Your Vote Counts!
by
Robert Klassen
by Robert Klassen
Your
vote counts in the marketplace, where your dollar elects goods and
services. Your vote also counts in political government, where your
ballot elects force and fraud.
The
United States of America was founded on the rule of law, not of
men. Factions and special interests were supposed to give way to
justice before the law. But men make political law, and special
interests broke the rules before the ink was dry on the Constitution,
commercial tariffs and the theft of Indian land being first on the
agenda.
The
rule of law is dead. Jefferson warned of this outcome in a democracy the history of mankind was not an unrevealed mystery to men like
him. Throughout the Nineteenth and the Twentieth Centuries other
men warned and then lamented the passing of a noble ideal. The men
in power lie, cheat, murder, and steal at will, in the name of democracy,
unrestrained by law. We all know that. We also know that there is
nothing we can do about it, except vote, of course. Your vote assures
them of their power, your vote sanctions their crimes.
Still,
I wonder, is this social system of political government really a
democracy, as the politicians and the media constantly insist? In
the year 2000, only one-third of the United States population voted
at all. What does this mean? Does it mean that two-thirds of the
population don’t care? I don’t think so.
Some
folks talk about secession again, apparently meaning that some states
or regions could drop out of the consolidated union as a political
protest against the central power. Under the circumstances, I view
this proposal as an invitation to another Civil War. Maybe that’s
what they want. I don’t see the choice between one political government
over another political government to be any choice at all, we’d
still end up with political government a social system with a
hundred-percent perfect rate of failure. Yet the idea of secession
might explain what happened to the silent two-thirds of our population
who did not vote in this loudly proclaimed political democracy.
I
doubt if there are significant numbers of Americans who flat refuse
to vote, not yet anyway, and I imagine that most Americans who do
not vote shrug it off as irrelevant to their lives. The media calls
it apathy. What is apathy? The dictionary says it’s "lack of
interest or concern." What would cause a lack of interest or
concern in two-thirds of the American population? Something about
government? What would it be reasonable to suppose that Americans
know for sure about their political government?
Taxes.
Income taxes, property taxes, sales taxes, excise taxes, money taken
from people against their will under the threat of force. Foreign
wars. Inexplicable and inexcusable use of force abroad, with the
threat of the military draft not forgotten. Domestic wars. Inexplicable
and inexcusable use of force against our fellow citizens; Wounded
Knee, Kent State, Ruby Ridge, and Waco come to mind as well as relentless
controls on guns, tobacco, marijuana, and alcohol. Despicable politicians.
With the exposed public lies of Nixon, Reagan, and Clinton most
conspicuous, but with a legion of others merely forgotten under
the sheer volume of them. Isn’t that enough? But let’s not forget
the deep and widespread certainty that the big-ticket political
promises, Social Security and Medicare, will fail in our lifetime.
Americans know these things for sure.
Political
government consists of force and fraud, it doesn’t take a rocket
scientist to figure that out. Two-thirds of our population do not
approve and do not vote. That’s secession. When the same two-thirds
discover a way to hide their money from political government, we
may learn just how much our vote – in the marketplace – really does
count.
Postscript:
I wrote this essay immediately after the 2000 election. I would
only add to the list of liars in political office today, and I still
recommend quiet secession.
September
17, 2004
Robert
Klassen [send him mail]
retired from a forty-year career in critical-care respiratory therapy.
He is the author of five books, including Atlantis:
A Novel about Economic Government,
and Economic
Government, which describe a solution
to the problem of political government. Here's
his web site.
Copyright
© 2004 Robert Klassen
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