Want to See Change
in the Country? Don’t Vote!
By James Rothenberg
08/20/07 "ICH" -- -
Well, it looks like the 2008 election campaign is in
full swing, or is it? Does anyone know who the
Greens are running? Or the Socialists? Or the
Progressives or Populists or Workers World? Nah, I
guess we don’t need them to get started. They can
fill in the chorus parts at the end of the play. All
we need is Big Politics. Come and get it. One party
for the price of two!
Democrats and Republicans alike beseech us to get
out there and vote, and why not? Besides making
these self-anointed guardians of democracy seem open
and civic-minded, there is the reassuring prospect
that each will get their standard split (results
will not vary greatly from 50/50). The virtual
monopoly control of election enjoyed by these two
parties make them confident they will not have to
face serious challenges from minor party candidates.
We are counseled that every vote matters, even a
single one. While this may be true on the Supreme
Court, a school board, or even a village election,
as the vote count grows larger the odds alone make
it progressively more unlikely that a single vote
could be decisive.
The pivotal Florida count in the 2000 presidential
election may seem to support one-vote-matters
theory. Out of 5,861,785 votes cast in the State a
mere 537 vote margin decided the whole shebang (via
the Supreme Court). Okay, so 537 is not 1 but it’s
tantalizingly close considering the total number of
votes. Didn’t this prove that a single vote could,
in principle, make the difference?
Forget it! It’s not a matter of odds. It’s a matter
of appearance. In an election of sufficient size and
importance, a single vote will never be decisive.
That is the Florida lesson. Remembering Florida,
think what would happen if the difference was a
single vote, which, taking the Florida figures,
works out to a margin of .000017 percent. Since this
is hideously less than the margin of error in the
count it would never be allowed to stand. It would
be challenged and re-challenged until the margin
raised high enough to quell some of the surrounding
noise. All of which means one thing. Your vote will
never matter!
Both parties see it as a bad sign when voters stay
away from the polls. It signifies that people may
have stopped paying attention. Democrats and
Republicans each struggle to maintain the illusion
that they are uniquely suited to guide the country –
that they alone deserve to lead by dint of
tradition.
The absurdity is compounded each election cycle by
these stalwart defenders of the status quo each
promising to bring about the next great change,
exploiting the public’s thirst for it.
While we are encouraged to vote for change, in our
system it works the opposite way. At the present
stage, the entrenched power of Big Politics is such
as to render any rival upstart stillborn. It won’t
happen at the ballot box, not in the expected sense.
Voting is their game and you can’t beat someone at
their own game.
When 100 million people vote each major party will
get between 40 and 60 million each, leaving
mavericks the crumbs and millions of votes to
overcome. Since mavericks are the only people who
represent true change (supply your own proof), what
we get is reluctance to change.
If only 1 million people vote each major party will
have ulcers at the prospect of their vulnerability
to the maverick. The fewer people who vote, the
fewer needed to upset the power balance. Is this a
partial explanation of why the establishment frets
about low voter turnout?
So the message is if you really want to see things
shaken up, stay away from the polls. This will take
some discipline considering how it counters the
prevailing advice. Your vote may be personal to you,
but to those in control it is a commodity. It is
bought and paid for in accordance with a formula
(dollar/vote correspondence) well known to those in
the field (applied electioneering), only you’re not
supposed to know this, even though you really know
this.
You may feel that you vote freely, but ask yourself
why you don’t feel free to vote for a minor party
candidate. Ask yourself why you don’t want to
“waste” your vote, yet instead reward with it the
very parties responsible for this state of futility.
The army teaches a valuable survival lesson. When
you are captured, the best time to escape is as soon
as you can, because it gets harder as you go on.
This presupposes something so obvious that it can be
overlooked. That you know you are captive! Applying
this to discussed circumstances, our primary
obstacle may be that we do not fully recognize that
all is futile.
James Rothenberg - jrothenberg@taconic.net
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