Why vote? A married couple I know is planning to stay home from the Presidential primaries because he’s voting for one candidate and she’s voting for another. They cancel each other out, so better to go to Starbucks and get a scone and a latte.
But isn’t that wrong? Isn’t there something deeply problematic about failing to vote? Sure, it seems like our single vote doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things. But we’re smart enough to know that it’s only the combined efforts of all those individuals that results in a decision. So how can you not vote?
There’s a wonderful teaching found in Judaism and other traditions that goes something like this: “He who destroys a single life, it is as though he destroyed an entire world. And he who saves a single life, it is as though he saved an entire world.” Each of us is unique. Each of us is infinitely valuable. And yet we are all equal in our infinite worth. Each of us contains within us a world–our world–and the possibility of infinite worlds emerging from us. And yet each of us is only a single human being. That can be both inspiring and overwhelming at the same time: we are special and yet we are the same as everyone else. We matter completely, and yet we don’t matter at the same time.
When we fail to vote, do we deny something essential about ourselves? Do we fail to add our voice to the mix? Or is there actually a better way to spend our time? How can we justify voting? How can we justify not voting?







Full text at: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/949738.html
... Read more Thu 31, 2008 11:47
Why vote? Because you don’t have a right to criticize or complain about any government policy - domestic or foreign - if you don’t democratically participate in trying to change it.
Fri 1, 2008 10:33... Read more Sat 2, 2008 3:35
... Read more Wed 6, 2008 11:46
... Read more Mon 10, 2008 9:49
... Read more Fri 2, 2008 11:56
... Read more Wed 27, 2008 7:36