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Eric Stoner

Eric Stoner

Posted: October 25, 2008 03:00 PM

Voting Is Not a Panacea


"If you don't vote, then you can't complain." So goes a refrain that is reflexively regurgitated to anyone who questions the efficacy of voting. Generally it's accompanied by a smug look, indicating that in their eyes you're hopelessly out of touch with reality. But after cutting through the hype, are elections really worth the enormous amount of attention, energy and money they consume?

In explaining why he stayed home on election day, comedian George Carlin flipped this dictum on its head. "I believe that if you vote, you have no right to complain," he argued. "If you vote, and you elect dishonest, incompetent people, and they get into office and screw everything up, well you are responsible for what they have done. You caused the problem. You voted them in. You have no right to complain."

And Carlin wasn't merely directing his ire towards Republicans. "This country was bought and sold and paid for a long time ago," he acknowledged with disgust. "The shit they shuffle around every four years doesn't mean a fucking thing."

That may be a bit overstated, but the idea that pulling a lever every few years is actually going to bring about real change is delusional. How exactly is this supposed to happen, when the corporate media and wealthy campaign contributors filter out any candidate who may rock the boat long before the public is ever asked for its opinion? Just look at what has become of Ralph Nader, Dennis Kucinich and John Edwards for challenging the status quo. Despite espousing views on numerous issues that polls show are far more in line with public sentiment than either major party candidate, they are branded as out of touch. The media ridicules -- or more often, simply excludes and ignores -- them until they are forgotten. Out of sight, out of mind.

In contrast, Barack Obama has made it clear that he would not ruffle any feathers. To take just one example of his orthodoxy, when asked September 7, on ABC's "This Week" which issues he would break with his own party on, he replied, "I've said that we need to increase the size of our military." Apart from the fact that cutting military spending isn't even a position held by his party, Obama's response implicitly approves of the Pentagon's already enormous baseline budget, which has increased by more than 60 percent since 2001, not including the more than $800 billion that has been wasted on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Therefore, he could slash $200 billion a year from the Department of Defense and it would merely bring military spending back to where it was under the Clinton Administration. Moreover, such a belligerent position is not even in line with public opinion, as a recent poll showed that 43 percent of Americans thought we spent "too much" on the military, while only 20 percent said "too little."

Thus, while the predictable drama around the nefarious schemes used to exclude voters unfolds, few note that the system was effectively rigged from the start. No matter who wins, a friend of the corporate interests that actually run this country will be installed in the White House. And everyday folks will once again be fleeced by an election -- and a political system -- that remains little more than theater.

So, if not voting, then what? Hinting at the answer to this conundrum, Henry David Thoreau wrote in Civil Disobedience: "Even voting for the right is doing nothing for it. It is only expressing feebly your desire that it should prevail. A wise man will not leave the right to the mercy of chance, nor wish it to prevail through the power of the majority."

Granted, some actively push for the policies that they believe in year-round in addition to casting their ballots. But for most Americans, voting constitutes their sole act of civil engagement. Looked at in this light, going to the polls on November 4, is the absolute least you can do for something you believe in. It is a cop-out. By voting only once every four years, people put hope in someone else to bring about "change" that, in reality, only the people themselves - through continuous organizing, direct action and personal sacrifice - can make happen.

As radical historian Howard Zinn explains, "Historically, government, whether in the hands of Republicans or Democrats, conservatives or liberals, has failed its responsibilities, until forced to by direct action: sit-ins and Freedom Rides for the rights of black people, strikes and boycotts for the rights of workers, mutinies and desertions of soldiers in order to stop a war."

And the truly existential threats that humanity must confront today are arguably only more trying than those faced by previous generations. Climate change, nuclear proliferation and corporate power run amuck will not be stopped with just a vote. There is no easy panacea for our predicament. If we are to have any hope of salvaging the world for our children, we must put our bodies on the line and radically change the way we live to an extent that most people have never considered.

Perhaps we could learn what such a life might look like from Ammon Hennacy, the steadfast anarchist, pacifist and member of the Catholic Worker. From refusing military service in both World Wars to fasting for up to 45 days against the execution of prisoners in Utah, he led an exemplary life of nonviolent resistance to the injustices of his day. Despite abstaining from elections, Ammon saw his body as his ballot. "Cast that body ballot on behalf of the people around you every day of your life, every day," he argued. "And don't let anybody ever tell you you haven't voted."

Eric Stoner is a writer based in New York, whose articles have appeared in The Nation. He can be reached at: ericstoner1@gmail.com.

"If you don't vote, then you can't complain." So goes a refrain that is reflexively regurgitated to anyone who questions the efficacy of voting. Generally it's accompanied by a smug look, indicating t...
"If you don't vote, then you can't complain." So goes a refrain that is reflexively regurgitated to anyone who questions the efficacy of voting. Generally it's accompanied by a smug look, indicating t...
 
 
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05:58 PM on 10/26/2008
In the period of high unemployment we are entering the US military has an excellent opportunity to expand and upgrade volunteer personnel.
A cut in expenditures for new weapon systems could provide funds for recruiting and training. An increase of 20 percent in our standing military and a 50 percent increase in National Guard and Reserve should be the goal. the total Defense Department budget could be maintained a current levels while the quality and readiness of the armed forces improved.
Our current forces have invaluable combat experience to pass on to the next generation of military leadership.
01:45 PM on 10/26/2008
Ok Stoner, you go vote for Nader, dividing leftists in this country and letting the republicans take over.

I hear what you're saying, and I like Nader and Kucinich and even some of the things Ron Paul says, but that's not where this country is, and i'm not about to depart for fantasyland.

The change we'll have with Obama is that we will use diplomacy before jumping into a war, a fairer tax system, improved teachers/education, and affordable access to health care, among others. That's a change that vast majority of Americans are ready to deal with right now.

Also, I'm not sure where you get the idea that Obama is in the tank for special interests in this country, and somehow Edwards is some kind of new-age philosopher. In addition, Obama has to say he is for increasing military spending because the whole republican strategy has been to make him soft on defense, if not a terrorist himself. He wants to win NOW, not in 20 years, because we need it now.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
11:50 AM on 10/26/2008
So he wants our economy to be even more in the tank than it already is...great.
11:31 AM on 10/26/2008
I think Eodnast is right: Edwards cast himself as a populist. I can't speak of his motives. But some of the stuff he was saying about the poor was just excellent. In the meantime, tho, we shouldn't miss the POINT of Stoner's article, which is that self-governance, or democracy, or change to a more just society - whatever you may call it - is achieved only most palely by voting. In fact, voting is giving your power to someone else. The real power lies in the persistent, mobilized, organized (and I would say, nonviolent) action of people committed to justice. That, I believe, is what Stoner is calling our attention to here ...
09:57 AM on 10/26/2008
I wish i lived in a battle ground state..........it gets kinda boring out here in CA.
01:58 AM on 10/26/2008
The best way out of insanity is to embrace it completely. Liberals should insist on a 13% per year increase on military spending and call the Republicans cowards. Eventually they will insist on a 15% increase, we can counter with a 18% increase and so on and so forth. It's a self cycling military build up based on internal fractures in idiologies rather than external threats. This is the path that we have been heading down for a number of years, I say we just push it along to it's obvious conclusion. That would be complete economic exaustion. Hey it worked for Reagan, i'm sure it can work for us...:D
11:25 PM on 10/25/2008
I don't see how you can say John Edwards challenged the status quo. He's for the death penalty, against gay marriage, against single payer health care. And the 2004 Vice Presidential debate "gay daughter" comment? The vote for limits on bankruptcy? The support for the PATRIOT Act? Or the Iraq War?

One could say that Edwards challenged the status quo in 2008, and accept Edwards' assertion that his previous positions were mistakes. A more convincing hypothesis, however, is that it was politically expedient for Edwards to run as a populist.
09:33 PM on 10/25/2008
Right on, Eric! After the elections, most fat voters will just go home, pop a beer and watch the boob tube.
I don't agree with hardly anything at all either one of these two propose, but Obama is a tad more palatable. When he screwed us on FISA, I knew the Telcos hold the REAL power. Ma Bell is a Motherfudger. The Constitution needs some form of lobbying reform. DRASTIC reform. As you can see, world corporatists don't give a damn about the tradition or legacy of the United States. The C F and R could care less. New World Order is the master agenda. I'm glad we're going down financially. It'll hurt, but change always does. Active vigilance and protest IS the way. It should be a 24 hour a day thing. You should always have it in the back of your mind and act on it when possible. We ARE the masters of our destiny. Don't let Big Brother tell you different. After all, they're only human behind that curtain they hide. You forgot Ron Paul, in statesmen that we're stomped on. I can forgive you that. Peace.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
legalgirl
Just a legal girl on a mission for the truth
07:58 PM on 10/25/2008
My hope is that without the obstacles of inadequate votes in Congress, a voter-motivated Obama will not veto or otherwise hobble the agenda that Dems have been trying to effect since that first 100 days. A recently-bankrupt oligarchy will hold much less sway, because NOBODY's buying that BS anymore (i.e., Greenspan). Obama must win. Then, let's watch Kucinich and Feingold and Waxman and Leahy get busy . . . let the GAMES begin!
10:54 PM on 10/25/2008
You go legalgirl. Impeaching the DINO's should be right up there to. (hear that Nance? Steny?)
07:31 PM on 10/25/2008
No doubt, my vote is for Obama. I am a livelong repub. but he had me the first time I heard him and learned more about him. He doesn't have the baggage McCain does. We need a fresh face and fresh ideas. Barack and Joe will bring them to us.
05:47 PM on 10/25/2008
Not voting is not the answer. I see things changing with this election because the MSM isn't the only source of information. The internet has empowered voters to donate, discuss, research, support, email and get involved in ways that were never possible before.

I predict an Obama landslide created by "the people" voting with their donations and their vote. I predict an empowered electorate that makes their concerns known to the President and Congress they elected and fully expect to see results. Corporate interests may find that the people have more power to affect change in their political system than we ever have before. Maybe they can't control us for the first time in history.

I believe that Colin Powell is accurate when he says that this is a generational change. I don't think Corporate America knows what it is up against yet.
04:37 PM on 10/25/2008
Unfortunately, you are correct, for the MSM is nothing butt the voice of the corporate oligarchy that has its fingers into every segment of our lives. The world changed when the Internet was created; it enabled Obama to rise to the top of the heap, but his voice will bellow against the oligarchy's cacophony. The tussle has already begun. McCain/Palin are victim's of outdated prejudices and ideas. No one in the Republican Party expected to win this year's Presidential election, but once a black man won the Democratic nomination--why the hell not try their old personal crap to demonize Obama and tap into what they thought was a greater residue of ignorance and racism in America's craw. I would hope that the white folks who realize that McCain/Palin offer them nothing wouldn't do the most unpatriotic thing imaginable--Not Vote for Obama. We can hope that enough ignorance and racism have been swallowed by the eagle.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
23000Days
Life: Tragedy for feelers, Comedy for thinkers.
07:31 PM on 10/25/2008
Every McCain stay-home is a vote for us.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Gidster
Not so much Liberal as I am anti evil.
01:09 AM on 10/26/2008
We the populace also need to vote with our wallets!
If the MSM does not give you anything other than the party line, don't watch. Tell your friends not to watch. Eventually the loss of viewers will result in the loss of income.

Government is not all that needs changed!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Halter
04:15 PM on 10/25/2008
Bush just asked Attorney General Michael Mukasey to investigate whether hundreds of thousands of newly registered voters in the battleground state of Ohio would have to verify the information on their voter registration forms or be given provisional ballots. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against this requirement, unanimously, last week.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
23000Days
Life: Tragedy for feelers, Comedy for thinkers.
07:29 PM on 10/25/2008
It was the Ohio Supreme Court....
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LiberalDemIda
Pragmatic Progressives 4 Obama 2012
09:28 AM on 10/26/2008
No. It was the United States Supreme Court that ruled against this requirement pushed by the GOP:

http://www.bradblog.com/?p=6526#more-6526
03:48 PM on 10/25/2008
Voting may not change policies, but there are times when it is necessary to vote in order to prevent further disaster. Like Howard Zinn, I am voting Obama.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
11:55 AM on 10/26/2008
I thought Howard Zinn was supporting McCain in order to make things worse for America.