by J. R. Practix
Absentee ballot: n. a ballot completed and typically mailed in advance of an election by a voter who is unable to be present at the polls.
I was just a little kid. (Little kid–that may be a bit of redundancy, except truthfully, I wasn’t really little.)
My parents were staunch Republicans. Every election season, they would brag about walking into the booth and voting a “straight Republican ticket.” Since they were my parents, I assumed that was another piece of nobility to be revered, and only later discovered that it was a proclamation of a bit of preconceived ignorance.
Matter of fact, that particular mindset is so prevalent in our society today that the action of voting may be all absentee–not just ballots sent in from some far-away land by traveling citizens.
No, it appears to me that at times all the American people are absentee during their balloting.
- They seem to be absentee of allowing their minds to be changed by reason, and instead wave the flag over their particular party of choice.
- There seems to be an absentee nature in understand the expansive needs of a multi-cultural America, which is mushrooming much faster than its willingness to contemplate.
- There seems to be an absentee of respect given between candidates campaigning for the same office–a disrespect for the ability of the other person to have gotten that far in the process.
- There seems to be an absentee of understanding that merely possessing a morality of your own choice does not make it superior to another person’s interpretation.
- And certainly we are absentee of following through on a conclusion to our political theories, determining whether they actually produce a government “of the people, for the people and by the
people.”
Even though I think voting can be a very good thing, I find it neither regal, virtuous or heavenly when it can be so easily “bedeviled” by stubborn loyalty instead of common sense.
Perhaps THAT’S the problem in America. Like my mother and father so many years ago, all the votes being cast seem to be absentee of the deliberation necessary to honor the traditions that have made this country rich with potential.
For let us be frank. The greatest leaders in our history–George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Abraham Lincoln, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and any others you might conjure in your mind–if deposited into our time, would all be completely uncomfortable associating themselves with either political party.
Because change is not a party.
It is often a lonely trip in the middle of the night to the local convenience store to pay too much for supplies, desperately needed.
