Elections are a thing in the United States and in many other places in the world, but it seems that when voting comes around, there is a minor misconception people get when doubling down to make that decision. Major parties warn you not to "throw away your vote" or in the case of the last presidential election "cast a protest vote." Neither of these is actually possible.
When one votes for something, the intention is that they engage in a conscious decision to put forth their voice to say which of the available choices they think are best. There is, in fact, no way for anyone to throw away their vote (or make a protest vote). Any vote put forth in good faith to make a decision in one's own best interest is a valid decision...whether that decision turns out to be the winning one or not.
My impression of some people is that when they enter into a voting situation, they get caught up in a game mentality. In the musical, Hamilton, some secondary characters are pondering who to vote for in the election of 1800: Adams, Jefferson, or Burr. When Adams is considered, the comment is made "He's gonna lose, that's just defeatist." This comment is right in line ith the idea that voting for someone who can't win is throwing your vote away. The idea of an election or vote of any kind is to determine the desires of the people, not for the people to play a game to guess who is going to win. Sometimes, you'll even hear about those who guessed wrong later. They'll say they voted wrong because their angle lost.
That's not why you vote. There is no prize for picking the winner. Unless you put money on it, but the legality of that is questionable in some areas.
The point of this is that when you vote, you are supposed to go in with the mindset to always make the outcome better, and even if that entails putting your voice behind something you think may lose, that's fine. If you believed in it, you did the right thing.
If everyone in the country stopped guessing the winner and started voting their heart, maybe we'd start making some positive progress.
Sunday, May 7, 2017
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