Blow writes: "Are too many Democratic voters sleepwalking away from our democracy this election cycle, not nearly outraged enough about Big Money's undue influence and Republican state legislatures changing the voting rules?"
Portrait, Charles M. Blow. (photo: Damon Winter/NYT)
Where's the Outrage?
28 July 12
re too many Democratic voters sleepwalking away from our democracy this election cycle, not nearly outraged enough about Big Money's undue influence and Republican state legislatures changing the voting rules?
It seems so.
A Gallup poll released this week found that: "Democrats are significantly less likely now (39 percent) than they were in the summers of 2004 and 2008 to say they are ‘more enthusiastic about voting than usual' in the coming presidential election." Republicans are more enthusiastic than they were before the last election.
Some of that may be the effect of having a Democratic president in office; it's sometimes easier to marshal anger against an incumbent than excitement for him. Whatever the reason, this lack of enthusiasm at this critical juncture in the election is disturbing for Democrats.
First, there's the specter of the oligarchy lingering over this election, which disproportionately benefits Republicans. According to a report by Senator Bernard Sanders of Vermont, "So far this year, 26 billionaires have donated more than $61 million to super PACs, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. And that's only what has been publicly disclosed." That didn't include "about $100 million that Sheldon Adelson has said that he is willing to spend to defeat President Obama; or the $400 million that the Koch brothers have pledged to spend during the 2012 election season."
During a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing on Tuesday, Sanders put it this way: "What the Supreme Court did in Citizens United is to say to these same billionaires and the corporations they control: 'You own and control the economy; you own Wall Street; you own the coal companies; you own the oil companies. Now, for a very small percentage of your wealth, we're going to give you the opportunity to own the United States government.' "
Then, of course, there's the widespread voter suppression mostly enacted by Republican-led legislatures.
According to the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law, at least 180 restrictive voting bills were introduced since the beginning of 2011 in 41 states, and "16 states have passed restrictive voting laws that have the potential to impact the 2012 election" because they "account for 214 electoral votes, or nearly 79 percent of the total needed to win the presidency."
A provision most likely to disenfranchise voters is a requirement that people show photo identification to vote. Millions of Americans don't have these forms of ID, and many can't easily obtain them, even when states say they'll offer them free, because getting the documentation to obtain the "free" ID takes time and money.
This is a solution in search of a problem. The in-person voter ID requirements only prevent someone from impersonating another voter at the polls, an occurrence that the Brennan Center points out is "more rare than being struck by lightning."
The voting rights advocates I've talked to don't resist all ID requirements (though they don't say they are all necessary, either). They simply say that multiple forms of identification like student ID and Social Security cards should also be accepted, and that alternate ways for people without IDs to vote should be included. Many of these laws don't allow for such flexibility.
Make no mistake about it, these requirements are not about the integrity of the vote but rather the disenfranchisement of voters. This is about tilting the table so that more of the marbles roll to the Republican corner.
Look at it this way: We have been moving toward wider voter participation for a century. States began to issue driver's licenses more than a century ago and began to include photos on those licenses decades ago. Yet, as the Brennan Center points out, "prior to the 2006 election, no state required its voters to show government-issued photo ID at the polls (or elsewhere) in order to vote."
Furthermore, most voter laws have emerged in the last two years. What is the difference between previous decades and today? The election of Barack Obama. It is no coincidence that some of the people least likely to have proper IDs to vote are the ones that generally vote Democratic and were strong supporters of Obama last election: young people, the poor and minorities.
Republicans are leveraging the deep pockets of anti-Obama billionaires and sinister voter suppression tactics that harken back to Jim Crow to wrest power from the hands of docile Democrats.
There is little likely to be done about the Big Money before the election, and, although some of the voter suppression laws are being challenged in court, the outcome of those cases is uncertain.
These elements are not within voters' control, but two things are: energy and alertness.
If Democrats don't wake up soon, this election might not just be won or lost, it could be bought or stolen.
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The US is headed for disaster thanks to all the Millions and Millions of IDIOTS that have not got a Clue what is really going on with our government and there are a whole lot of IDIOTS out there. The following is a quote I received and that Marine nailed it.
"The danger to America is not (solely) Barack Obama but a citizenry capable of entrusting an inexperienced man like him with the Presidency... Blaming the prince of the fools should not blind anyone to the vast confederacy of fools that made him their prince. The Republic can survive a Barack Obama. It is less likely to survive a multitude of Idiots such as those who made him their president." - A U.S. Marine
Well , in any case, the snarling Mr McConnel, the prettified Mr. Boehner, the snickering Mr. Ryan, and their cohorts soon put an end to those hopes. No, this country hasn't matured. In fact it looks like it never may.
I'm not voting in 2012. I don't give a shit who wins the election. The Washington Regime is beyond salvation. It will devolve into total brutality and bankruptcy and I'll go to Washington and piss on the grave of the Federal government. That will be my vote.
Here's a joke -- "If Democrats don't wake up soon, this election might not just be won or lost, it could be bought or stolen." I've got news for you pal, the election is going to be bought AND stolen whether you are awake or sound asleep. Forget it. The Washington Regime is over. Nothing left to wait for but the pissing.
But don't feel too bad... I'd say another 50 to 60 percent of Americans are like you. Want proof? Read the comments in this on-line blogazine, or the NY Times, or most of the others. So you represent what is probably the central problem facing this country. Plenty of vim and vigor, loads of attitude, but zero team spirit. And absolutely no patience.
The founders agreed - not in '76 but later at the Constitutional convention, that Americans (slaves) of African descent would count as 3/5 of a person in the census and for assigning votes. The South proposed, the North agreed, and we had a republic. We had a war later about this, but what would we have without the initial agreement?
The one major contribution of the US to philosophy is "Pragmatism."
This year I'll be voting Green. Imagine the message we would send if a significant portion of the voters voted third party. For the politicians, it's not just about lining their pockets. It's about being re-elected so they can do it for another term.
People who will vote for Obama or Romney are the problem. If we all voted for who we could believe in we might just get a government that would do the things necessary to create a world our children and grand children can survive and thrive in.
But I don't see why you're so hostile towards Israel. The Islamic republics that want to destroy Israel will never succeed. The Israelis are, after all, God's chosen people.
Talk about head in the sand...ask yourself how izzit that hundreds of billions of dollars have been spend in the past 50 years of computerization and are continuing to be spent each year on network security.
Duh and Doh!!
One company, Diebold, accounts for the cast, count, aggregate and total tabulation of 80% of all votes in the US.
AND, Diebold uses a can't see the software, it's proprietary excuse for hiding the manipulation... lies, lies and damned lies is what our vote credibility is about!
When a battle goes badly, true warriors (in the spiritual tradition thereof) do not say, "Oh, the hell with it, this isn't worth fighting". They keep at it until they win or they are completely vanquished.
Within the realm of "progressive" thought there is diversity. You can't always get what you want. That doesn't mean you stop trying.
In my case, the third party makes the most moral, ethical and rational sense...keep votin' for the lesser of two evils and the outcome continues to be evil no matter how you look at it.
I contend that the only path to true, heartfelt deep and lasting change is for conditions to become tense and dire enough for the critical mass to move in resistance to it.
...apparently, judging from the red thumb opinions here at RSN, the 'mass' is not crtical yet.
No matter how I may have misconstrued the history, I'd always like to think I could earn the red feather in my version. I will always try to put up the honorable and good fight, no matter the odds, and hope some of opponents that are not as honorable will never earn white or red feathers, no matter how much damage they cause on the far less powerless. They are not brave enough or honorable enough in too many of their one-sided fights to earn feathers.
Until we get ranked choice voting, or the chance to cast a negative vote against a candidate, I'll have to hold my nose and do the most effective thing I can choosing Obama over Norquist's stooges.
He is clearly clueless enough to run for office and should do so without delay. He can give rousing speeches to people whose jobs have been outsourced or wiped out due to corporate fraud and other malfeasance, whose 401ks are gone, whose homes have been foreclosed, whose children are starving, whose college debt is astronomically higher than their incomes (if they have any), who can't pay their medical bills or afford care at all. He can chastise them all for their lack of enthusiasm and remind them that the well-being of the Democratic Party is substantially more important than their own. I’m sure millions of people simply don’t realize that they are supposed to be enthusiastic about a party whose main claim to fame is that the Republicans are worse.
We must add the observation that one of our most common critiques of republicant's is their lock step cognitive dissonance...no w appearing to be that of far too many 'bots for the Zer-'0'.
Red Thumbs - Ten-Hut!
Thanks, MarjG, for the wakeup call. They haven't documented any cases of voter fraud in PA for example. But we can certainly document cases of voter suppression that have led to Republican victories: (1) FL in 2000, where the Sec'y of State, Katherine Harris, scrubbed at least 80,000 voters from the rolls prior to the election, which led to a Bush victory by 537 votes - after (S)election by the Supreme Court that is. Ms Harris got a congressional seat as a bonus, but they were done with her after one term. The 2000 (S)election led to the worst administration in modern history. (2) OH in 2004, where the Sec'y of State, Ken Blackwell, scrubbed thousands from the voter rolls in the same way that Harris did in 2000. Note also that the GOP is looking for individual cases of voter fraud, while they are using ELECTED OFFICIALS to perform wide sweeping acts of voter suppression. And surprise, surprise where is it happening? In states controlled by GOP governors and state assemblies, where nationwide as many as 5 million voters could be affected in this election.
And, yes it is PURE EVIL!
MarjG, you don't wanna look under Romney's coattails. If he wins, Grover Norquist has already laid out the plan. Check it out at:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/02/13/grover-norquist-speech-cpac.html
So Romney will be the dummy, Mortimer Snerd, to ventriloquist Grover Norquist's Edgar Bergen. And for all those folks out there who are saying "We want our America back", you're gonna get a BACKHAND from a party interested only in shredding what's left of the social safety net for our most vulnerable - children, seniors, the working poor, public employees, the disabled, students, the infrastructure - and funnelling money upward to the rich.
After a Romney/Tea Party term, YOU REALLY WON'T KNOW AMERICA!!!
We're still cursed with our corrupt political process that probably won't change without a revolution (non-violent or bloody) Instead of choosing the lesser of 2 evils, I prefer the analogy of doing my part to thwart the hyenas.
Until I see the barricades being erected, I shall vote for Obama.
When do you suggest that begins and how do you possibly rationalize some form of 'change' when you are voting for the identical slog through the dung pits of political lies, corruption, human slaughter and soulless international behavior that you on the other hand note as dispicable?
DOH...AND DUH!
I certainly wouldn't want you on my team when in the Visitor position. You'd quaver at the Home team's superior number of fans and head back to the locker room.
I won't fall into a tit for tat ad hominem with you...
It seems to me America has yet to awaken to that extent...the craven exhibited by the past and current administrations just seems to not stir WETHEPEOPLE...yet.
Get off trying to insult me please, it is a bit abrasive.
I am merely reflecting the reality of things in the 'practical politics', lesser of two evils' redundance that is going on.
Respectfully and redundantly brought to you by the Department of Redundancy Department...re spectfully...re dundantly.
Do you really think that the corporate cronies, CIA and MIC are worried about Obama?
They have him in their hip pocket and could care less whether he or Romney wins. They win either way.
They are actually better off with Obama because his teleprompter induced eloquance keeps the lefties under control while the powers behind the curtain continue their assault on liberty and freedom.
Now what "Democracy" would that be?
He then goes on to write about "Oligarchy lingering over this election": "gloating" might be a better expression. -Wish he'd make up his mind and quit self-contradict ing -and to no really great point.
And what does he mean "could" be bought or stolen -it already is headed down that road. He appears in the article at least, to be as out-of-touch as the House, Senate and judiciary.
It is basic strategy, when you have two enemies fighting over you, to help destroy one, and at once turn on the other, right?. The only time you should take sides between the two is a single Tuesday in November. Tear down the Republican party; but continue to lay the Democratic party bare. Neither one has a shred of legitimacy left; neither has fulfilled their side of the national contract which could claim our loyalty, respect, tax money, or obedience.
Once enough of us realize that neither of them has the slightest right to claim our allegience we will just shrug them off, as well as their corporate puppet masters.
It may not be hard or bloody as we think. It happened in India, South Africa, Eastern Europe. Then comes the hard part. Reinstituting a free and just society . . .
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