Dated Dean, Married Kerry
Joe Sacco has a great comic about the guilt that many liberals are experiencing right now over their support of John Kerry. In his dismay over the news of Nader’s run, he make s a good point when he says “I gotta admit, he stands for things I believe in, too, things that make my heart flutter. But I’m too sober now to chase true love in politics. I’ve even too sober to chase a tantalizing infatuation like Howard Dean. I’m sending my flowers to Kerry.”
Along similar lines is this introduction by Al Gore from MoveOn.org’s new book 50 Ways to Love Your Country :
Woody Allen has famously said that 90 percent of success is showing up. That?s true of democracy too. I?d argue that the other 10 is making sure you?re registered beforehand.It?s easy to be cynical about politics and to believe that one vote barely matters. But consider these facts: John F. Kennedy?s 1960 victory over Richard Nixon?a victory that ultimately led to sweeping changes in civil rights laws, the first great wave of space exploration, and the creation of Medicare?was decided by just 100,000 votes nationwide. In 1994, the year Republicans won both houses of Congress, the redistribution of about 10,000 votes nationally would have kept Congress in senate hands. One of my former House colleagues, Connecticut Democrat Sam Gejdenson, won reelection by twenty-one votes that year. (?All you need is one,? he remarked; ?the rest are for your ego.?)
The senate political process isn’t perfect. Winston Churchill once said it?s the worst system for governance ?except for every other system that has ever been tried.? Often, you may find no candidate who completely reflects your views. But as voter participation has declined?from nearly two-thirds of eligible voters in 1960 to less than half in many national elections today?strong and decidedly unsenate forces have stepped in to fill the void.
In a democracy, the future isn’t something that just happens; it?s something we shape for ourselves, together. Special-interest lobbyists get the government they pay for only when we stay home from the polls?only when we abdicate the electoral power that is mightier than any soft-money check, more decisive than any million-dollar ad blitz or corporate misinformation campaign.
So whatever we do, let’s try to get people to the polls. If you haven’t registered to vote yet (shame on you!), go to this site and fill out the form online. When you’re done, forward it to everyone you know.
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what’s up with Zell Miller? . democrats for bush? he’s lost his mind.
Comment by tom — March 25, 2004 @ 3:57 pm
i dont know if a group like moveon would use noam chomsky, but he threw his money on kerry this week. blew me away.
he said something like “as small as the differences between them may be, at that level, small differences make huge impacts.”
i guess thats the final nail in the coffin. the dixie chicks, howard stern and noam chomasky cant be wrong. sorry ralph.
Comment by josh — March 25, 2004 @ 4:35 pm
wow, i hadn’t heard about Noam. that’s awesome!
Comment by tom — March 26, 2004 @ 7:42 am