Whereas both major political parties have sold out to the Wall Street banks and multinational corporations with no allegiance to the Nation or the people, Whereas third parties have no possibility of winning the Presidential election due to corporate control over the media and the electoral process, Whereas three decades of solid efforts to reform the electoral process have been subverted by the corporate state, Whereas participation in this process lends legitimacy to a system that has lost its legitimacy, We hereby refuse to vote in the 2012 Presidential elections.
So it seems that the substance of the anti-electoral position is limited to (1) bourgeois, major-party candidates, in (2) the Presidential (as opposed to more local) elections. The question is whether boycotting the elections is a viable alternative political strategy. In order to explore this question, I talked to Terri Lee, a veteran activist for economic justice and co-administrator of the group “Declare Your Independence from the Democrats!” Terri is also a member of the Boycott Elections Facebook group mentioned above.
POLITICALCONTEXT.ORG: Why should American citizens boycott the 2012 Presidential elections?
Terri Lee: Boycotting the presidential elections would be a notable act of rebellion and defiance. The Establishment effectively draws in the public and engages them in the ‘horse show’ and political theater of elections. Voting serves them, not us. They work and invest millions to keep us attached to an immoral, rigged, corrupt, electoral process which is both a scam and a sham. I support Wally Conger’s Anti-Electorate Manifesto: “We, the Anti-Electorate, do not believe there is a need for “strong leadership” in government. We are not drawn to ‘intellectual’ authorities and political ‘heroes.’ We are not impressed with titles, ranks, and pecking orders – politicians, celebrities, and gurus. We do not struggle for control of organizations, social circles, and government. We do not lobby the State for favors or permission to control those with whom we disagree. Rather, we advocate freedom. By its very nature, the State does not. Exercise your right to say ‘No’ to the warfare-welfare system. Refuse to vote. Then tell your friends why.”
PC: Should citizens boycott only the Presidential elections? What about candidates down ballot? Senators? Representatives?
TL: Well, the presidential elections garner a lot of attention and so it could be very effective if registered voters resisted going to the polls as a loud, clear form of protest. Voters could publicly burn their voter registration cards and expose the system for the corrupt system that it is. We can deem it unworthy of our participation. We could demonstrate the integrity of the collective by refusing our participation and resist.
PC: Even more to the point: Should I vote for my city council candidates, local judges, public hospital board members, and school board members? Why them and not the President of the United States? What’s the bright line?
TL: Here’s something to consider. Let’s take electing your local mayor. The mayor lives in your community. You may see him or her at your local grocery store, gas station, post office, school or park. You live and work with one another and you share a community. It’s easy to have access to your mayor — you can go to his or her office. If residents are upset, the mayor has to face the outraged citizens rather directly and intimately. The farther out you go the more distant, detached, insulated the elected official is. Citizens have to use their own judgment on this, of course, but it seems to me that for where we are now loud public resistance to the presidential elections is a good place to start.
PC: Let me play devil’s advocate: The Obama administration will not enforce the Defense of Marriage Act. A Republican administration would. Under Obama’s health care reform, a few million people might have a better chance of accessing life-saving medical treatment. Under a Republican administration, that won’t happen. Aren’t you sacrificing gay rights and sick people on the altar of political purism? Aren’t you saying “sure it’s okay if a few hundred thousand people die, or there are fewer civil rights for gays, as long as I make my politically purist point?” How would you answer arguments like that?
TL: Well, I don’t agree with the premise of your question regarding the Democrats and the Republicans, but I understand your point. It seems to me that you are suggesting that it is slightly more important to vote Democrat than to vote Republican due to that thin bit of difference — so, why not just go to the polls and pull the lever for the Democrats because it could do ‘some good’ for ‘some people’. So if you calculate a ‘least harm’ and ‘most benefit’ ratio, hold your nose and just vote Democrat, yes? I turn to journalist Glenn Greenwald who most eloquently expresses my view on this (not about not-voting, but rather about the point that it’s ‘slightly better to vote Democrat than Republican so be a reluctant voter and vote Democrat’):
GREENWALD: You know there’s abeen lots of people who make radical critiques of hte government who — like Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn and others — who have said ‘as horrible as the Democrats are the fact that they are even a little bit better than the Republicans means that it’s important that they win and not Republicans because with an entity as powerful as the United States governmetn even small differences can make meaningful differences in the lives of millions of people.’
And so even though there’s tiny little differences between Democrats and Republicans — and they’re both evil and corrupt in their own ways — that it’s important to continue to elect Democrats, they’ve argued.
That to me was an argument that was somewhat persuasive — for awhile.
And what I’ve actually decided and concluded instead was that even if there are short-term benefits to electing Democrats — as opposed to Republicans — so you get a Sonya Sotomayor on the Supreme Court instead of an Antonio Scalia, for example — something like that.
That’s a benefit that’ll sway some case and it’s bettr [inaudible]….um, there’s also experent costs to pledging your loyalty to a political party and to contine to support it even though it’s in this extremely corrupt and destructive expression.
And so it’s not just the benefit that needs to be weighed, it’s the cost as well, knowing — as party leaders do — that many liberals are convinced (and that many people on the left are convniced) by this reasoning [the Democrats] can continue to ignore people on the left, because they know that at the end of the day they’ll scare enough of them to with scary images of Michele Bachman or Newt Gingrich or whomever…they’ll continue to support [the Democrats] even though they’re ignored adn they get nothing.
And they’ll be ignored and get nothing forever.
That’s a huge cost.
Another cost is the opportunity cost of doing activism for a political party that doesn’t care at all about you.
Instead of using your money and time on more meaningful changes.
[APPLAUSE]
So that, I think, is the ultimate formula that needs to be evaluated. The ultimate weighing of costs and benefits that needs to be assessed — not just ‘well, there are some beneifts to the Democrats, therefore let’s vote for them.”
[Ask, too] what are the costs from continuing to support and prop up this party and having them know that they can take the support for granted and putting our time and energy into that rather that something more significant that can achieve something more enduring and more fundamental with longer-lasting benefits.
And so that’s the calculation that, to me, has swayed me away from that view [of Zinn and Chomsky].
PC: What about third party candidates (e.g. the various socialists) who admit the Presidential elections are largely meaningless in the substantive sense, but who run candidates for President in order to take advantage of the electoral process in order to get the message out about their party, their beliefs, the crisis of capitalism, etc.? In boycotting Presidential elections, are you also “boycotting” the way in which those third party candidates use the elections as a platform for their message?
TL: The third party candidates can still campaign — in fact, that’s their function in this scam of a system: to simply run. In their campaigning they expose the injustices in the system and the seriously flawed positions of the candidates. And, at the end of the day that’s about it. Inherent in the system design (including the domination of corporate monies) third parties and third party candidates are unable to establish an alternate party or see a candidate to victory. We know it, the third party candidates know it and The Establishment knows it too. Boycotting presidential elections does no harm to them because there was no chance for victory from the onset.
PC: What reforms of the electoral process, specifically, would have to happen before you’d stop calling for the boycott?
TL: We would need to take out all the elements referenced by Noam Chomsky when he speaks of presidential politics (paraphrased) as: “the big-money big-media candidate-centered narrow-spectrum electoral extravaganza the masters stage for us once every four years”. Simply put, we have to get the corporate money out of elections, level the playing field, implement publicly-funded elections, and institute Instant-Runoff (IRV) voting. (And while we’re at it and dreaming a bit, a parliamentary government with proportional representation would certainly be a step in the right direction.)
PC: If voting makes no difference, why does refusing to vote make a difference? How is your gesture any less symbolic and meaningless than voting?
TL: Excellent question! Voting is the status quo. It’s desirable to The Establishment to have us follow these silly elections, to have us believe in the illusion of choice, and to have the public think “that’s politics” and busy ourselves with phone banking, fundraising, canvassing, etc which is all FOR THEM! Intentionally, purposefully, and loudly not-voting is an act of defiance. A refusal to partake in the immoral, illegal, corporate dominated, money-serving system in which voters are pawned.
Refuse to partake. Refuse to vote. Declare abstinence from the corrupt system that they designed and want to draw us into. How liberating! Let there be a ballot-box revolt in which all the polling stations are empty and quiet on Election Day 2012!
LINKS: http://www.zcommunications.org/should-progressives-boycott-the-presidential-elections-by-matt-j-stannard-interviews-terri-lee
and
http://politicalcontext.org/blog/2011/12/should-progressives-boycott-the-presidential-elections/



39 Comments

No. Simple as that. When we have people of the calibre of Rocky Anderson, to vote is an insult to them.
Not to forget that the electoral process is a great place to ORGANIZE
I vote every time possible. My 87 year old mother plans on taking people to the polls in November.
Hell no!
As flawed as it is, you can use our electoral system to express your disapproval. Not voting tells the PTB you don’t care.
Send as clear of message as you can and vote Third-Party!
I voted in my first presidential election in 1972. I have never seen a ballot without at least one additional candidate.
Voting for a candidate that is unlikely to win is not throwing your vote away. It is a statement of principle. You are saying I am exercising my right to vote, I care what happens to my country but I am not going to vote for evil.
I’ll boycott the two big parties, but I’ll probably vote third party. Not voting at all is just giving power to the republicans and democrats to enable the corporations.
Elections are won by the candidate who receives a plurality of the votes cast. I repeat: …of the votes cast. No candidate has ever been elected when all of that candidate’s supporters did not vote. The preferences of the people who do not vote are unknown, and worse, irrelevant. No matter how many progressives boycott the election on November 6, 2012, the winner will be the candidate who gets the most votes, – the most votes, no matter how small the total number of votes cast may be – and on the following January 20, that person will be inaugurated as President of the US. Do you think that either Obama or Romney will raise his right hand on Jan 20 at the Capital and tell the Chief Justice “I just can’t let you swear me in as President. I’m so embarrassed because the progressives all stayed home on election day.”??
The only way for your vote to be counted is to VOTE.
A lot of people voted for Obama and the Democrats in 2008, but about 40% of them did not vote in 2010. That’s why the Republicans won the House, many governorships, and control of many state legislatures. The stay-at-home vote got almost zero attention in the media. If that 40% had instead voted for a third party, or otherwise helped a third party, getting a third party on the ballot for 2012 would be far easier now.
Boycotting the elections is a bad idea, they can spin that however they want (maybe they’ll suggest that you stayed home because you are a democrat who thinks Obama is “too liberal”).
Vote Green Party instead!
Obama and Ben Nelson Democrats are not worth voting for – they do not at the end of the day differ from the GOP, and indeed Obama is more effective in getting GOP ideas into law, because Democrats toss progressives overboard every time he tells them to do so, so that Obama is MORE dangerous to progressive ideals than a GOPer would be.
But of course I will vote – just not for President Obama. Or any down ticket fake Democrat But there are plenty of good progressives running as Democrats down ticket that I will both support and I will vote for.
Just because I’m no longer casting votes for Vichycrats doesn’t mean I’m going to abdicate my responsibility to vote. You know who else would LOVE for progressives to stay home in a huff? Republicans. Terri Lee and every other fake progressive on the planet can stand in line to kiss my ass.
Excuse me
I mean to NOT vote is an insult. Not to forget strategically wrong.
Or we have lost the right to complain about the actions of the president. Not to forget it is pretty blatant now that TPB do not want progressives to vote.
Voting for nobody, when you could have voted 3rd party, seems awfully dumb and lazy. What’s more, it’s voting in voting blocs that holds the potential to both relatively easily shake up the system, as well as attract additional follower to your voting bloc when you do shake up the system. This would provide the opening for a rapid escape from strangulation by the D/R duopoly.
The only good excuse for not voting in a particular race is if a) you are in a voting bloc b) your voting bloc collectively decides to boycott a given race c) only a bad Dem and bad Repub were running in that race and d) your voting bloc made efforts to make the reasons for their action well known.
If you are not in a voting bloc, if there is only a D and an R, and one is significantly less evil than the other, it makes sense to vote for the (greatly) lesser evil. Otherwise, I think it makes the most sense to vote contrarian – get the incumbent out of office.
Well, in general. A complicating factor is that “sending a message” or “growing a 3rd party” can be at odds with “punishing”. Thus, if Mitt Romney is the R nominee, and I want to punish Obama for his many betrayals by voting for Romney (even though I consider Romney and Obama more or less equal evils), if I vote for a 3rd party, then I may risk an Obama victory. This risk is a function of the voting tendencies of my fellow citizens, which I wont’ know for sure until after the results are in. So, guessing is part of the game, though it should help to read the polls.
The fundamental problems I have with voting strategy diaries, which is also demonstrated in this diary, are
a) no call for the input of accomplished political game theorists, like Bueno de Mesquita
b) no (explicit) appreciation of the fact that you need persistent voting blocs – voting blocs that will change the “game” that your political game theorist calculates, to the advantage of citizens who are inclined to join them (i.e., disgusted with both the D and R parties)
c) no mention of the fact that voting blocs ideally need to be able to vote on their strategies, also (not just candidates and parties). This is to mitigate against loss of members from the voting bloc. Therefore, a voting strategies aggressiveness needs to be tailored to fit the group. Kind of like mutual funds of varying degrees of aggressiveness are sold to different types of customers, depending on their tolerance of risk. A progressive who abandons the Democrats invites the risk of seen a worse Republican take office, until the system is made tangibly more democratic. Likewise for conservatives abandoning Republicans.
d) no mention of the fact that efforts to pre-crowd-fund potential campaigns (at least in nacent stages of voting bloc formation and eventual domination)
e) no mention of the fact that efforts to pre-staff potential campaigns needs to be organized (at least in nacent stages of voting bloc formation and eventual domination). These volunteers can recruit into local chapters of their voting bloc, even absent a candidate
(OK, these “facts” are my considered opinion)
f) no mention of voting groups in our recent past (which don’t quite rise to my definition of voting bloc), which made electoral threats against D or R incumbents, made good on those threats, and have significantly shifted the functioning of government, thereby. These groups are a) Tea Parties in 2010 b) Wisconsin Democrats and allies, which successfully recalled some Republicans. These efforts have continued into a recall effort against Scott Walker, which is going well.
So, voting is not a completely meaningless process.
The 99% should vote but should boycott the legacy parties.
d) no mention of the fact that efforts to pre-crowd-fund potential campaigns (at least in nacent stages of voting bloc formation and eventual domination)
should be
d) no mention of the fact that efforts to pre-crowd-fund potential campaigns needs to be organized (at least in nacent stages of voting bloc formation and eventual domination)
It’s very difficult to be a ‘principled voter’ in our current system.
I think the key part of your comment above, mytwocents, is that you said that the non-vote got zero attention — I am a suggesting organizing the non-vote as an act of rebellion, resistance, and revolt. I am not suggesting ‘quietly not voting’ but rather, noisily making a statement about our corrupt, fixed, immoral system.
Voting Green Party or any third party does not advance the demands and desires of the populace. Nor does voting for the dominant parties. Conclusion: voting — no matter how you deliver it –voting does not make life better for us in any way.
I am suggesting abstaining from voting as an act of resistance, rebellion, and rejection of the manipulated system. Republicans are welcome. No matter which candidate or party wins, there is no win for the people. There is no electoral way to make changes that benefit us.
Just by looking at your picture, one thing is certain: I’m older than you and I always will be.So listen up.
I went down the road you’re pointing to years ago. It’s a dead end.
The only way we will ever get the country we want is by “voting” for it. Not just at the voting booth, but in the streets, in foreclosed homes, on the first day of Congress’ next session, etc. (a la Occupy)
The NPA was founded here last year to work on the voting piece. We’re not a party, but an org dedicated to creating an environment in which viable third, fourth, and fifth parties can flourish, and to doing that through electoral activism. The Unified Platform ratified earlier this year assures candidates uphold Progressive principles (as distinct from compromised, sold-old, neolib ones), and put personalities aside.
Saying that we have no options or that voting indie/third party is willful blindness, terridi, and despite Greenwald’s clueless claim to the contrary, it is most assuredly not what Chomsky advocates. For decades, he has espoused exactly the path the NPA is pursuing:
1) Come together as a constituency
2) Put out a platform that represents your beliefs
3) Recruit candidates who will pledge to uphold it
4) Hold them accountable to doing so by very publicly disowning them the first time they fail to uphold it
5) Repeat
(You can read all about it in his book “Media Control.”)
If this strategy sounds like what the GOP did back in the 80s with the “Contract for America,” that’s because it is. It’s also the reason you never heard of a pro-choice Republican, a pro-tax Republican, a pro-gun control Republican, or an anti-corporate Republican. And it’s why America has consistently moved right (fascist) for all of those 30 years, despite polling showing the public’s strong desire (consistently 60 percent and greater over that same period) that we move in the opposite direction.
Despite their fascist views being firmly in the minority, the GOP’s unflagging insistence of purity within its ranks and by its candidates on its key issues is the ONLY reason it has consistently secured victories which the numbers show to be implausible at best. Unless and until the Left is willing to do the same thing – to STOP COMPROMISING – We the People will continue to lose.
In five states (so far), disaffected Democrats have Darcy Richardson as a principled alternative to Obama – NH, MO, TX, LA and OK. Can he win? Of course not. Can he send a message that awakens those disaffected Dems to the completeness of their party’s capitulation to corporate interests? You’re damned right, and they can take that knowledge to Stein or Anderson in the general election.
Change is incremental, terridi, not instant. If we choose to take our balls and go home just because some smooth-talking huckster bamboozled us four years ago into thinking systemic change would be easy, we’ll have only ourselves to blame when it proves that much longer in coming.
The way it starts is by voting for the country we actually want, not a diluted or compromised version, and by insisting on candidates who are resolved enough to pledge to us they will work for same – ALSO not a diluted or compromised version – every time. That’s what they started doing 50 years ago in Canada, and this spring it finally paid off. The neolibs are out, the much more lefty NDP is in, and the conservatives are likely to get their asses shellacked in the next Canadian cycle.
Vote or don’t vote — it won’t make a difference either way. You can participate in “symbolic not-voting” while at the same time voting. Whatever.
If we’re going to talk direct action, let’s talk something more serious, like occupying foreclosed properties or building community gardens.
No.
Next question.
The time between now and the elections next fall is when the important actions will take place, the actual election will be just another Tuesday.
I do not care if a progressive votes for a third party, or writes in someone to the left of Barack Obama. I do care if they do not vote. Because if you want to move the conversation to lefty, liberal, progressive ideas and have candidates actually embrace these ideas you have to prove to the idiots that THAT is what people want. For years, the Democrats who have lost are being told that they lost because they weren’t centrist enough, weren’t ‘moderate’ enough. I do not think that is true. I think they lost because they weren’t giving the voters a real choice between mushy middle and slightly more right mushy middle. They were making the case that voting didn’t matter because voters weren’t getting what they wanted – progressive policies. Unless it is clear that votes were lost because the Democrats weren’t from the Democratic wing of the party or even more left, we’ll hear more of the same.
The NPA might be a very good idea, but the first step is to make it clear to the pundits and the various politicians that the reason none of their mainstream candidates is acceptable is because they have moved too far right for the voters.
You’re right! Nothing like willingly and passively allowing people to enslave you. I vote we just not vote and let whatever wingnut the teabaggers, (who are going to vote), into office where s/he can do even more damage to our ability to be free without a whimper. That’ll show ‘em.
Margaret, I’m declined to state and I will vote.
I deny the two parties my vote, I do not deny my self my vote.
Life is simple, don’t fuck it up, you faux proggie ‘stay at home’s’.
And I chide, deride and otherwise mock incessantly those who would tout making ‘staying at home’ an act of rebellion.
No one will run your story, only a few bloggers will know and talk about your efforts, and for the most part you folks will be dismissed as the crackpots you are . . . . go peddle your genius to Rove and Grover Norquist, their scripts need fresh blood for they are stale and old.
I truly believe the voting is rigged so it doesn’t matter for whom I mark up my electronically tabulated ballot. Having said that, the person was right who said what matters is not that Tuesday but what occurs between now and then. I prefer the idea of telling the PTB that instead of boycotting (since so many just don’t go with no message in mind) how about something like, “I’m voting for the person who takes o more than (whatever amt a third party candidate can reasonably raise) from corporate funding”….as long as there’s an alternative to the D and R that is. In our times of trouble right here right now, the amount of money in campaigning and media etc is plain obscene and ought to be a crime.
It makes no sense not to vote when we have candidates like Jill Stein and Rocky Anderson bringing forward progressive platforms and programs. Why would we not vote for them when they advocate the kind of change we work and struggle for everyday?
Why would anyone waste time trying to organize people not to vote when there are candidates worthy of our votes?
I agree with Anthony Noel and Michael Cavlan.
In fact, there are even some (not many) Democrats worth voting for.
Michael Cavlan lives and breaths for real progressive change; is a stalwart activist for peace, social and economic justice. He is running for the United States Senate against Amy “Republican Lite” Klobuchar. Why would anyone suggest that people should not show up to vote for him?
What we need is more— not less— involvement and participation by liberals, progressives and the left in the electoral process.
Withdrawing from the electoral process is not an option for those of us seeking real change.
Advocating boycotting the elections is a cop out and an excuse for not organizing.
Terri Lee lost me when she started up her wish list and it included an ill-defined form of voting (that was nevertheless sufficiently well defined to know it lacked monotonicity and Condorcet conditions), and a complete overhaul of the government to a parliamentary system.
Boycotts have to be well organized and announced to be effective. Simply not voting just produces a phenomenon known as “low voter turnout”, which is adjusted for in the polls by re-evaluating the criteria for the “likely voter”, resulting in you being completely discounted from the political system — precisely the disempowerment that Glenn Greenwald believes is the result of voting for Democrats.
OBTW, Rocky Anderson has until January 3rd to collect 103,000 registered voters in California, or he will not appear on that ballot in November 2012. Deadlines is deadlines.
If you’re a Progressive Liberal, Obama is your man. And that’s the problem.
It seems to me that people are living in a dream-world, investing their hopes and dreams in a bankrupt ideology.
Liberals and progressives don’t serve working people anymore.
Nobody’s coming the rescue – there is no messiah coming to restore the true faith.
It’s time for working people to make a clean break from the Liberal/Progressive regime. If not now, when?
Noise does not guarantee media coverage. The story after the election is who got elected and what their plans are.
Nothing that you want – “Simply put, we have to get the corporate money out of elections, level the playing field, implement publicly-funded elections, and institute Instant-Runoff (IRV) voting.” – can become law from noise. Only duly elected nonUniparty members of Congress can make them law.
“The preferences of the people who do not vote are unknown, and worse, irrelevant.”
Bingo! As I’ve said before, if you don’t vote you get lumped in with the “apathetic” crowd and ignored: why should they care about people who don’t vote? If you vote 3rd party or write in you get noticed by the people who wanted your vote and didn’t get it.
On the ballot is Mr. Dufus Democrat, Ms. Repulsive Republican, and Mr. Futile Free Party. Repulsive get 47% and wins, Dufus gets 43% and loses, Futile gets 10% and loses.
Two thing happen the next day:
Dufus asks himself, “What can I do next time to attract that 10% that would have put me over the top?”
Repulsive asks herself, “What can I do next time to attract that 10% that Dufus is sure to be going after?”
“I am suggesting abstaining from voting as an act of resistance, rebellion, and rejection of the manipulated system.”
And the difference between that and holding your breath until you turn blue is… ?
Never mind: Edmund Burke said it better.
You don’t understand what either a progressive or a liberal is. Obama (and most of the rest of the Democrats) are neither. Excluding Vietnam, the last liberal in the White house was LBJ.
If liberals stay home and Democrats win, it will be taken by the pols as satisfaction with Obama. If they lose, it will be taken as apathy. In no corner of the political world will it be taken as an act of rebellion.
Voting third party, however, sends an unmistakable message. If you want to send a message, send it!
I understand very well. Structural change is required, not a reactionary defense of the true faith.
FDR and LBJ are heroes of mine, but they belong to the past. Liberal and Progressive are not timeless, ahistorical abstractions.
Defense of the indefensible and tribal loyalties will get us nowhere.
The parliamentary system was used as an example in which third parties could obtain proportional representation.
And yes, that’s the point: a boycott needs to be organized and announced to be effect. This is not about being apathetic, it is about being resistant and rejecting the current system — throwing out both the baby and the bathwater.
Rocky Anderson — or any other third party candidate is a perfect example — the system has made it difficult or impossible to permit third parties on the ballot. While the mainstream parties are raking in millions with easy, Rocky and his team are running around “collecting signatures” in an attempt to compete withe the ‘real’ and ‘viable’ candidates (as per system definition). As a result Rocky or Jill or any other third party candidate can’t make a dent in this unjust system.
Now, if Donald Trump does make that ‘independent’ (not third party) run he can complete on a more level playing field as he has two very important things: 1. name recognition and 2. millions of dollars.
Yes, that’s it. Structural and systemic change is required because the current structures, institutions, and system serve monied interests only. This is why we much ‘reject’ the system of electoral oppression.
I would like to suggest this FB site to all! https://www.facebook.com/events/179319712162048/
Emanuel Sferios — the creator of Boycott the Presidential Elections has this to say (and I agree with him): There is no point to be made voting for a third party except as a protest vote. However, this only protests the corruption of the two major parties. Voting “NO” for President is also a protest vote, but it protests the corruption of the system. Every four years for decades good people like yourself get all excited supporting a Green candidate. Cynthia McKinney is a colleague of mine. I support her wholeheartedly, yet I knew it was a mistake for the Greens to run a candidate. She got fewer votes than ANY OTHER PARTY during the last election. Even the right-wing Liberal Party got more votes. The Greens should be calling for a boycott, just like all opposition parties do in other countries when their elections are rigged and there’s no possibility of winning. If they had done this—if they do it this time—they will be holding out REAL HOPE for Americans. They would be saying, “Join us! Let’s fix the broken system.” We can’t sway elections anyway, no matter what. The corporations control the system too thoroughly. Our vote does not matter. We need major election reforms. We need to get corporations out of politics entirely. Until we do that, we are just validating their social control system, participating in a charade. https://www.facebook.com/events/179319712162048/