that was what you wanted or not.
I’m sorry, but you’re absolutely wrong. I cast my ballot for Dennis Kucinich, and none other, for president. A ballot cast for one candidate is not now nor has it ever been a ballot cast for another. My vote is mine, to be given to whom or whatever I choose. Neither Clinton or Obama received my vote, because neither has done a damned thing to earn it. And they certainly shan’t bother to try if I simply cast my ballot for one of them without making them work for it.
I’m sorry RHL, I mean no offense, but I’m so tired of all this jockeying bullshit, that in itself is a waste of a vote in my mind.
Vote your conscience.
If more people were proud of their opinion rather than needing to feel part of some mass teevee movement, maybe we’d have viable 3rd parties, or a solid, people candidate like Dennis to jockey a position at the convention, instead of this winner-take-all nonsense tossed at us by the Federalists back at the inception of the nation that has morphed into media star ratings acquisition candidates like O’Billary.
Voting for Dennis for president was a waste in my opinion, but voting for his candidacy to return to the House was not.
How did he do?
He won. The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported that Kucinich won over fifty percent of the vote. Cimperman got around 35%, depending on which numbers you go with. The rest of the primary challengers got single digits. So I guess now that the Plain Dealer wasted more ink and money in yet another failed bid to oust Kucinich, it shall do so again going into November by tossing money at Republican Jim Trakas.