The biggest tragedy about this election is NOT that the
Democrat candidate is Hillary Clinton (a person who has no regard for the laws
of this nation and thinks she is above them) and the Republican candidate is
Donald Trump (a person who is guaranteed to only make decisions that benefit
himself)—although that is definitely a tragedy big enough to hang your head in
shame when people ask if you are an American.
No, the biggest tragedy is that 90% of the people who step
into the pole booth on Tuesday will believe that those are the only two
candidates from whom they can choose. So depressing was that thought to me,
that I almost considered not voting at all in this election. Now, for many of
you, not voting is a common thing. For me, I have only missed two elections in
which I could vote in my entire life. Last year, we moved on October 30—that
means that I would have been voting for local representation in an area where I
no longer lived if I had chosen to vote, so I didn't. There was also one
election in an "off year" (we only vote for three years in Indiana
and then take a year off) that was simply a referendum that I had no opinion
about.
I have since revisited my decision not to vote. This is the
year when a third party SHOULD be able to overturn the other two. The
Republicans and Democrats have been in league with each other for years to the
point where they have really stopped representing the ideals on which their
respective parties were founded. They have long stopped representing "We
the people…" The instead represent whomever gives their party the most
money. This is not me, and I would be willing to bet it is also not you. The
top two parties have also ensured that other parties do not make it on the
ballots because they are the ones who write the laws for who can make it on the
ballot. Some laws they have concocted are literally so restrictive in their
wording it would be impossible to get on the ballot unless you are the
Republican or Democratic nominee.
The top two are also broken because they allow ANYONE to
vote in their primaries. That means I, as an independent who frequently votes
across party lines, can go down and vote for the Democrat nominee without even
remotely wanting to be in the Democrat party. In my state (Indiana), I do have
to choose whether I want to vote for the Republican or Democrat and I cannot
vote for both, but the one time I did it I was not given the chance to vote for
the Libertarian, which tells me their primaries must be more selective. Some
states allow you to vote in both the Democrat and Republican primaries (so I
have heard). Why? Shouldn't only registered party members be voting in
primaries? Yes, they should if you truly want a representative of that party.
However, as I said before, the Republicans and Democrats are
only one party. A vote for one, is a vote for the other. Both support their top
donors. I literally have somewhere in my garage a signed letter from a Senator
stating he would not ever vote for something and then a printout showing he did
in fact vote for that thing. In the next election, this senator advertised that
he did not vote for that thing (but his voting record showed different).
Thankfully, he is no longer in office, but I am pretty sure he is not alone in
his deception especially since both of Indiana's current senators have
advertised they would never vote for X and then turned around and voted for it!
When was the last time you actually checked the voting record of the people you
vote for?
So, I will be at the poles but I will be voting for a third
party. There are actually some really SOLID choices this year. I am encouraging
you (1) to please share this with all your friends and (2) please do a little
research and check these people out; you may find you support their party
beliefs more than you support your traditional Democrats or Republicans. DO NOT
BUY INTO THE HYPE THAT THERE CAN ONLY BE TWO PARTIES. The reason that statement
was first made historically is because by the nature of our elections (the
person with the most votes wins even if the most votes are 25% of the total
votes), only one or two parties will make the voting laws and thereby make it
difficult for a third party to get in. That is the purpose of this post. If you
live in a state that has barred third parties from being on the ballot, WRITE
IN one of these candidate names below—unless you truly want to vote for Trump
or Clinton (keep in mind though, a vote for Clinton may actually be a vote for
Trump if he can get a felony tacked to her by January).
LIBERTARIAN:
Gary
Johnson (former governor of New Mexico) Libertarians believe that
states (and ideally individuals) should make most of the laws governing
America. They see the Constitution as the ultimate document for determining
law. Traditionally, they support abortion, but they believe a person who
disagrees with abortion should not be forced to pay for it (in other words they
would remove government funding but allow it to remain legal). This candidate
does have a vested interest in the marijuana industry (he used to be a CEO). He
supports legalizing it at the federal level and allowing states to decide-
similar to what our current president has supported. Despite what I have heard
a lot of Democrats say, Libertarians are more aligned with their actual
beliefs. (Democrats tend to tell me Libertarians are just Republican but this
is not true.)
CONSTITUTION:
Darrell
Castle The constitution party supports the Constitution, but they see
the Bible as another important document in determining law. This party is most
aligned with what the Republican party believes. This candidate is pro-life. He
believes the U. S. should exit from the U.N. and he would like to get rid of
the Federal Reserve. Although the Constitution party is on the ballot in more
than 20 states, plan on writing his name in if you want to vote for him.
GREEN:
Dr.
Jill Stein The Green Party believes in putting the environment first
(big surprise, I know) and where the environment is silent, they tend to be
Democrat in thinking. Their platform revolves around protecting the
environment. This candidate supports public ownership of all energy sources,
banning pesticides and other toxins, ending fossil fuel extraction that is
disruptive to the environment, labeling and getting rid of GMOs. She would like
to outlaw insurance but create national healthcare, and she supports any form
of abortion.
There is actually a
long list of write-in candidates
that you can vote for, but these are the top three. A few others (who are on
the ballot in 5-20 states) to research are:
Socialist Workers Party
Alyson
Kennedy (that is the official platform website, I couldn't find a specific
webpage for her.
Ballotopedia
has a clearer presentation of the party platform but I don't know how accurate
it is.)