A
Vote Note
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
My
friends react with horror to my remark that I do not intend to vote
in any future national elections. Both offer the same objection:
"If you don’t vote, how can you complain about the actions
of the government?"
I
presume they make that complaint because it is the first thing which
pops into their heads. It certainly seems, at first blush, to have
validity. In fact, it is utterly vacuous. Since we are lunching
together, I ask, "Did you vote for the cook?" Their puzzled
look inspires my next question.
"Did
you ever fly on an airliner?" I ask. "Sure," is the
reply. "So what?"
"Did
you vote for the pilot?" Furrowed brows, quizzical stares.
"No, of course not. Why should we?"
"Exactly.
You expected that the pilot, whoever he was, would be qualified
to do the job, right?" "Of course."
"And
if, for some reason, there had been no pilot, would voting on which
passenger was to fly the plane have made any sense?" Impatient
shakes of the head. "No!"
"Well,
there you have it. The President’s job is not complex. His duties
are listed in the Constitution, and they are not difficult. If the
man elected to the job were to fulfill those duties, and uphold
his oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution, what
difference would it make who he was? Did it matter who flew the
plane, drove the bus, or delivered the milk? Similarly, if the man
elected had no intention of fulfilling the duties of President,
would that be OK if he had been elected by a landslide?"
Comprehension
slowly dawns. There remain half-hearted objections to the effect
that, of two men who could faithfully perform the duties of President,
one of them might be better at the job than the other. But how could
we possibly know that? Election campaigns are more designed to attack
the opponent than reveal the candidate’s actual motives in seeking
office. It is universally recognized that campaign promises are
nonsense: in any event, they have no legal binding force, and the
candidate cannot be compelled to adhere to them, should he even
remember them. One only has to look at the campaign promises of
FDR, and contrast them to his actual performance in office, to realize
that campaign rhetoric is hogwash designed to deceive or distract.
Besides,
if voting is the right way to select people for important (more
or less) jobs, why should it be limited to politics? Why NOT vote
for the pilot of your next airline flight? "If you survived
an airliner crash, would you sue your fellow survivors, if any,
and the families of the passengers who died?" Blank stares.
"Huh?"
"Well,
they failed to do their duty to vote for the best man for pilot.
Had they voted, they might have elected someone who would have avoided
this disaster. Their indifference might have cost people their lives!
Or would you say that, even had the pilot staggered aboard drunk,
you still have no cause for complaint, because you didn’t vote for
him?"
I
warm to my subject, pointing out that Presidents have dozens, if
not hundreds, of advisers, and nobody votes for them; indeed, their
very identity is known to few of us. Moreover, Supreme Court Justices,
whose fantasies, written down, are considered the "law of the
land," are not elected, although they are at least as important
as the President.
I point out that there is no other corporation which puts people
in high positions based upon the votes of thousands of people not
even shareholders! who have never met them, know almost nothing
about them, and even less about the operation of the business. Moreover,
the direction of government, regardless of elections, has moved
steadily in the same direction for the past century, at least. That
direction, to put it simply, is toward fascism: government control
of virtually all "private" business, and thus, indirectly,
over all individuals. This is regardless of the voters ejecting
from office liberals, in favor of conservatives, or vice-versa.
Nothing changes. Voting only encourages them. Blatantly unconstitutional
government activities continue unabated, and new ones are added.
Finally,
I ask how it can be that the losing candidates invariably pledge
their support to the victor, whom they had previously denounced?
Well, maybe because, in the primaries, at least, they were all Democrats,
or Republicans. But even after the general election, the loser for
the Presidency calls upon his followers to support the new President,
and pledges that he, too, will work with the man whose election,
he had charged only a day before, would bring about the end of civilization.
Wouldn’t logic dictate that the loser express his horror at the
appalling choice made by the voters, and pledge his undying opposition
to the winner? If the loser ran his campaign on principle (and don’t
they all!), then evidently those principles were at odds with those
of his opponent. Yet, after losing, he apparently throws his principles
out with the other trash, and urges his disciples to set aside "divisiveness"
and work with the victor! It’s a con!
"So,"
I start to ask my friends, "how has voting changed government
in your lifetime?" But they’ve left, shaking their heads. Well,
if I’ve lost a couple of friends, it’s my own fault. I didn’t vote
for them!
July
20, 2004
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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