“Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again
and expecting different results.” That quote is generally attributed to Albert
Einstein, a man most consider to be one of the smartest people to have made a
mark on our country in the past hundred years. I wonder what he’d say about
yesterday’s election results.
If you pay attention to some of the Republican blowhards in
this country, you’d think the reelection of Barack Obama is the end of our
country and way of life. It isn’t. But his reelection and that of the vast
majority of Congressional incumbents begs the question, why do Americans keep
voting these people into office if they aren’t happy with the direction our
country has been going? The answer you’ll hear most often is that voters are
given no real choice. Congressional House districts are gerrymandered to ensure
they never change hands and election funding rules allow the two major parties
to accumulate and spend vast amounts of money on campaigning in order to drown
out any opposition.
The United States’ two party system is now so entrenched
that nearly 99% of the 1.2 million voters yesterday chose between Obama or Romney despite the fact that 28 candidates received at least 500 votes each.
That is the power of money in politics and the influence money has on the
American press. I’d wager 98% of those 1.2M voters couldn’t even name one of
the other 26 candidates.
My candidate, as documented in my previous post, was the
Libertarian nominee, Gary Johnson. With two successful terms as governor of New
Mexico, he has more political experience than Romney or Obama before Obama took
office in 2008, but he still wasn’t invited to the debates, wasn’t reported on
by the press, and came in a very distant third place with just over 1.1 million
votes. Why is that? Money, of course.
In George Washington’s 1796 Farewell Address, he shared the
following warning about political parties:
“They serve to
organize faction, to give it an artificial and extraordinary force; to put, in
the place of the delegated will of the nation, the will of a party, often a
small but artful and enterprising minority of the community; and, according to
the alternate triumphs of different parties, to make the public administration
the mirror of the ill-concerted and incongruous projects of faction, rather
than the organ of consistent and wholesome plans digested by common counsels,
and modified by mutual interests.”
Washington’s fears have come to pass. Our federal government
no longer serves the people, but serves only itself and those rich corporate
donors and PACs that pay for it. Politicians vote based on party platform
rather than conscience, common sense or the voice of their constituents.
The saddest part of this is that American voters have been
fooled into believing one party is better and significantly different than the
other. In fact, the majority of voters passionately believe this, but they’re
wrong. Unless you make over $200K per year, there’s almost no difference in how
the two parties’ tax plans will impact you. Neither supports pulling all troops
and funds out of the Middle East. Neither supports smaller government and
significant deficit reduction despite rhetoric from the Republican party stating
otherwise. Neither has the political will to solve the mounting
crisis of Medicare costs or the corruption of Wall Street. Neither supports the legalization and taxation of marijuana despite
the revenue it would generate, the huge hit it would deliver to the Mexican
cartels, or the fact that it’s no more medically dangerous than alcohol. Neither
supports Congressional term limits despite the fact it would reduce corruption
and force regular change within the ranks of leadership. In short, for almost
all of the major issues facing this country’s well being, the choice of Democrat
or Republican doesn’t improve a thing in the life of a typical American citizen.
So what’s the answer? 3rd party candidates. If
you want real change in this country, you must stop voting for the candidates
our two major parties and their media cronies spoon-feed you and begin voting for independent
candidates instead. Support independents at every level; city, state, and
federal. Sure, they probably won’t win in the next election or two, but
movements must start somewhere and the longer we wait, the longer things remain
status quo.

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