Throughout most of my teenage years, I
have been apathetic about politics. It has long since been my opinion, that corporate
sponsorship of politicians has more or less destroyed democracy. Politicians never
seemed to care about the topics they were discussing, they seemed like actors
repeating well-rehearsed lines written by their analysts, played out on a
stage, in a drama directed by their corporate sponsors.
For the past few months, I have found
myself laughing condescendingly at everyone getting all caught up in the
presidential election fever. Before one of the Obama vs. Romney debates, I posted
the following on Facebook, “spoiler alert: they are both lying”. That sentence about
sums up my feelings toward the whole “game.” I had no intention of voting.
Two weeks ago, I watched a three-part
PBS series called “Commanding Heights.” It compared and contrasted the two
competing economic theories of the 20th century, centrally planned
economy vs. free market economy. This was the first time I had encountered
economic theories in my life, and seen how they played out in the countries
that implemented them. Now considering myself a “well educated and informed”
expert on economic theory, having graduated the prestigious PBS school of
economics, I decided to see what Obama and Romney were saying about the
economy.
I watched the debates, read up on their
respective opinions, and concluded that Romney had his head on straight in
terms of the economy. However, I hated almost everything else he stood for. I disliked
his views on stem cell research, mentioning god at public events, censorship,
LGBT rights, and medical marijuana. I tried to see if perhaps, anyone could
justify Obama’s economic policies, but to no avail. I found myself caught
between two worlds. In addition, I still could not shake from myself the distrust
that I had always felt towards politicians. The lying, the falsely portrayed
passion for topics that they did not actually care about, all of those feelings
were still there. Additionally, I found the debates very stale and lifeless;
there was very little overlap between what people normally discussed and what
the candidates were proposing. The whole debate seemed very one-sided, with no
real new ideas. I still felt undecided, but I was leaning toward Romney.
In the wake of the recent hurricane, my school
cancelled all of my classes, so I found myself randomly surfing YouTube
listening to random lectures. I was watching a speech by Penn Jilette at Google
when I noticed on the side another clip of him, this time discussing politics
so I clicked on it. Two things really stuck out from that interview. 1. In game
theory (I know nothing about it, so I can’t say that I know this is true)
choosing the lesser of two evils always increases evil. 2. He introduced me to
the Libertarian party. He described it as having a right wing economic policy
with a left wing social policy (“make a right on economy, a left on sex, and
head straight to utopia.”) After hearing him, I decided that rather than
support the lesser of the two evils (Romney,) I would watch the “other”
presidential debate, between the Green, Justice, Constitutional and, Libertarian
parties.
The most
refreshing thing I discovered in the debate was a real passion for what
happened to America. There was a certain idealistic fervor, which sharply contrasted
the other debate. There was audience participation; cheering and booing were
fine. Democracy was alive, the people cared, and I loved it. New ideas were
discussed, well they were not really, new ideas, I have heard most of these
ideas in the past from friends, or read about them. It was new to see
politicians discussing them in the public forum; it was exciting to see presidential
candidates discussing these “new” ideas. It was refreshing to hear presidential
candidates discussing the very problems that I have had with politics for
years. They spoke about not allowing corporations to make political
contributions, not allowing political action committees and limiting terms in
congress.
There was another thing that they had
that was lacking in the other debates, a certain informality, which allowed the
focus to be on the ideas, not the people. Very little of “Mr this ” “Congressman
that” it was almost all on first name basis. There was conversation, instead of
speeches. There were ideas, not rehearsed party lines. Regular people were
asking the question, through Facebook, Twitter, and the like.
The single greatest line I heard was from
the libertarian candidate Gary Johnson “…wasting your vote, is voting for
someone you don’t believe in, that’s wasting
your vote…” and with that, I changed my mind. I liked that so much that I checked
up on him, and his policies and I am considering voting for him for two
reasons. Firstly, he meshes what I feel, is the best of the democratic and
republican parties. Secondly, he seems passionate and honest, two qualities
which are sincerely lacking in the mainstream candidates. As a disclaimer, I am
still trying to understand the “Fairtax” which he is proposing, so I am not yet
one hundred percent sure that I will vote for him.
In conclusion, if you, like me are
feeling that something is lacking in the mainstream candidates, please go and
check out the alternatives. If you feel that, why should I vote for him? It’s not
like he is going to win. My response to you is this, firstly if enough people
feel as I do, he just might. Secondly, voting is not betting on the right
candidate so that you can tell all of your friends “I knew he was going to win.”
It is not a sports team that you support because you think they will win the World
Series. It is a chance to voice your opinion; it is a chance for you to tell America
what you think. I will grant you that he probably will not win, but I will be part of a vocal minority if I feel
that they are correct. Should he lose, then at least we made some noise for the
right cause, and maybe by next election, the noise will have become loud
enough, the minority will have grown large enough, and America will at least
know enough to make an educated decision.
Third party presidential debate: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0vE5CTTSFI
Third party presidential debate: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e0vE5CTTSFI