Voting
is Your Right, not an Obligation
By Chuck Muth
October 30, 2014
At
the risk of being accused of “voter suppression,” allow me to suggest that if
you don’t know the issues and don’t know the candidates that it would be better
for your community and our republic if you just stayed home on Election Day.
Don’t
get me wrong. I’m not saying you “can’t”
vote. Just that maybe you “shouldn’t.”
Indeed,
if you haven’t taken the time to research both the candidates and the issues on
the ballot this year sufficiently enough to cast an informed and educated vote,
then please do the rest of us who are exercising our right responsibly a favor
by sitting this one out.
There
is simply no excuse for not being an informed and educated voter in this day
and age. The Internet is an absolutely
fantastic tool for researching candidates and issues. Local newspapers continue to provide
invaluable information and often endorsements.
And plenty of organizations of like-minded individuals also provide
voter guides and candidate recommendations.
For
example, if gun rights are an important issue to you, then check out the
endorsements of groups such as the Nevada Firearms Coalition. If social issues are important to you, check out
the voter guide published by Nevada Families.
If
being a Republican or a Democrat is important to you, find out which party the
candidates running in so-called “non-partisan” races belong to. If you’re libertarian-leaning in your philosophy,
the Libertarian Party did a great job researching candidates this year on their
website. Ditto the Independent American
Party if you take your politics more on the social side of issues.
The
point is there’s just no excuse for casting a ballot in ignorance. And yes, I’m saying that if you go into the
voting booth and make your decisions by flipping a coin or going “eeny-meeny-miny-moe”
that instead maybe you should spend the day getting your car washed or your
nails polished.
An
instructive case in point illustrating the danger of casting an ill-informed
vote was the campaign of Dave Wilson last year.
Wilson
was a white candidate running in a predominantly black district for a board of
trustees seat in Houston who didn’t include a single photograph of himself on
his website or in mailers but strongly and disingenuously suggested he was
black. And to the shock of many black
voters who ignorantly voted for him without really knowing who they voted for –
he won!
Is
there a “Dave Wilson” on your ballot this year?
If you don’t know, don’t vote. Or
at least only vote in races in which you clearly know who the candidates
are. You get no extra credit for casting
a vote in every single race.
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