The sound of one man voting
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SHERWOOD KIRALY
I’m not there yet, but by Tuesday I’ll have all my issues straight.
I’ve got my pamphlet and I’m wading through -- although 180 pages of
propositions, many of them followed by a rebuttal to the effect that
“this proposition says the exact opposite of what it says it’s
saying,” can get you staring out the window.
But voting, like baseball, is an American tradition that’s coming
back big, and I’ll be out there Tuesday, punching away at the new
keyboard. It’s a great opportunity, and flattering, too. The country
wants my opinion on who should be president and the state wants my
opinion on stem cell research, tribal gaming, DNA sample collection,
the three-strikes law and employee health care.
There’s also a local election, which to judge from my mailbox is
grimmer and more intense than any of that national and state stuff.
So all in all I’ve got a lot of people and proposals to straighten
out. I’ll do it; in fact I’ll enjoy it.
I haven’t always been such an active participant. When I was 22 I
voted, and my guy lost. The system clearly didn’t work. For several
years thereafter I was pleased to complain about the mediocrity of
the candidates and lament the passing of the godlike statesmen I’d
read about in school.
Then one year a TV personality was being spoken of as a
presidential candidate and it occurred to me that someday I might
want to vote against someone, so I re-registered.
(I’ve been called for jury duty more or less constantly ever
since, but that isn’t so bad. One side or the other always excuses
me; I don’t know why. I just tell them I write comic novels and I’m
out of there.)
Nowadays, of course, everybody’s registering. Our two favorite
excuses for not voting (“My vote doesn’t matter” and “There’s no
difference between the candidates”) have gotten shaky, so there’s
sure to be a good turnout on Tuesday.
Over the last four years, voter attitude has changed from “Why
bother?” to “Try and stop me.” This year I’m not only ready for the
election, I’m ready for the lawsuits after the election.
Errors and abuses on election day are always possible and no doubt
it’s best to be vigilant. In Chicago, my native town, the mayor’s
machine was once notorious for bringing in the graveyard vote.
But here we are, having come through over 200 years of exclusion,
coercion, fraud and fluke, about to exercise the franchise again, and
looking forward to it. People say the country’s badly divided now,
but on the other hand there’s always something dicey about a nation
where the president gets voted in unanimously.
So get out there and vote your conscience. Have fun with it. See
you at the polls. And see you in court.
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