by compared2what? » Thu Feb 24, 2011 1:51 am
I'm with justdrew. Your choices in an election may all totally suck, or what few distinctions you're able to make between the ways that they suck may be slight, or -- what the hell -- they may in fact be identical to one another in their suckiness. All of that is beside the point. And even trivial. Your right to vote is yours, not the candidate's. That he or she doesn't value it is very likely true. Because its devaluation serves his or her interests always. And yours never. If you don't exercise your rights, they atrophy, same as anything else. And that's where we're at in the United States at the moment. We're a nation of 310 or so million people, fewer than half of whom have just enough strength left to waste it all bemoaning the failure of our elected representatives to value our rights more highly than we do.
And come on. Of course they fucking don't. It's not even their job to. I mean, their our representatives, after all. You can hardly say they don't represent us by treating the rights that we threw away like trash.
Nevertheless. We the people are not, individually or severally or collectively, to blame for the enormous fucking mess in (or through) which we're living right now. But we are responsible for doing something about it. Nobody -- and sorry, that includes Ron Paul -- is going to restore your autonomous and free political will to you. You have to regain it through regular exercise. Even if you're only capable of crawling, you simply do not have a better option than to start crawling in the direction of your rights. You deserve one, for sure. But you don't have one.
And you should have hope, btw. I mean, why shouldn't you? Despair isn't going to get you anywhere. And although there probably isn't a much better option than crawling right around the corner where you can't see it, there might be. You'll never know if you don't crawl there and check it out, however. You shouldn't have unrealistic hopes, obviously. But I believe that I already covered that implicitly with the vote-for-Ron-Paul-if-you-must-but-don't-vote-for-him-or-anybody-else-because-you-feel-they're-going-to-save-you-comma-they're-not stuff.
That corner/crawling metaphor isn't really so apt, on consideration. And since it's certaintly not much of an inducement to participation, I guess it doesn't actually have a single thing going for it apart from my having typed it already and being unable to think of another right this second.
Hmm. I guess a somewhat better simile would be that it's like recovery, in the 12-step sense of the word. Admitting you have the problem and the fact-facing that goes with that is a very tough hurdle to clear. But once you do, it's mind-boggling how nearly miraculously improved the same prospects that looked dire before you did reveal themselves to be. Again, to revert to an earlier not-quite-right simile, sort of like exercise. Difficult at the outset, then easier, then so rewarding it seems inconceivable that you were ever foolish enough to postpone or disregard it. Then sooner or later you get complacent and quit. And then it's difficult at the outset, etcetera.
That one's actually not so bad as a simile. People never learn and they're therefore always learning and that's not so bad, really. Which is a lucky thing, since that's how it is.
“If someone comes out of a liquor store with a weapon and 50 dollars in cash I don’t care if a Drone kills him or a policeman kills him.” -- Rand Paul