Attention nonparticipants
Nov. 6th, 2002 11:42 amThis is for all you Green-voting, non-voting, "anarchist" types who don't vote because "they're all the same".
Wake the fuck up.
They're not all the same. The people who won yesterday want to take away reproductive rights, roll back civil rights, dump a huge tax burden on working people, strengthen entrenched monopolies, chop down every tree in North America, and send us to war for little reason.
I see the arguments that "I can't give my vote to the opposition because they're slimy and annoying" and I have to laugh. Folks, politics is not about whether you feel beautiful and pure and ideologically correct leaving the booth. Politics is practical. It's about what you can accomplish with that vote, in the real world where we all live. It's not about reading 'zines and drinking wheatgrass juice and being part of a totally ignored nouveau hippie subculture. This stuff has real-world consequences, and not just for you and your painfully correct friends.
So I hope you get what you wanted, anyway. Maybe at the next party you can put on your hemp cap and sweet talk some girl into bed with your tales of how you stood up to the Man and didn't cave in and vote for some compromise candidate because you're keepin' it real. Or maybe you just got to stop off for a latte on your way to work instead of punching a hole in some cardboard.
In any case the rest of us are going to be spending the next two years watching George II and his cronies take away our country. Thanks for nothing.
Wake the fuck up.
They're not all the same. The people who won yesterday want to take away reproductive rights, roll back civil rights, dump a huge tax burden on working people, strengthen entrenched monopolies, chop down every tree in North America, and send us to war for little reason.
I see the arguments that "I can't give my vote to the opposition because they're slimy and annoying" and I have to laugh. Folks, politics is not about whether you feel beautiful and pure and ideologically correct leaving the booth. Politics is practical. It's about what you can accomplish with that vote, in the real world where we all live. It's not about reading 'zines and drinking wheatgrass juice and being part of a totally ignored nouveau hippie subculture. This stuff has real-world consequences, and not just for you and your painfully correct friends.
So I hope you get what you wanted, anyway. Maybe at the next party you can put on your hemp cap and sweet talk some girl into bed with your tales of how you stood up to the Man and didn't cave in and vote for some compromise candidate because you're keepin' it real. Or maybe you just got to stop off for a latte on your way to work instead of punching a hole in some cardboard.
In any case the rest of us are going to be spending the next two years watching George II and his cronies take away our country. Thanks for nothing.
Re: i agree (sort of)
Date: 2002-11-07 03:20 am (UTC)Fair enough. Their platform is rather wacky in many places too, I'm not sure I'd like to see any of these people actually in power! :) But the fact that they exist makes the Dems at least watch their back, they can't become *actually* identical to the Republicans without losing support.
You and I share a disgust of the left as we know it...
I disagree with your chracterization of the public as being "lame". A lot of people are genuinely concerned these days and don't know where to turn. One obvious thing that's different from the Dems of your youth; unions have much less power and influence, and can't focus discontent into action like they used to. I don't want to see the USA or Canada turn into France, but that might be half the problem right there.