Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Around the Campfire => Topic started by: Hawkdancer on November 02, 2020, 10:32:21 pm
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Time to get out and vote!! If you don't vote, don't complain about the outcome! Many of us on here have put in many years defending that right!
Hawkdancer
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If you don't vote, don't complain about the outcome!
Alternatively, if you do vote you are legitimizing and condoning a rotten, corrupt system and are at least partly responsible for all of the bad outcomes it generates. Those who refuse to participate are the only ones who can legitimately complain because they withheld their consent to be governed by whichever terrible party/leader wins.
>:D
Either way, good luck with it.
Mark
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If you don't vote, don't complain about the outcome!
Alternatively, if you do vote you are legitimizing and condoning a rotten, corrupt system and are at least partly responsible for all of the bad outcomes it generates. Those who refuse to participate are the only ones who can legitimately complain because they withheld their consent to be governed by whichever terrible party/leader wins.
>:D
Either way, good luck with it.
Mark
What if my wife's and my ballots cancel each other out? We're net zero on responsibility but still did our part? ;D
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If you don't vote, don't complain about the outcome!
Alternatively, if you do vote you are legitimizing and condoning a rotten, corrupt system and are at least partly responsible for all of the bad outcomes it generates. Those who refuse to participate are the only ones who can legitimately complain because they withheld their consent to be governed by whichever terrible party/leader wins.
>:D
Either way, good luck with it.
Mark
Well that's pretty dark but I like it :)
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Thanks Hawk. I have 50 years of voting and am proud of it. :OK
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Got a letter from the Election Board that said I was in the top 1% for voting. I'll be going to vote soon, would rather be hunting but you do what you got to do.
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What if my wife's and my ballots cancel each other out? We're net zero on responsibility but still did our part? ;D
You get it. :D
Well that's pretty dark but I like it :)
I just like to point out that there are more ways to view the issue than the usual 'if you don't vote you can't complain' trope. Freedom to vote also means the freedom to not vote if you chose. It's a right, not an obligation.
Mark
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I sure wish I could vote this election.... but then again, would it do anything ?
-Fox
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Fox, your vote always does something.
Mark, I think of voting as not only a right but an obligation too.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion! ;)
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Got a letter from the Election Board that said I was in the top 1% for voting.
What does that mean? What would put a person n the bottom 1%? Confused but American politics seems to do that to me :D
PS Actually Canadian politics confuses me too ;D
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I think he was kidding dc
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Very likely, he hasn't missed very many elections, at any level. This one marks 60 years for me at the state/federal level.
Hawkdancer
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My first voting was in 1968 and I've voted in every election, Federal, State and Local since and am proud of it. :OK
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I recall my first vote (1970), up in Overgaard AZ (Sitgreaves NF). It was at the non-denominational mission church, two punch card machines and one poll worker. The first time AZ used punch cards. 50 years later, fill in the little box with a black pen, kind of like we had in school. Needless to say, I haven't missed an election since then, voting absentee when I was out of state on assignment. Voting is important, it reinforces our right to bitch. :-)
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I recall my first vote (1970), up in Overgaard AZ (Sitgreaves NF). It was at the non-denominational mission church, two punch card machines and one poll worker. The first time AZ used punch cards. 50 years later, fill in the little box with a black pen, kind of like we had in school. Needless to say, I haven't missed an election since then, voting absentee when I was out of state on assignment. Voting is important, it reinforces our right to bitch. :-)
Gifford, Off the topic, but I drove from eastern Oklahoma to overgaard az to buy a sawmill. That place is beautiful. I really thought the guy was feeding me a line when he said he cut timber there as I was driving through desert and scrub brush, then it all kind of appeared from nothing.
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That is quite a change of scenery after 300 miles of "desert"! Had to stop at the Altitude Grill(& Bar) for lunch!
Hawkdancer
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Morgan & Hawkdancer - you hit the nail on the head, after checking in at Supervisor's office (SO) up in Holbrook Az, I drove down the 'dry lake road' to Heber & Overgaard to the District Office. I sort of felt like I had been sent on a snipe hunt seeing darn few trees, pinyon pine and juniper scattered here and there but then, lo and behold, there were the trees, lots of big old Ponderosa Pine. Guessed I was in the right place after all. :-)