Posted on 06/11/2020 10:09:30 AM PDT by Kaslin

Voting is our peoples greatest mechanism for change. It is arguably our only avenue for which we peaceably exercise our free will to guide the course of a nation which delicately and admirably struggles to balance personal freedoms with the collective good.
Too much of the national conversation surrounding calls for change in the aftermath of George Floyds death fails to stress the closest mechanism of change that can have an immediate and direct impact on the intersection of policing policy and race relations: voting in local elections.
Sadly, in todays America, its more important to stand in line for hours awaiting a new iPhone release than to spend time in line to vote for local candidates who directly impact the way policing in communities is conducted as well as which budgetary items will take priority.
Some of the most populated areas in our country experience extremely low voter turnout, and even worse, have little to no discourse among parties or individuals of competing, creative, or innovative ideas as to the best way forward - or even a collectively expressed communal value in participating in the process.
Instead, Americans of all colors and backgrounds are forced into a binary choice at best, if not an array of boring same-party candidates so indistinct most voters glaze-over and disengage consequently yielding to big money and heirs-apparent to decide their primaries. Whats left is an underwhelming sense of sameness and stagnation for anyone exiting the general election voting booth.
Outliers aside, and they are few, thats the norm. Will real and lasting change come? they wonder. Likely not. This is especially true when it comes to race relations and policing. Too many of Americas great cities have been under one-party control while trying to grapple with mismanaged budgets and entrenched special interests demanding more of the publics money.
But, does that mean opportunity for change is an allusion? No. One of Americas greatest beauties is that our people are truly in control - and our first obligation to exert that control is voting.
Too many arguing the contrary expend otherwise useful energies fueling excuses of rigged systems. Worse, the excuse-makers prop-up groups calling out the problems but never mobilizing people toward considering conservative or libertarian approaches, or even moderate independent candidates, particularly in urban and minority America.
Over decades, that system has churned-out one ineffectual bureaucracy after another, with nothing to show for minority communities than the same old unfulfilled promises. The worst result is on plain display with Americas major cities grappling with both civil protests and several elusive criminal entities meant only to agitate, inflame, hurt, and even kill people while destroying businesses in our communities. The agitators capitalize on our divides among our people which is a result of the erosion that binary thinking has wrought on our national consciousness.
What our nations cities and disenfranchised populations need most is a renewed sense of duty to vote for candidates in local elections who will not only embrace doing what is right over what is politically expedient but will assert their calls for change by proposing local policies that make a direct and prescriptive impact on policing.
Mayoral, city councilmembers, county executives, sheriffs, state representatives and senators have the most direct impact on the tangible changes so many are seeking. It is these positions which determine the course of budgets, negotiate with unions, hire and fire police officials, and implement reforms and oversight structures of public services.
Few will discredit national efforts for sweeping changes, and there are several options expected for votes in Congress, but what Americas burning communities need most is a greater diversity of discourse at the local level.
The people must question their mayors, who are overwhelmingly Democrats, and the city councils. They must question those leaders dealings and negotiations with police unions and public bureaucracies to secure fair mechanisms of discipline and oversight. Should the establishment leadership fail their people, new leaders should be elected to implement policies which settle these inequities permanently - but voters need choices and new ideas.
No one promised the process of keeping democracy alive would be easy, smooth, or predictable. In fact, it is because democracy is hard that we must embrace the never-ending work of solving the issues of our day.
Every American should reexamine who leads our cities and governs our municipalities. We must register to vote - and then vote. We must throw our hats in the ring for candidacies, and all of us would be better to free ourselves of the toxic binary thinking that fuels politics, not policy.
The Left hasn’t believed in voting or any other Constitutional process...ever.
That they were able to pass Obamacare the way they did was astonishing...with zero embarrassment.
The Left is composed of Enemies Foreign and Domestic.
Are you kidding? If we trust voting we will end up with 4 more years of Trump!
Because the dems and the deep state can not get the votes and they know they can just walk over us with no resistance from our elected republicans. Hell, many of them are down with the insurrection. And us? well we’ll do nothing as well. I guess the republicans we elected are actually representative of us.
Real Clear Politics
Rush Limbaugh:
Evidence Of The Left’s March Toward Ending Elections
These radicals want change and they want it now.
They cannot abode the system.of elections held at regularly scheduled intervals. They are like spoled children who want what they want, now, not on election day.
Oh... were not.
This is all to swing an election - both a threat and a punishment for not voting properly.
“Oh... were not. This is all to swing an election”
I might add that voting by mail is very bad because it means you aren’t guaranteed to vote in secret.
Once in 40 years I was reasonably happy with a candidate for the presidency,once with a primary candidate for governor.
The president won; the gubernatorial candidate didn’t.
Small town candidates have been ok. They answer to their neighbors. A write in campaign can win.
County and state officials? Almost non-entities, party creatures, compromisers, hanging in for the pension.
Congressional reps and senators, the same, with more personal ambition.
I’ve served on a couple of local committees, so boring I couldn’t stick with it. I have to credit the pols for enduring that.
Voting, do you want baked ziti or mac and cheese? Neither. Sorry, it’s ziti or mac and cheese. Two party system. The parties, the pols, and the powers that be.
Now I feel a slight, weird sympathy for the rioters.
Good people, who are successful in other endeavors don’t want to bother with running for office. Frankly, who can blame them? The Left will target them and their families, even for local elections. And the environment is so poisoned, why bother? Just look at the City Council of any big city these days? Would you want to get into that pig sty?
Well, It sure looks like they're going to get what want.. We apparently don't have the stones to do anything to stop it... :(
Why Are We Ignoring Americas Most Elemental Instrument of Change?
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The left ignores it, because the majority of the people are not for their insane ideas. So they use Law Fare, riots, and extortion to get what they want.
When elections are scheduled, they use emotion to get voted into office. We are seeing an example of their get out the vote effort along with force/extortion.
And we are not a Democracy-we are a Republic. And the so called sheep are armed and ready to defend against the fascist wolves to keep the Republic, if the Cities and States should be so stupid as to dismantle the police in response to BLM/Antifa extortion.
Voting as an instrument of change is dependent on the candidates. Last round of elections for Pima County Sheriff not one candidate would take a strong stand against no knock raids. Plus of course police chief in a lot of places is appointed not elected.
The left is starting to remind me of the KLA in Kosovo. Political change was too slow. They then took up arms and got their arse kicked. Then they whined about how beaten up they got by the people they themselves attacked first. Those that attack Israel do the same thing.
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