Voting Is a Moral Responsibility

It’s easy to decide that we can’t be bothered with politics.  We have our own lives.  We must make dinner, we have to get to bed on time so we can get up in the morning and go to work, and we have relationships that are more important to us than which politician said what.  Whether your boyfriend texts you back promptly is infinitely more interesting than what The Supreme Court decided about whether you can get an abortion, or religion in schools, or who can marry whom.  Regulating Health Care, whether Medicare can negotiate for better prescription prices, and who will pay for hospital stays are abstract ideas that don’t seem to matter in our practical world.  I get that.

But here’s the problem.  If we see no farther than our own backyard, we are likely to find the landscape outside of it, in which we all have to function, will be changing significantly, but slowly, so we don’t really notice it.  And sooner than you think, what’s happening outside your backyard will make its way into your home, your life, and your soul.  If we don’t think about more than 24 hours in the future, by the time we notice what’s happening, it’s likely to be too late.  When we can’t vote anymore, we will have lost the little power we have to change things, and we will watch our rights being stripped away more and more quickly.  Fascism flourishes in apathy.

I’m not saying you need to quit your job, give up your life, and go work for some political campaign.  I would like you to be aware of what’s happening so you can do what little you can to change it.  

Okay, Edmund Burke never said, “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing,” and I don’t know who first did.  I also don’t care.  It’s true regardless of the source.  I would, because I live in 2022, amend it to change “men” to “people,” but otherwise, I stand by those words.  Evil persists.  The effort to take our freedom of thought, of speech, of opinion, and, perhaps more importantly, our freedom to choose for ourselves is constant and ongoing.  Will someone else stop it?  I certainly hope so.  I can’t stop it.  What I can do is vote for those I believe are most likely to slow its course a bit. 

What would I like you to consider when you go to the ballot box?  I would begin with January 6, 2021, and the effort to keep power from being transferred peacefully from one President to the next.

I would pay attention to the efforts to restrict voting rights.  I would look at how many legislatures are trying to pass measures to invalidate the vote entirely if those in charge don’t like the results.   It’s happening here in Arizona already.  I’m including a link, and I hope you’ll take a few minutes to understand that this matters.

https://tucson.com/news/state-and-regional/proposed-law-would-allow-arizona-legislature-to-overturn-presidential-election-results/article_c2a70681-59c0-512f-ba86-2bf23128f9ee.html

I would also pay attention to Supreme Court decisions.  They have already stripped bodily autonomy from half the population.  They are going to revisit the idea that we should be allowed to marry whomever we love.  They are going to consider the possibility of banning contraception.  In short, if a woman has sex, she is required to give birth to the child, regardless of the circumstances.  I’ll remind you that a 10-year-old girl in Ohio was forced to travel to Indiana to terminate her pregnancy because after The Supreme Court repealed Roe v Wade, Ohio banned all abortions.  It’s doubtful a 10-year-old would even survive giving birth.  I won’t bother to give you links to this story.  It’s easily Googled.

This is enough to help you understand that what’s happening in America today is as important as how long it takes your boyfriend to reply to your text.  The time to stop the transformation into an authoritarian dictatorship is running out.  The least you could do is vote for those who have the best chance of stopping it. 

The Republican Party was, in my lifetime, composed of decent honorable people with whom I often disagreed.  There are still a few such Republicans.  Liz Cheney is one.  John McCain was another. 

What is called the MAGA Republican Party has none of these, or if they do, I haven’t seen them.  And that’s the party that is taking power.  If you don’t know who Lauren Boebert or Marjorie Taylor Greene are, that’s okay.  If you don’t know who Matt Gaetz is, life will go on.  But, these are the people who are elected not only to represent us, but to make laws that will have direct effects on you.   You don’t need to spend an hour a night watching the news, but you should at least know the basics.   This will allow you to be aware of the threats, and it will help you meet them.  If you just want a basic nightly rundown in five or ten minutes, read Heather Cox Richardson’s Facebook page or subscribe to her newsletter. 

When people are threatened by and refuse to engage ideas that differ from their own, they become dangerous because they can’t be swayed by conversation.  When words become worthless, all that’s left is violence.  Nothing good will come of that. 

An authoritarian dictatorship is on its way.  Many people are already coming up with contingency plans to escape America if the fascists are successful. 

It seems to me the only tool we have to fight this is our ballots. I advocate using this tool because once violence begins, it almost invariably gets out of control, and does so with alarming speed. It means, at the absolute minimum, someone will be hurt. It usually means someone dies. Whatever Good we believe we bring about with our violence is denied to The Dead. We have absolutely failed them.

Many, if not most, of us have no means of leaving America. Should it become the authoritarian dictatorship the MAGA Republicans are trying to create, we will be trapped here. We will suffer. Many of us will die.  You may be certain they won’t tolerate dissenting opinions such as mine.  Fortunately, I’m very small.  I won’t be at the top of the list of people who need to disappear in the dead of night never to be heard from again.  This is what happens in dictatorships.  It will, in fact, happen here if we allow it.  The biggest voices will be the first to go.  Sadly, I can’t afford to move out of my place at all.  Getting to another country would be impossible for me.  I would be forced to wait until they come for me.

For this one moment, we still have the power of the vote. I recognize it seems unimaginably small. But enough people doing a little thing makes a massive difference. And that power is one denied to millions around the world. It is one that was once denied to millions of Americans.

People have fought and died for that right. They have been lynched, tortured, and they have endured unimaginable atrocities for the right of all of us to go the ballot box. Failing to make use of that most fundamental right is more than a slap in the face to those who struggled so long and hard to win it for us. It is essentially pissing on their graves as we passively watch ourselves collapse into a dystopian nightmare from which, for far too many of us, there can be no escape.

Of course I’ll be voting. I couldn’t mail it in because I was in the hospital. Where I live in Mesa, there have been reports of armed people watching early voting ballot boxes. They may watch me drop my ballot in one of those boxes and shove their metal substitute penises straight up their asses. I don’t really believe they’ll shoot me. If they do, it will do more for the cause of freedom than my single vote ever would. I can think of many worse ways to die. And I would prefer being dead to living in the Hell to which they would like to condemn me.

The Road to Fascism is paved with claims that what’s happening is no big deal.  For example:

January 6 wasn’t a big deal.  Very few people died.  Everyone was fine. 

That sort of attitude normalizes the hatred, fascism, and violence that were on display that day and are swelling in America and throughout the world. 

I recognize how difficult it is to find Truth.  The Media that tells us what is happening is filled with agendas.  CNN, MSNBC, and Fox all rely on Confirmation Bias, or the idea that we tend to believe those things that best fit our ideology, and we reject those that don’t.  They make money by feeding us what we want to hear.  That’s respectable in Art.  It’s worse than worthless in Journalism.  We can all choose our own media outlets, but most of the time we must separate the Spin from the Truth. 

Since we’re not there to see what’s happening in the places where laws are being made, we are forced to rely on the Media to tell us.  You have your sources.  I have mine.  Neither of us can be entirely sure that we understand all of it. 

One of the rare exceptions is the January 6 Committee Hearings.  We could see every minute live.  Complete videos are still easily accessible on YouTube.  You don’t need to listen to media spin.  You can just watch for yourself if you want to invest that much time in understanding what happened.  Most of the participants were Republicans.  To say that it’s partisan is simply untrue.  Both sides of the aisle came together in a search for the Truth.  They’ve invited the former President to come and tell the truth.  In fact, they have subpoenaed him.  If he complies, I promise it will be worth your time to watch and listen, without Spin.

I sympathize with the idea that you don’t want to put 18 hours or so into that pursuit.  You have a much busier life than I have.  I work when I’m feeling well enough to sit at this keyboard.  You probably spend 40 hours or more at work every week.  I don’t leave the house.  You have a social life.  I get that.  I honestly do.  The best I can recommend to you is to find someone you trust to give you the basic facts.  If you don’t trust me, find someone you do trust, and try to look beyond your Confirmation Bias.  Give them more than 5 minutes to explain.  At least once.  Then… go do your most important civic duty.  Go and vote.  Do it while you still can.  You may never get another chance.  You owe it to those who fought and died for that right.  You owe it to all of us.  It is a moral responsibility. 

https://open.spotify.com/episode/2lGBQHL8t1a8hld5PSmEqC?si=e8939fb4d3f54b53

Saving Freedom

I spend far too much time watching science fiction and fantasy.  In Star Wars, the evil Empire is destroyed, but they keep coming back.  In Star Trek, no matter how effectively we think we have destroyed The Borg, they return.  I just finished watching Stranger Things, and they’ve burned Vecna up completely, and he will still be back for the fifth season.

I used to look at these facts a bit cynically.  Once you beat the Bad Guys, that should be it.  But the truth is you can never stop it.

We won The Civil War.  The Confederacy continues to clamor for attention; and it’s getting it.

We beat the Nazis in World War II. They are still on our streets, and people cheer for them as much as they sneer at them.

We won The Cold War, but Russia continues to attempt world domination.  And the world waits nervously.

Someone once said, “The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men (and women) to do nothing.”  This is commonly attributed to Edmund Burke.  It turns out he never said that.  John Stuart Mill, in his 1867 Inaugural Address said something similar, though: “Let not any one pacify his conscience by the delusion that he can do no harm if he takes no part, and forms no opinion. Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing. He is not a good man who, without a protest, allows wrong to be committed in his name, and with the means which he helps to supply, because he will not trouble himself to use his mind on the subject.

The evil of fascism can, it appears, never be destroyed.  It will build another Death Star.  It will assimilate another culture.  Vecna will force The Upside Down back into our world.

And so, we must continue to fight for our Freedom.  We must continue to vote, to protest, and to protect our poor, our disenfranchised, our disabled, and our unrepresented.

Our rights and our freedom are under a clear and obvious attack now.  I did an episode about that last week.  One of the most brutal attacks was against women.  Half of the population has been stripped of bodily autonomy, and some defend this on religious grounds.  I think that’s a misuse of religion.

One of the reasons America has survived as long as it has is that we have specifically avoided becoming a theocracy. We have recognized there are few things as personal or individual as our relationship with the Universe.  Whether it’s God, or Vishnu, or Zeus, or Allah, or simply the Vast Nothingness, we get to decide those things for ourselves.  One can be coerced into claiming to have beliefs, but, finally, they are our own deep inside ourselves.  We can change them only by choosing to do so, and by a careful reflection that shows us something new.

Those who claim (falsely, I believe) to be Christians of 21st Century America love to decide they’re being oppressed when they aren’t allowed to make their religious views the law.  I’m unaware of any successful free country that has worked as a theocracy.  I’m unaware of any theocracy in which I would choose to live.

I did a Google Search for theocracies in the world today.  Only 6 came up.  They are the following:

  • Afghanistan.
  • Iran.
  • Mauritania.
  • Saudi Arabia.
  • Vatican City.
  • Yemen.

In which of those places would you wish to live?

What Evangelical American Christians fail to recognize is that bodily autonomy isn’t a religious issue.  It’s a question of personal freedom.  It’s about owning oneself.

And I don’t think most of the people restricting freedom are doing it due to any deeply held beliefs about God or the Universe.  I believe they’re doing it because they want to have the power to tell others what to do with their lives.  It’s the Need of the Narcissist.  It’s the Sustenance of the Psychopath.  It’s saying I’m in control.  It’s saying, basically, “I’m God.  I know what God, who is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent and has the power to create an entire universe, wants.  So just listen to me.  And, God wants me to control everyone. God wants everyone to obey me.”  Doesn’t that idea seem startlingly arrogant to you?  Someone really claims to understand what an almighty being, capable of everything you can imagine, wants us to do?  That sounds pathological to me.  Actually, I should say a God who can do almost anything you can imagine.  There’s always the example of the first paradox I ever learned.  When I was 12, my father the philosopher asked me, “If God can do anything, can He create a rock so large that He can’t lift it?”

The attack on freedom is a contempt for individuality.  It’s an attack against your free will.  It’s dark.  It’s dangerous.  It’s destructive.

I am on the record repeatedly in favor of freedom of religion.  I can think of few places that are more deeply personal than how you view your relationship with the universe.  Most of my friends have some form of Christian view.  They believe in a God who created the universe and is deeply concerned about what we do with the Free Will He gave us.  They may well be right.  I certainly can’t prove they’re wrong.  I want them to have the freedom to explore that idea, and to live by the beliefs that spring from it, in every way possible.  I want them to be allowed to worship in the ways they choose.  I want them to be allowed to express their beliefs whenever they choose, wherever they choose, and to whomever wants to hear them.  I just don’t want them to make their beliefs the only ones allowed.  I don’t want them to decide our government must reflect those beliefs.  That’s what happens in a theocracy.  That’s how planes get flown into The World Trade Center.

No it’s not!  Those were Muslims, and they are evil!

Those were people who were raised believing that theirs, and only theirs, is the correct view of the universe.  They’ve been taught, since birth, that those who believe something different are evil, and they must be destroyed as enemies of Allah.  This isn’t inherent in Islam.  It’s inherent in a theocracy. 

The overwhelming majority of Muslims are not evil, just as the overwhelming majority of Christians are not evil.  It was Christian theocracy that led to The Salem Witch Trials.  It was Christian theocracy that led to The Spanish Inquisition, which, Monty Python aside, was entirely expected.  It was Christian theocracy that tried for centuries to end any scientific progress, as both Galileo and Copernicus learned.  Christian theocracy has no better history than Islamic theocracy.  

Outside of Vatican City, Christian theocracies are few and far between.  I believe you can find Mormon settlements that have managed it.  It doesn’t go well for them.  You can ask Warren Jeffs, the former President of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Days Saints, about this.  You can ask those children he was convicted of raping.  You can ask the same question to those who have been raped by Catholic Priests.   

The Republican party has aligned itself with Evangelical American Christianity, and, in my view, corrupted it for its own ends.  They have used fear of “The Other” to band people together to oppose those who are different from them. 

They have taught homophobia, although no homosexual represents any threat to anyone simply by being homosexual.  I remember when I was 9 years old, a furious parent at a PTA meeting was talking to my father about the fact that the school was allowed even to mention homosexuality.  “How would you feel,” he asked furiously, “if a homosexual raped your son in the bathroom of the school?”  My father replied, “Probably about the same as I would feel if a heterosexual raped my daughter.”  “Oh my God!” shouted the man.  “Are they teaching that now, too??”  Ignorance breeds fear.

And fascists know that.  It’s why they want to decide which books we can and can’t read.  It’s why they oppose teaching a complete history of our country.  And it’s why they tell us to watch out for liberal, commie, socialists who are coming to destroy us all.  They know that most people don’t really understand what it means to be a liberal, a communist, or a socialist, and they use those words to frighten the willfully ignorant.  They pass out cherry-picked information that is just enough to frighten people, but not sufficient for true understanding.  “A little knowledge,” as Einstein purportedly told us, “is a dangerous thing.”  (Alexander Pope said it first, but he used the word “learning” in place of “knowledge.”)

So, I’ll say this again, and I will be grateful to the person who can tell me to whom I can reliably attribute it.  “Education is the journey from cocksure ignorance to thoughtful uncertainty.”  Let’s allow our minds to be open to different ideas.  I recognize an open mind is not the same as an empty one.  I don’t advocate abandoning all of your beliefs.  I would like you to be able to question them.

Why do fascists do encourage hatred?  Hitler was incredibly successful at it in the 20th Century.  He got Germany to blame “The Other” for its horrendous situation following World War I, and the results are one of the most infamous chapters in world history.  Those who are different, he taught, are a threat to be eliminated.  I believe we’re all more enlightened than that now.

Fascism has infected the Republican Party.  And Democrats are either unwilling or unable to do much about it.  We had nearly 50 years to codify Roe, and ensure women are in control of their own bodies.  We dropped the ball.  Republicans actually wanted to pass a Universal Basic Income during the Nixon Administration.  Democrats dropped the ball.  Reagan told us that “Trickle Down Economics” would help the whole country.  We’ve had more than 40 years to see it didn’t work.  And Democrats have been unwilling or unable to do anything about it. 

Republicans have done all of this under the guise of following the Constitution.  The Senate, for example, may have been a good idea when it was created.  It was an effort to ensure those in rural communities would be represented in government.  Now, however, it has made citizens of one state vastly more powerful than citizens of another. California has nearly 70 times as many people as Wyoming, and they each get two Senators.   A citizen of Wyoming has nearly 70 times the power to control the government as one in California. 

What we are seeing is the efforts of The Few to control the lives of The Many.  They want to maximize their freedom by restricting ours.  We’re choosing to let them because they have embedded their ideas so deeply in our culture that any others are unthinkable.  Except, all ideas can be thought.  Everything begins with a thought.  Let’s try some new ones.  Let’s imagine a better world.

Here are some unthinkable thoughts.  Let’s change the Senate so that it represents people equally.  I know that’s how The House of Representatives is supposed to work, but due to the obvious gerrymandering of voting districts, it rarely does.  How do we change it?  I don’t know.  I leave that to better minds than mine.  I’m simply offering the thought.

Here’s another unthinkable thought.  Let’s give everyone enough money to survive, so we can all decide how to live, for ourselves.  I know this is unthinkable because this will mean prices go up, and we’ll never be able to keep up with the inflation.  I don’t know anything about Economics, so I should probably just shut up.  I was told that frequently when I lived in my little trailer in California.  I live alone with Speedy Shine, now, so I’ll say it anyway.  How do we work out the details?  I have no clue.  Anthony is right.  I know nothing about Economics.  Fortunately, there are many people who do.  I leave it them to figure out how that’s done. 

The final thought comes from the best writer with whom I have ever occupied a room, Mark Rozema.  It’s from a brilliant essay he wrote on Facebook:

It is time to jettison the politics of domination.  It is also time to stop treating one another (and the rest of nature) as commodities to be exploited.  There is a better way.  The transformation to this better way will not occur without a visceral, muscular rejection of the injustice of unfair representation and the various wrongs that stem from it.

  • Mark Rozema

I believe part of the reason we leap for excuses to avoid finding the better way is because we have been taught all our lives that nothing can be done to help people.  That’s helpful to us if we can disregard our empathy and compassion.  We’re taught to think of Us and forget about Them.  Nothing needs to be done to help Them.  And I have rent to pay next month.  I can’t be bothered to think about it. 

We see too small a picture of the world.  There was a shooting last week in Phoenix, but I live at least 20 miles from there, so it’s not my problem.  21 people were killed in Uvalde, Texas, but that’s another state, so it’s not my problem.  Ukraine is under attack, but that’s not my country, so it’s not my problem.  It’s happening to Them. But on The Front Porch, we know There is no Them; we are all Us. 

No man is an island,
Entire of itself.
Each is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manor of thine own
Or of thine friend’s were.
Each man’s death diminishes me,
For I am involved in mankind.
Therefore, send not to know
For whom the bell tolls,
It tolls for thee.

John Donne

We’ve defeated the Republican effort to make us into a dictatorship before.  We must find a way to do it again. 

As Princess Leia said, “It’s not over yet.”