Lack of votes
in and of itself is not our problem.
In 2000 when
the Republicans and SCOTUS stole the election, lack of votes wasn’t the
problem.
In
gerrymandered districts, more votes won’t change the outcomes. For example, if
a district is 90% Democrats and the Democrats always win; more votes won’t
change a thing. In a district that is split 60% Republican and 40% Democrats,
and the Republicans win 60 – 40, more votes would not change the results.
The problem is the lack of Progressive
Votes.
Our voting
system is set up to disenfranchise and discourage Progressive Democrats from
voting and/or render Democratic votes meaningless.
A bad analogy
would be to assume our voting system is one big giant DieBold voting machine.
No matter who you want to win, the results are what the Oligarchs want. Shoving
more votes into the machine won’t change what comes out the other side.
So what are the
real problems?
The basic
problem is that we get too few Progressive votes.
And one big
reason is that our voting system is corrupted. Until that’s fixed, getting more
people to vote won’t solve our problem.
Also, the
voters are mislead by the Corp-Media. We must figure out how to counter that.
If we don’t fix this, the “more votes” we get may be for Conservatives.
Another reason
we don’t get more Progressive votes is that we have too few Progressive
candidates at the national level and the candidates we have won’t speak out
against Conservatism loud enough to convince the public that there is a
different between the parties.
If you want to
get more Progressive Democrats to vote, work on solving the above problems.
Simply complaining about lack of turnout is counter productive.
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