Slashdot Mirror


Ralph Nader Moderates One Last 3rd-Party Debate for 2012

Late Tuesday, both the 2012 U.S. election (the popular vote at least) and the 2012 campaign season should be over. Tonight, though, whatever your ability or plans to vote are (see the current poll for a peek at what other readers claim about their intentions), you've got the chance to see one more presidential debate, to be moderated by Ralph Nader, and featuring third-party presidential contenders Gary Johnson (Libertarian), Jill Stein (Green), Virgil Goode (Constitution) and Rock Anderson (Justice). Yes, the same ones featured in another debate a few weeks back. (We promise, this is the last debate of this go-round.) If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

58 of 409 comments (clear)

  1. A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

    Because it's MY vote. I'm told at work that I'm "wasting" my vote by not selecting candidate XXX, but to me, a wasted vote is a vote for something I don't agree with. I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq, I like Romney for requiring OpenDocument format (ODF) when he was governor of Mass, but at the end of the day, the candidates have more in common than not: use of drones, no plan to scale back TSA, overfunding the military, corrupted by Wall Street, etc.

    That's a loaded question to ask anyway, its similar to asking, "Why use something other than Apple/Microsoft?" Well, its about personal choice, and its about ideas. Sure, Linux will probably never win on the desktop, but you better fucking believe that Windows and MacOS are better operating systems now than they would have been had Linux never come along. The threat of losing to competition forced a better TCP/IP stack, it forced real security options in Windows, and it forced Apple to reinvent itself as a UNIX OS. And oh by the way, I happen to prefer using KDE over Apple/Windows.

    Same thing with the political parties, we have come to believe (as a nation) that R/D are the only legitimate choices, and it has lead to stagnation of ideas and of real work being done. The Federal government is broken, and cannot even pass a budget. But you better believe if Mitt Romney loses the electoral college due to the L vote, the Rs will start to distance themselves from the "abortion" issue and religious nutjobs, maybe start courting non-whites for a change and it will be for the better. Just witness how the Al Gore and the D's came around on the environment when my boy Nader took the election from him in 2000. The mandate for MPGs is going to double what it was 10 years ago, and we are finally subsidizing clean energy instead of oil.

    1. Re:A Wasted Vote... by blackfireuponus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I am also a Nader fan and a 3 time Nader voter, and I'm voting for Jill Stein. A vote for a mainstream candidate in a non contested state is the real wasted vote.

    2. Re:A Wasted Vote... by artor3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is nothing like asking "Apple or Microsoft?" You, as an individual, can choose Linux, but it's not like you're gonna get to have Johnson or Stein as your own personal president.

      Our election system sucks. It's just about the worst way to choose elected officials. It forces all elections to come down to a binary choice. But wishing and dreaming won't fix it. The rules are the rules, and you have to pick the best strategy within them. Insisting on only moving your pawns one square at a time will lead to disaster, no matter how much you may disagree with the double-move rule.

      Now, that said, if you're among the 85% of Americans who don't live in a swing state, then your presidential vote doesn't matter so much anyway, so you might as well try to get some extra funding for your third party of choice for the next cycle.

    3. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      the fact that there are virtually no third party members in any elected office is the real problem. i've never understood why the libertarians who can't get someone elected as mayor somewhere thinks they have a chance to win the presidential election. and on the wild, impossible chance that a third party one there is no party structure to actually get anything done. the only chance a 3rd party has is by starting small. look at the tea party, in the early 90's religious zealots and small gov types(proto tea partiers) started taking over local school boards because those elections are easy to win if one has even a small bit of organization. this is exactly how michele bachman got where she is today. of the greens and libs and the rest would actually engage the political system instead of having these self absorbed ego fests every 4 years then we might actually see a change. if nader really gave a damn about anything but himself he would have run for mayor of oakland or something and worked his way up.

    4. Re:A Wasted Vote... by flyneye · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Technically, since the Republican and Democratic parties have taken turns, term by term, doing eventually, exactly the same thing the other would do, perhaps sooner, perhaps later, for around a century, we've no reason to consider them separate parties. Minor differences between them have supplied the illusion of a separate entity, all smoke and mirrors, this is a one party system: The Repubmocrats.
              To continually do the same thing over and over, then to expect different results each time is crazy and stupid. Therefore to cast a vote in favor of the presiding one party system is logically a waste of a vote for an improving break of this mad cycle.
      You can argue that radical changes would be made by the other parties, I give you that radical changes must be corrected due to our incompetence over the last century. Yeah , it could hurt. Wanna pawn it off on your kids? Grandkids? Want more of the same ol' downward spiral for you and them? Just keep voting Repubmocrat if you do. Frankly, I would vote for a one eyed, hump backed, anarchist Hobbit, if I thought it would mean an end to Repubmocrat tyranny.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    5. Re:A Wasted Vote... by gman003 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Maybe not this election, but if candidates see that X% of voters want $IdeologyOfThirdParty, they'll start pushing that way more, because that few percent could be what wins them the election. So it still has influence, just more long-term.

      (There's also that federal funding given to any presidential campaign whose party earned over 5% of the vote in the last election. So once a party reaches that threshold, it could jump up rather quickly.)

    6. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A third-party vote, even if it is not destined to designate the winner, can also be a strategic decision, not just a "wasted vote".

      A significant vote for a third party sends a very strong message to the powers-that-be: you are messing up.

      They listen. They have to, if they want to be elected again.

      Further, a vote for a third-party candidate can help set up a better atmosphere for another third-party candidate 4 years from now.

      According to polls, approximately 20% of the voting American public identify themselves as "independent" (in this case meaning they do not support the "Big 2"). That is the largest number in history.

      According to other studies, it only takes 10% to make major changes, if they are persistent and sincere. We have twice that now.

      Look out, Big 2.

      And you can bet that I won't be voting for either of them. They're both so bad as to be laughable. Or they would be, if it weren't so tragic.

      --
      "Always vote for principle, though you may vote alone, and you may cherish the sweetest reflection that your vote is never lost." -- John Quincy Adams

    7. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Molt · · Score: 2

      The majority of desktop machines run Windows, does yours? If not then it's not like the Presidential election where the votes of others count just as much as yours towards who you personally are governed by.

      When it comes to choosing which OS to run you are allowed to make your own decisions, in Presidential elections you aren't allowed to choose your leader- you'll be getting the same one as the rest of your nation. As you point out issues with more mainstream OSes will bleed over to affect you but that's in no way the same.

      --
      404 Not Found: No such file or resource as '.sig'
    8. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A vote for a mainstream candidate in a non contested state is the real wasted vote.

      I think that a vote for a D or R in a contested state is even more wasted than in a non-contested state. Because the D&Rs dominate the only way to make them adopt change is to scare them into thinking they won't win the state - they have no fear in the states that are not contested.

      So if you vote 3rd party based on your conscience this time around and the D or R that you disagree with more wins the state you have exercised the only leverage you have - that a party that doesn't represent you could have had your vote but they effed it up. If they want your vote next election, they need to adopt some of the positions of the 3rd party that you did vote for. Winners keep doing what they were doing because it worked last time. Losers change their tactics in order to try to win next time.

      BTW, this is why I think the Tea Party is a sham - they aren't a real party, just a wing of the republican party. You can't vote for a tea party presidential candidate the way you can for a real 3rd party candidate.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    9. Re:A Wasted Vote... by swampfriend · · Score: 2

      Keep in mind that Obama took 55% of the popular vote in 2008, but with a 62% turnout, only about 34% of eligible citizens supported him enough to go vote for him. The two major parties simply do not represent majorities in this country.

    10. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      For the nth fucking time, Gary Johnson was a Republican when he was governor. He became the Libertarian Party candidate because he lost the Republican presidential primary.

    11. Re:A Wasted Vote... by cffrost · · Score: 3, Informative

      I like Romney for requiring OpenDocument format (ODF) when he was governor of Mass.

      Um, you lost me here, why would a greedy venture capitalist give a flying fuck about open-source software? I just did a google search and found nothing relating to WTF you just said, or are you just a Romney-troll in disguise? In that case, you still aren't changing my vote, the O's are in for FOUR MORE YEARS bitch.

      http://www.consortiuminfo.org/standardsblog/article.php?story=20060313100529485&mode=print

      Next time, try using a search engine instead of a fucking ad engine, dipshit.

      --
      Thank you, Edward Snowden.

      "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
    12. Re:A Wasted Vote... by artor3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Long-term thinking like that doesn't work. If you give up a few presidential cycles working for your twenty year goal, then you'll find that the Overton window has shifted against you, the Supreme Court is stacked with idealogues who'll rule your every move unconstitutional, and the districts are gerrymandered to make taking over Congress impossible.

      Like I said before, if you're not in a swing state, then 3rd parties are the way to go, if only to get them federal funding. But if you are in a position where your vote could set the course of the nation for years to come, you'd be a fool to throw that away for some long-term plan that may never come to pass.

    13. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. I stopped supporting the Libertarian platform because I grew up and joined the real world, and realized that most of them were just GOP washouts.

      While we would all love to believe that everything would be better if the government stepped out of the way, that isn't true. Human history is inconsistent with this fantasy, and Atlas Shrugged is just about as realistic as Harry Potter. With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in. Anyone who thinks we can get away with deregulation after 2008 is either a complete moron or at best deluding themselves. Taxes are the price of civilization, and regulatory forces are necessary in order to keep things in check. We need moderates on both sides of the aisle who are willing to balance out how we spend our funds and ensure our policies don't go off the deep end in either direction (Fascism and Communism are equally dangerous).

    14. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Culture20 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I found reams of the same information via Google too.

    15. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      Our central government has put more of its own citizens in jail than any other on the planet. Just because you live in a privileged suburb doesn't make it real for anyone else.

    16. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Informative

      I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq

      you mean for sticking to Dubya's plan because he was forced to, mostly because Iraq simply refused when they were offered to extend the deal? They even dared to demand they could prosecute troops committing crimes, which are immune to the local law enforcement.
      And there is that huge so called embassy for 5500 people, full of mercenaries. That pulling out is in name only.

    17. Re:A Wasted Vote... by anagama · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'm told at work that I'm "wasting" my vote by not selecting candidate XXX, but to me, a wasted vote is a vote for something I don't agree with. I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq,

      Kudos for voting third party. Me too.

      However, I feel obliged to correct a misconception about Obama. He did not "end the war in Iraq" --- he merely failed to extend it. In the months leading up to the expiration of SOFA, scheduled for Dec 2011, the Obama administration lobbied Iraq for an extension in order to keeps thousands, maybe up to 20,000 troops in Iraq. SOFA was a prerequisite for that because it forbids Iraq from prosecuting soldiers in Iraq, for crimes committed while they are in Iraq. Had Obama been successful at extending SOFA, Obama would not now be claiming to have "ended the war in Iraq" because it would still be going on. I mean, it still is, just with mercenaries and such, but it is perhaps a worthy semantic distinction. I just hate to see people give credit to Obama though, when all he did was "fail to extend," which is totally different from "intending to end."

      Citations: http://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2012/10/23/obamas-revisionist-history-on-ending-the-iraq-war-a-lesson-from-the-3rd-presidential-debate/

      and this from within the above:
      http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704889404576277240145258616.html

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    18. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      China, Cuba and North Korea are a paradise then.

      Taxes are the price of civilization, and regulatory forces are necessary in order to keep things in check.

      that price is not infinite and have you ever heard of 'revolving door' or 'regulatory capture'? Do you have your lobbyist on the capitol hill? No? So why do you foolishly believe the legislation originated there is supposed to make average peon's life better?
      Besides only ex CEOs and insiders work in those regularory agencies, or fucking morons who were not smart enough to make careers on WallStreet. They aren't going to catch anybody, they are either buddies with criminals, or to incompetent to see the forest for the trees.
      Also regulations are mostly toothless, they are carefully crafted to look pretty from PR point of view but at the same not to bother the regulated too much. On top of that they attack past problems and are completely unprepared to deal with next crisis because nobody knows what exactly it will look like.

    19. Re:A Wasted Vote... by feedayeen · · Score: 4, Funny

      But he wanted to advertise his third party search engine.

    20. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Veggiesama · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I like Obama for ending the war in Iraq, I like Romney for requiring OpenDocument format (ODF) when he was governor of Mass...

      Only on Slashdot are these comparable accomplishments...

    21. Re:A Wasted Vote... by tignom · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If there are mainstream candidates you want to win, vote for them. If not, a vote for a third party is a vote for more viable candidates to choose from in the next election. In the long run, that's a meaningful vote.

    22. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Interesting

      who says about lack of any government? Cutting back and getting rid of entirely are 2 different things and most libertarians suggest the former. It doesn't matter though because every time a libertarian says something reasonable like 'paying taxes on working and subsidizing not working is counterproductive and the govt is not supposed to micromanage every detail of your life, what you eat, who you sleep with' he is 'encouraged' to go to Somalia.

      also correlation is not causation - that the rich countries recycle huge part of their GDP through government channels doesn't mean the govt is the source of prosperity. It may as well be the other way around: prosperous countries can afford to blow money on fluff and would be more prosperous if they didn't.

    23. Re:A Wasted Vote... by hrvatska · · Score: 2

      A third party isn't going to be viable nationally until it has a strong local base. If it can't get enough votes to get local officials elected it's unlikely to be able to get votes for its presidential candidates. Local office holders can be an incredibly valuable resource for a national campaign. When people's mayors, town council members, country executives and the like are seen to be members of a third party it makes that party a much more attractive option. Parties like the Greens and the Libertarians need to build locally before they can hope to have an impact on national races. And building locally doesn't just mean having members in a locale, it means having an active party organization that can get people elected to local offices.

    24. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Teancum · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Just because you think Mitt Romney is the devil incarnate and ready to harvest your soul taking America down a dangerous road doesn't mean that he may have a few redeeming qualities too. There were several Slashdot stories about Massachusetts under the Romney governorship and adopting the Open Document Format with some pretty sound reasons for doing that. If you are too new here to remember those stories or so closed minded to have skipped over them, I can't help your ignorance on this subject.

      You don't need to do a google search to find this stuff and certainly if you are older you can remember significant things like that... as his move did set the standard which pushed Microsoft and some other companies to adopt the Open Document Format as at least an option with their word processors and even do a pretty decent job of supporting the format.

      While I don't think Barack Obama is the messiah either and in fact I am hoping he doesn't get re-elected, he has several redeeming qualities about him too. In particular I like Obama's space policy as a massive improvement over what George W. Bush or for that matter anybody since Lyndon Johnson. I can certainly name a few other things that I admire about his service to America, so why is it that you must be such a jerk and fail to see any good qualities in another person who lives on this planet?

    25. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Clsid · · Score: 2

      I agree with a lot of what you said, but I'm not sure that Linux was the reason why Apple reinvented Mac OS. If you read the famous Steve Jobs bio by Isaacson, the whole upgrade was something of a dire need in order to compete with Microsoft. They were looking at BeOS or NeXT, after failing miserably with some internal projects. In the end, NeXT won the deal, and since NeXT itself used a Mach Unix kernel at its core, it was only logical they were going to choose BSD to build Mac OS X on.

      But as far as ome other stuff where Linux was clearly the motivation, remember how Windows 7 copied KDE's taskbar.

    26. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are misrepresenting my point about subsidizing not working and you know it. Subsidies in general result in more of the thing that is subsidized, are you telling me that generous welfare system causes disabilities and vetarans?

      1) "Not working" includes children. Should we return to Dicken's Englang?

      No. But if you think that passing the law by the govt is enough to make child labor dissapear, you are very wrong. That is putting the cart before the horse. In reality it's the other way around. Society needs to be wealthy enough to pass on the child labor, the law is merely icing on the cake that was baked already.
      Starving families in 3rd world countries don't give a fuck and sure as hell won't allow their children to play and learn and have happy careless childhood when their very existence is on the line. If you passed such a law there, you'd create even more pathology, as these children would still be expected to bring money home, but now they would be forced to beg (optional mutilation for greater efficiency) or into illegal activities: crime, prostitution.
      Besides if you are a parent, it's your fucking responsibility to provide for your offspring first and foremost, not everybody else's.

      2) "Not working" includes veterans. Probably we just should let them die on the streets.

      i got an idea. Stop waging wars on brown people, there won't be any veterans, problem solved.

      3) "Not working" includes disabled people. Natural selection FTW!

      being disabled sucks, no doubt, but do you think that whining about it will make their lifes better, with the sense of fulfillment? No, treating them as a special, worse kind of people who are not able to wipe their own ass without help causes 2 things:
      - lower self esteem
      - increased helplessness and dependency on the system
      It's simple, lower expectations and you can bet the people will lower their performance to match them.

      4) "Not working" includes retired people. Invisible hand of market wiped out your investments (remember, no FDIC!)? Tough luck.

      Investments and FDIC? i thought FDIC secured boring deposits up to $X. I know the libertarians believe that such programs make people not do their due diligence because it's easier and more convenient to delegate the responsibility to bureaucrats than to cover your own ass (which means more malinvestments and outright scams slip through) but seriously, that's your main criticism? no FDIC?
      Besides if there is a situation where much of the fake wealth evaporates, the only thing the govt can do is to paper the problem over and restore nominal number, but not the original purchasing power behind it. If such a disaster happens you can be sure there was a bubble and the correction was unavoidable either way. Besides the govt is not exactly a friend of retirees, they are that huge ugly position in the budget and the govt is glad the inflation lowers the burden of promises.

      In the absence of a single freaking example of a libertarian country that is not a hell-hole like Somalia, we are forced to conclude that the redistributionist government is necessary for a healthy society. The only question is the degree of redistribution of wealth.

      Does not follow. Redistribution of wealth is a direct result of democracy, because politicians play their electorate by divide and conquer strategies, and offering concessions to different interest groups in order to win votes. Underwater mortgage? we will help you! $20 worth of birth control too expensive? you got it! Farmers in redneck states are unhappy? Corn subsidies for everybody! Students know shit? Throw even more money at the problem and give govt backed loans to everybody!

    27. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2

      With rare exception, countries with weak central governments are hellholes that no modern American would enjoy living in.

      China, Cuba and North Korea are a paradise then.

      You fail logic forever.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    28. Re:A Wasted Vote... by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > the O's are in for FOUR MORE YEARS bitch.

      The next time someone here asks how we arrived at a point where the only ones with a shot at winning are two corrupt and manipulative parties that are carbon copies on all but a few wedge issues, please point them at this post and remind them that this is an "average voter".

    29. Re:A Wasted Vote... by boots19 · · Score: 2

      Long-term thinking like that doesn't work. There've only been two elections since the Reagan years where a plausible argument can be made that a marginally viable 3rd-party candidate affected the outcome of the presidential election: 1992 and 2000.

      Yet the Overton window has still shifted radically rightward over the last 30+ years. The relatively paltry number of people in this country who have decided to vote for the candidate that best represents their values can hardly be blamed for that shift. It's a lot more plausible to blame the masses, especially those who lean to the left, who've decided to vote for centrist after centrist (i.e., "the lesser evil"), though the Republicans continue to nominate more and more radically right-wing candidates.

      Democrats are like the Baltimore Ravens of politics. They load up with awesome, even inspirational defensive players and thus often rank highly in fewest points allowed, win a fair number of games as a result and go to the playoffs most years. Yeah, they might even win a Super Bowl. But mostly they lose the biggest games. Meanwhile the Manning brothers and Tom Brady lead teams to championship after championship.

      Eventually you have to draft a QB a team can believe in.

    30. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Seeteufel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Romney seems to be the better president for the US, but I am no US citizen. It is better to have a right wing moderate in office and a left opposition. Where is the Pirate Party candidate btw.? Why can't the US get a decent universal vote election system?

    31. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Vaphell · · Score: 2

      it works until it doesn't. Look at Greece. All parties competed who can promise the most free shit to the plebes. Huge chunk of population shuffling paper and drinking coffee in government sector, retirements at 50, hundreds of privileged occupations and what not. Pretty much the only thing that was not promised was the moon. Of course everybody knows the only problem is that they can't print their way to prosperity because of the euro currency, not the fact the whole country was ridden with pathologies and deserves its fate (it takes 2 to tango, people deserve their politicians)

      Turns out that actually HELPING people in need (even if they are partially to blame for it) helps to build a prosperous society. It's much better to give a helping hand than to kick a lying man.

      In need? How is that possible that everybody and their dog is in need? When everybody is, the meaning of the word depreciates and people in real need are lost in the noise.
      And what about the reinforced helplessness, increased dependency on the almighty state? That breeds the kind of people unable to wipe their own ass. American prosperity was not built by entitled whiny bitches who expect free obamaphone every week, was it?

    32. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Any vote for either major party is not just a wasted vote, it's an immoral vote.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    33. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Hatta · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Supreme Court is already stacked with ideologues who'll rule every good policy unconstitutional and districts are gerrymandered to make taking over Congress impossible. The electoral system is already thoroughly broken, so what's to lose?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    34. Re:A Wasted Vote... by Soluzar · · Score: 2

      Maybe because he doesn't believe in spending money on paid solutions when the free one is adequate? I think that for a lot (if admittedly not all) uses, ODF and Libre Office are adequate.

  2. Tomorrow night? by tooyoung · · Score: 3, Informative

    Won't the election be over on Tuesday?

    1. Re:Tomorrow night? by artor3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But for those people, the election won't end until Wednesday!

    2. Re:Tomorrow night? by hutsell · · Score: 2

      Won't the election be over on Tuesday?

      The President is elected by the Electoral College; the Electors, chosen by the voters tomorrow, meet in their own state capitals on the Monday after the second Wednesday in December (December 12, for this year) and cast their votes on separate ballots, one for the President and the other for the Vice President. Unofficially, we'll know tomorrow night. If it's an unusually close or controversial election, then we'll know after December 12, 2012.

      --
      Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
    3. Re:Tomorrow night? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      "Read the constitution. While it doesn't say "you can't tell them how to vote" it does say that the electors annouce their decision."

      I am presuming that you are basing your argument on the words "their decision". But there are many kinds of decisions... like "Vote the way the people of this state tell you, or walk." That is a decision, of a sort. It is also coercion, of a sort. But not the sort wherein someone points a gun at your head. There is a quantitative and qualitative difference.

      "The govenor of Ohio can simply appoint a bunch of Republicans as electors, if the Ohio constitution/legislature allows it. But the govenor of Ohio shouldn't be able to tell them how to vote. But he does. Which is probably unconstitutional."

      No, it's not unconstitutional. Each state (read that Constitution again) can decide for itself -- as long as it does not break other Federal laws -- how the people vote in Federal elections. Also how their electors will "decide" their votes.

      But that also presumes that the people of Ohio both know of these practices, and approve of them. If not, they they are supposed to -- at the state level -- change it. In my state, we got fed up with the "2 party only" system of voting that was in force, and changed it. Several times. I won't go into detail because I don't publish my home state on Slashdot.

  3. Easy answer by Nidi62 · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

    Easy: Romney wants to control your bedroom (marriage, abortion, etc), and Obama wants to control your bank account. Not to mention in the debates they both have either lied out of their asses or refused to provide real answers/details to any policy question.

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  4. for some things, less is not more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I am Greek - in my country (birthplace of Democracy... but you know that!), and in our last elections few months ago, we had about 35 parties to choose from, and from them there are 7 in the parliament (there is a 3% minimum of total votes requirement for geting there), and from those 7 parties 3 of them are forming the goverment... and still, for many citizens there is not a party that fully represents them.
    I believe that you have a much better Democracy in the USA than ours, but thats because you are better quality citizens - you should really check this multiple parties thing... it will make your Democracy even more better.

  5. Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Obama wants the top tax bracket to go up 3%. That's it. It was higher under Reagan.

    1. Re:Bollocks by lexman098 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I can't afford health insurance right now, and would rather do without as I don't feel it is right for everyone else to subsidize it and pay for it for me. What makes it worse is that I am penalized for not even being able to afford the insurance.

      This pretty much sums up the misinformation surrounding obamacare. Let me guess, you're too poor to afford insurance without your employer helping out, but still not poor enough to qualify for medicaid. The affordable care act was built with you in mind, my friend. It's actually less efficient for everyone else to let people like you go without insurance, so the affordable care act is going to (hopefully) make it cheaper for you to buy insurance from the exchange or at least require your employer to help out. You won't be "fined for being poor" unless you're ignorant ideology prevents you from taking advantage.

    2. Re:Bollocks by nedwidek · · Score: 4, Informative

      No company, huh? Provably wrong. Lowe's Home Improvement does for one.

      http://careers.lowes.com/benefits_part.aspx

      --
      Post anonymously - For when your opinion embarrasses even you!
    3. Re:Bollocks by Legion303 · · Score: 2

      "Work part time, live at home, and turn 26 this month."

      What was that you were saying about "personal responsibility"?

    4. Re:Bollocks by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

      It's actually less efficient for everyone else to let people like you go without insurance, so the affordable care act is going to (hopefully) make it cheaper for you to buy insurance from the exchange or at least require your employer to help out.

      Its actually cheaper in many cases for the employer to pay the fine for not providing coverage than to pay for coverage. Coverage hasn't really been getting cheaper, but more expensive as insurance companies see the writing on the wall and so raise prices now because they know that they probably won't be able to do so easily in the future. They have also been dropping children's policies for similar reasons. That also doesn't account for people that lost their jobs as business shutdown some locations or down-sized so as to stay under the level that triggers required compliance with the law.

      You won't be "fined for being poor" unless you're ignorant ideology prevents you from taking advantage.

      Apparently you can find no wrong in a 2,000+ page bill significantly altering the role of government and establishing new power over the lives of individual Americans that was passed without anyone reading the whole thing first. The lack of reading it first explains the stream of negative news about yet another unintended consequence of the law. What is it that explains that? Ignorant ideology?

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  6. South Florida independent voter here... by belgo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... and I was just voting my conscience (last Sunday, during early voting, as it happened). The two 'major' parties both want to send your children to die in countries that did not attack us in 2001, and both parties enjoy ordering record numbers of wiretaps, both with and without warrants, every single year. Both 'major' parties are also huge, huge fans of welfare, as long as the recipients are banks. I know one of them will win (and given their similarities, it doesn't matter which). But I'll sleep better knowing I had no part in endorsing their sociopathy.

  7. Peace by JackPepper · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I can get a ballot, I am voting for Libertarian Gary Johnson. He would pull all the troops (Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea, Germany, Japan, etc.) home right away and stop the drone strikes. That's enough for me. How do Democrats or Republicans expect people to believe in their government, when their government continues to murder innocent civilians in other countries?

  8. Why vote third party? by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're voting (or would, if you could) for other than the Democratic or Republican parties' candidates this year, what drives that decision?

    Maybe it's because I only see minor differences between the two major parties. Under both the D's & R's, the size & scope of government has increased, and our liberties are being decreased. What liberties you ask? How about the right to have medical marijuana in a state where the voters have decided it should be legal, but the Feds are conducting record numbers of raids? How about not having a presumption of guilt when trying to travel via airplane? How about the right to not be spied on without due process? That's just the start. I'm not 100% libertarian, but I'll still be casting my vote for all of the LP's candidates on my ballot. We need competition in the political marketplace just like we do in the financial marketplace.

    --
    Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  9. Conscience by chill · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm voting Gary Johnson (L) because I'm impressed with his accomplishments and agree with his philosophy.

    End the wars, legalize and tax drugs, practice fiscal responsibility.

    He's a self-made millionaire businessman who also has an excellent record as a 2-term governor. He was praised by both Republicans and Democrats alike for being able to work with all parties and get the job done.

    His bio and record speak for themselves:

    http://www.garyjohnson2012.com/about

    http://www.garyjohnson2012.com/record

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  10. Here's the Problem by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I agree that you should vote for somebody you believe in, even if they have no chance of winning. My problem is that I can't believe in any of these bozos. Just picture any one of them in the White House. Could they govern? They could not.

      The U.S. isn't an elected dictatorship — POTUS has to govern in tandem with Congress. If you're not satisfied with the current crowd, you need to replace the whole crowd, not just one guy. You have to work on electing Congresspeople who reflect your views. If you're not willing to do that, all this crap with fring Presidential candidates is a waste of time.

  11. In case anyone missed it... by cffrost · · Score: 4, Informative

    In case anyone missed the 4-way debate moderated by Larry King in Chicago on 2012-10-23:

    https://kat.ph/torrents/20121023-full-third-party-presidential-debate-yt-avi-t6769764/

    All of the presidential candidates' social/economic ideologies are graphed here. [Note the proximity of the two corporate parties' candidates.]

    Please—especially if you live in an uncontested state—vote for the best candidate, not the second-least-worst candidate; our country (and especially our civil liberties) have taken just about all the "lesser evil" that can be withstood.

    This quiz can help you determine which candidate best matches your own ideology.

    --
    Thank you, Edward Snowden.

    "Arguments from authority are worthless." —Carl Sagan
  12. My voting plans? by King_TJ · · Score: 3, Informative

    I, too, have no plans to vote for either Obama or Romney. I think a vote should only be cast for someone you're confident is a good choice for running the country. Neither one of these people have shown they deserve the title of President, IMO.

    I really dislike that "vote for the lesser of two evils" concept. People have been doing that for a long time now, and that's largely how we got to the mess we're in today!

    It seems to me that the current system has a razor sharp focus on ensuring everything quickly comes down to only 2 remaining viable candidates, at all costs. If a 3rd. party shows promise, the media or members of one of the two established parties pull out all the stops to discredit him or her. They want politics to run just like our sports teams ... only 2 teams on the field fighting it out to see who wins. No matter how many teams play each other in a season, it has to come down to only two in the end, to declare someone the winner.

    Until this changes, the American people really aren't able to vote for the type of government they want. They're only able to pick from two people pre-selected for them by the elite (meaning those with enough money and influence to boil the choices down to the final two they want to see you pick from). And sure, you CAN vote for a 3rd. party candidate (and I almost always do so). But we all know it's currently nothing more than a small display of contempt for the status quo system. I really doubt any sane person voting for, say, Gary Johnson, believes he really has a decent shot at winning.

    Still, that's fine with me. You don't earn a prize for having voted for the guy who winds up winning.

  13. Vote for one of these (unless you're in FL or OH) by jemenake · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you're at all interested in getting more ideas out into the national consciousness (and if you're living in a state that Obama or Romney has a lock on), consider voting for a third-party candidate. Because of the electoral system, it's not going to change who wins the election, but it can increase the chances that one of these candidates gets a spot at some future televised debate. Once upon a time, the debates were sponsored by the National Organization of Women... and now they're run by the Commission on Presidential Debates (which is run by the Democratic and Republican parties). Being a bit of a cartel, they've managed to stipulate that the only invitees to debate must get at least 15% representation in various national polls (another classic case of the successful pulling up the ladder they used to climb to the top).

    Now, we could argue the game theory of elections and I'd have to concede that it's always going to devolve into two parties (like how tea-partiers, when the chips are really down, vote for the republican because the alternative, a democrat, would be, to them, the apocalypse), but part of how those two parties stay on top is by having a "big tent" and trying to appeal to a broad spectrum of views (okay... and also by not really specifying what their views are). And I think that, if other candidates are able to get up with the "big boys" and put forward their views, then that's more exposure... and maybe some of those views might have to get some recognition from one of the major parties.

    Frankly, after visiting ISideWith.com, I was blown away at how congruent my views are with the Green candidate, Jill Stein... to the point where I really wish more people knew that there was a candidate that was, potentially, so suited to their views. Same goes for Gary Johnson. He's not my cup of tea, but I really wish the socially-liberal/economically-conservative republican voters out there were more aware that they didn't necessarily need to throw gays and women under the bus in exchange for getting capital-gains and inheritance taxes abolished. And maybe a stronger-than-expected showing in the election will provide the social proof for some more people to look into what's up with this (Libertarian|Green|Justice| Constitution) thing.

    Of course, as I said in the subject, if you live in a swing state, then ignore the preceding rant and get your state swinging.

  14. My Reasoning by mothlos · · Score: 2

    I have grown tired of being ruled by lizards.

  15. Independents represent the largest share by Andy+Prough · · Score: 3, Informative

    Keep in mind that Obama took 55% of the popular vote in 2008, but with a 62% turnout, only about 34% of eligible citizens supported him enough to go vote for him. The two major parties simply do not represent majorities in this country.

    Exactly - and a large percentage of those that voted for him did not identify themselves as D's - they were "Independents". As of 2010, Gallup polling found that 31% of Americans identified as Democrats, 29% as Republicans, and 38% as independents (http://www.gallup.com/poll/145463/Democratic-Party-Drops-2010-Tying-Year-Low.aspx). So no party has even close to a majority of voters, and independents are the largest portion.

    The interesting thing is that independent voters continue to allow R's and D's to make all national elections referendums almost exclusively about their own candidates. The most successful independent or 3rd party candidates in the past 100 years were Ross Perot (18.9% in 1992), and Teddy Roosevelt (27% as a Progressive in 1912).

  16. Re:Voting for Gary. by germansausage · · Score: 2

    brake. The word is spelled b-r-a-k-e.

  17. Re:Four candidates, summarized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's because you mispelled it. Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party.