Politically
Incorrect Thoughts on Voting
by
Bob Murphy
by Bob Murphy
DIGG THIS
Over
the weekend I attended my brother-in-law’s high school graduation.
My wife and I were nervous when her brother excitedly told us that
the commencement speaker was someone who had spoken to the class
before, and was "a pilot who had been in Vietnam and told us
he’d done the things that the US government had denied it was doing."
Apprehensive
as I was, the speech didn’t turn out as my-country-right-or-wrong
as I had feared. He mostly stuck to the clichéd yet important
truisms that young people need to hear. (Of course they won’t believe
you when you tell them, but after they make the mistakes
of chasing popularity, adopting other people’s moral codes, etc.
etc., maybe your words will help them understand exactly what went
wrong. Then they can continue the cycle by warning the next crop
of bored teenagers.)
However,
the one thing that really bothered me about this guy’s talk was
that he actually told them: "Now kids, the most important thing
you can do to turn around this great nation of ours is to vote.
Does anyone here know what percentage of the eligible voters participated
in the last presidential election?"
Now
this is a very typical view, especially coming on Memorial Day weekend.
Yet I think it is just plain dumb. Bear with me as I try to explain
my (literally!) politically incorrect views on voting.
The
people who lament the state of our nation obviously don’t like the
politicians we’ve been electing, right? So at first blush, shouldn’t
they be blaming the people who voted for them? Let’s go back
to the speaker at my brother-in-law’s graduation. He didn’t come
right out and say it, but I’d be willing to bet my pocket Constitution
that this guy was a strong supporter of George Bush over John Kerry
and Al Gore. So what would have happened if more people had turned
out to the polls? Either the same outcome would’ve occurred, or
we’d have John Kerry leading us in the fight against Islamic terrorism.
So why was this guy complaining?
Really
folks, let’s think this through. The people who complain about the
lack of voting seem to imply that if only people were more interested,
then there would be great candidates from which to choose.
No, actually the causality is the other way around. In our great
system – at least for the last several decades – the voters have
really been presented with only two possibilities. One candidate
pledges to moderately invade economic liberties and strongly invade
civil ones, while the other candidate pledges the reverse. The voters
slowly come to see that there really isn’t a dime’s worth of difference
between the parties. (Did you know that the "conservative"
George W. Bush has increased federal spending at the highest rate
since Lyndon Johnson, and that even if you exclude defense spending,
he’s increased spending more than the "liberal" Clinton?
What about the "right winger" Richard Nixon, who imposed
wage and price controls and took the US off the gold standard? And
how about those compassionate Democrats who care about children,
like Janet Reno?)
Now
in this environment, what the heck is the concerned citizen supposed
to do? Keep mindlessly pulling the lever for the politician who
will merely slow (not reverse) the erosion of the Constitution?
No, I submit that, in his or her capacity as a voter in the general
election, the best thing the voter can do (if the choices really
are abysmal) is either vote for a third party candidate or abstain
altogether. The worst thing in the world to do would be to cast
a vote for an admittedly awful candidate and thus grant legitimacy
to his rule.
Just
to distinguish my cynical views on government in general, from my
specific objections to the "You’re right to vote" crowd:
It would have made sense if the commencement speaker had advised
the kids to go into politics, or to become very active in the primaries
of the party that best represented the particular student’s views.
I personally would’ve disagreed with that advice, since I agree
with H.L. Mencken that elections are just advance auctions on stolen
goods. But at least that advice would’ve made sense.
In
contrast, if you are as disgusted as most people are with the clowns
running for office, then think before you repeat the mantra that
it’s everyone’s duty to go vote. Maybe if the clowns starting getting
only 10 or 15 percent turnout, more responsible people would go
back into politics.
And
if you wanted to be really radical, after you tell kids to
follow their hearts, be individuals, disagree with the crowd, and
so forth, maybe you could point out that elections are giant popularity
contests. That at least might get their attention, since they’ve
probably never heard that before. I grant you, you won’t change
anything right away. But perhaps in twenty years when they’re explaining
to their own kids about the days when you could cross state lines
without showing the national ID card, they might vaguely remember
that cranky old man who talked to their high school class, making
some anal distinction between democracy versus a republic.
May 30, 2007
Bob
Murphy [send him mail]
has a PhD in economics from New York University, and is the author
of Minerva.
See his personal website at BobMurphy.net.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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