Why I'm Voting For Jill Stein

An essay was published here a few days ago titled "Why I am Voting For Hillary." While I respect the author for posting it here--"behind enemy lines," so to speak--I still felt that his reasoning was just the latest update of the same reasoning we hear every four years, which goes: You have to vote for the Democratic nominee because the Republicans are awful.

I concur: they are awful. And they'll likely always be awful. Yet some people are always trying to use this inescapable part of American political reality to justify all manner of backsliding by the other political party--you know, the one that claims to represent "the people."

So I would like to write a rebuttal here. Not of that article, but of that entire manner of thinking.

Let's start with Donald Trump. Yes, he's awful. He finds new ways to be awful. He's flamboyantly, crudely, cartoonishly awful. He's a racist and a sexist, and he's flatly unqualified to hold the presidency. What would he do as president? Harass people on Twitter at 3 AM? This provides the pro-mainstream argument with its greatest strength: naturally, we should do whatever it takes to keep someone like that out of power, right?

Yet due to the unique nature of the 2016 election, it also serves as that argument's Achilles heel. Why? Because this year, we're electing someone for one term only. That's right, whoever wins the White House in 2016 will not be there past 2020. Hillary Clinton won't be because there is no way in hell that someone as unpopular as she is--and with the public as dissatisfied with the economy as they are--will give the Democrats 16 years. 16 years never even happens in good times, with popular presidents. Donald Trump, on the other hand, will be a one-term president because he's Donald Trump.

So while in heated elections the focus always turns to winning, and winning now, I think we may benefit this time from thinking a few moves ahead.

Which brings me to Hillary Clinton. Many of us dislike her and don't trust her, and I think we have good reason. The one thing she's been consistent about throughout her career is a willingness to say anything to get elected. So while feeling the electoral heat, she's willing to parrot her erstwhile rival Bernie Sanders and offer her own free tuition plan, she then goes behind closed doors and tells her elite donors that free college tuition is a nutty idea only popular with political naifs who are "living in their parents' basement." And while her surrogates are out and about telling everyone that Hillary Clinton is running on "the most progressive agenda in history," Clinton herself, behind closed doors and to that same group of donors, says that she prefers to occupy the space "from the center-left to the center-right" on the political spectrum. Hillary Clinton may say that she wants to reverse police militarization, but her actions on the subject likely speak louder than her words. Because that's just the kind of person she is. Deep down, Hillary Clinton is a politician who is most comfortable in closed rooms in the company of the very rich and very powerful, and who thinks voters are something to be "managed."

Which is why she is the absolute worst person the Democrats could have put up in the populist, anti-establishment mood of 2016.

So let's do a thought experiment. Let's imagine the one term of both a Clinton and a Trump presidency, and let's imagine where we'll be both two years into them, and in 2020, when they'll be over. To do this I'd go so far as to say we need no crystal ball whatsoever, and that all we need to do is look at the behavior of voters over the past couple of decades and extrapolate from there.

First, a Clinton presidency. We're two years into it, and needless to say, Hillary has not been a transformational president. Her administration is (probably correctly) seen as corrupt and in the back pocket of Wall Street. The wars continue with no end in sight. The economy is either still sputtering, or has slid into another recession. Will Hillary's natural rightward bent help her stave off a slaughter in the midterms? Absolutely not, because it doesn't work like that. She still has a D next to her name, she's still seen as a liberal in the sense that "liberal" has come to mean "useless elite," and the R's by that time will have been out of the White House for ten years. They'll be foaming at the mouth. They'll want blood, they'll smell blood, and they'll get it. Because can you even imagine the existential despair that will have settled over the vast majority of left-leaning voters two years into another Clinton presidency? Yeah, it'll be ugly. And needless to say, the GOP will emerge victorious in the 2018 midterms, possibly with a supermajority. I probably don't even have to mention that Clinton's response to this shellacking will be to move even further to the right, or that doing so won't help her keep her job. In 2020, the Republicans won't make the same mistake twice, instead putting up someone more "presentable" like Paul Ryan or Scott Walker. The media will have a collective orgasm, crowing about how this represents a "return to sanity" on the part of the GOP, except here's the thing about those guys: they are very, very, very far to the right. They're the movement conservatives, the true believers. And they'll clean Hillary's clock. And so now we're looking at a President Scott Walker, possibly with a supermajority in Congress. (And that's not even getting into how if Democratic turnout is weak in both 2018 and 2020, Republicans will win at the state level, so they'll be the ones to control the redistricting that follows the census. A Clinton presidency could directly result in the Democrats being gerrymandered out of existence.)

Obviously, that was a very ugly scenario, but what about a Trump presidency? What would happen then? Here is where my "behavioral model" of prediction fails, because like anyone else, I have absolutely no idea what a Trump presidency would actually be like. (Though I will not lapse into the Godwin's-Law-busting hyperbole that has come to pass for "analysis" in leftish circles.) The only thing I can say for sure about a Trump administration is that it would be a total disaster. Would he stage gladiator duels on the National Mall? Would he rent out the Lincoln Bedroom to "hot babes?" Would he pull a Palin and quit halfway through? (I can see the press conference now: "Yes, I answered the call and became president, not that my resume needed it. But I found the work to be frankly beneath me and not very profitable. However, being an ex-president, now that's where the real money is. Right, Bill?") But if we assume that the Donald and his itchy Twitter finger make it through four whole years, I think we can also assume roughly the opposite behavior from voters: this time it will be conservatives who are demoralized, because whatever their hopes are for a Trump presidency, those dreams will not come true. (Like I said above, the only thing I'm sure about in regards to a Trump administration is that it will be a disaster.) So likewise, it will be the Democrats who are energized. Which will lead to Democratic gains in the midterms (which would mitigate any potential damage Trump could do), the White House in 2020 (assuming someone better than Hillary Clinton), and better positioning for the congressional remapping. So since you can't keep the Republicans out of the White House forever, I think it may be preferable to let them blow their wad on this clown and tarnish their brand for years to come. The 2016 election is so uniquely toxic that I think that for both candidates, winning the White House would actually act as a poison pill for their own party.

If you've read this far, you may have noticed a couple of things about my argument. First, that I've talked an awful lot about what would help the Democrats, and don't we hate them? Well...in my case, yes and no. I don't deny that they are "better" than the Republicans (although that's an absurdly low bar.) And if there's a viable leftist third party in place by 2020 I'll gladly support them, but I kind of doubt that will happen. For this essay, I'm just extrapolating the current state of things into the near future. And I'm not making any predictions about how I personally will vote four years from now.

The second thing you may have noticed is that in my essay about why I'm voting for Jill Stein, I still haven't mentioned Jill Stein. So I'll do that now. Because the mainstream media's line on those of us voting third party this year is that we're impractical pie-in-the-sky dreamers, or that we're bitter spoilers, and that above all other things, what we're doing is profoundly unrealistic. Without even getting into how offensively anti-democratic it is to use your media megaphone to advocate for ordinary voters having fewer choices, I have to say that I strongly disagree. My vote for Jill Stein is, to me, an extremely strategic vote. I know that flies in the face of all the Nader-addled logic that gets peddled in the press, but I consider my vote strategic partly for the reasons I listed above, and partly because of what I'm saying with it. I'm saying that I demand a viable option on the ballot to the left of what is currently being offered. And if I don't get it from the Democrats, I have no problem going elsewhere.

Because that's what voting is. Most of us aren't extraordinarily wealthy, and most of us certainly don't work on K Street, so that few minutes we spend in the voting booth every two years is the only real shot we have to speak our mind, to influence policy, to strike some fear into the hearts of these people. One line of compromise-thinking goes, "Yes, I'll vote for Hillary Clinton, but I plan to hold her accountable after the election." (Give me a moment here to finish laughing. I'm sure that as president, Hillary Clinton will live in constant fear that you will say something critical of her on your blog.) But on the left we keep making this mistake because we don't understand what voting is. A vote is a vote. A hold-your-nose vote counts the same as an enthusiastic one. Because if we say that we oppose so many elements of the neoliberal agenda, and then we vote for them anyway, we don't really oppose them, do we?

Because if you're in that camp, the camp that plans to vote for Hillary Clinton despite serious reservations, and is really only doing so because of Trump, just remember that when you fill in that oval on the ballot, you're not voting against anything. That is a logical impossibility. You're filling in that oval next to someone's name, and you're voting FOR everything that person stands for.

So if you vote for Hillary Clinton, what are some of the things you'll be voting FOR?

  • Perpetual warfare in the Middle East
  • Support for (and orchestration of) military coups to overthrow democratically-elected leaders in other parts of the world
  • Neoliberal economic policy at home that will continue to exacerbate inequality
  • Trade policy that, despite her sudden campaign-season change of heart, will continue to send U.S. jobs overseas, hollow out American cities and towns, and will give multinational corporations veto power over U.S. law in unaccountable foreign tribunals
  • Health care still being seen as a commodity, not a right; the profit motive enshrined in our medical system
  • On education, "more charters" still being the answer to everything
  • The continued financialization of the U.S. economy
  • Pay-to-play, cronyism, and legalized bribery still being the way business is done in Washington
  • Allowing ourselves to be swayed by a little election-season progressive talk from a politician with a history of support for right-wing projects, and
  • That Hillary Clinton is ultimately an acceptable candidate for the leftmost of America's two main political parties.

Just remember that your few minutes in the voting booth are the one chance you get, just once every two years, to make yourself heard by these people. And if, despite the fact that you may oppose most or all of the things I listed, when you step into the booth, you still say "Aye," then these are the things you have just voted for. And you did it with your eyes wide open. Your vote is your voice, and when your turn came to speak up about the litany of inequality, corruption, and bloodshed I listed above, you voiced your unequivocal support. All voting is unequivocal. Once done, there's no having it both ways and there is no backing out.

Me, I'll be voting "Nay." And that is the most strategic vote I can possibly cast.

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movie buff's picture

Nothing more, nothing less.

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"The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum." --Noam Chomsky

The Hillary Clinton campaign has canceled joint appearances with former primary opponent Bernie Sanders after he admitted that "of course" it bothered him that Clinton seemed to be talking down to his supporters in hacked audio from a fundraiser.
http://nation.foxnews.com/2016/10/03/clinton-cancels-joint-events-sanders

Bernie's people will vote for Jill Stein. I am glad Ron Paul came out in support of the Green Party.

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"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon

Raggedy Ann's picture

I can hear her from here! Wink

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

As someone who campaigned for Ron Paul in '08, trying to move the Republicans back a little more toward sanity, I'm glad to see him say great words about Stein. I'm not surprised to hear his words, one of his biggest things was ending US imperialism and our utter failure in foreign policy.

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Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

They represent a threat to US sovereignty over itself.

While I'm not the freaky anti-internationalist Paul is, and unlikely to shout USA USA USA!!! with anybody, on this point I agree with him. The language that's been leaked is disgustingly anti-democratic, anti-republican, anti-the concept of representative government. It's sick.

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

lunachickie's picture

I am glad Ron Paul came out in support of the Green Party.

only because I never expected it in a million years Smile

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and your 2 cents is gotta be worth a little more, based on inflation and all.

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Hawkfish's picture

Physical markets don't function without them, and neither does "the marketplace of ideas". Vote for what you want, just like you would buy what you want. No one buys a carrot "because it's not as bad as a turnip".

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We can’t save the world by playing by the rules, because the rules have to be changed.
- Greta Thunberg

Raggedy Ann's picture

I agree with your whole rationale. Good

My brother keeps trying to persuade me that I must vote her heinous. I always send him a smiley face when I answer I've not changed my mind. Third party is the only way to go if you choose to cast a ballot for POTUS, IMHO.
Pleasantry

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

Essayist doesn't include election fraud as a factor in the equation. How will that influence matters? This is something that shouldn't be ignored, even if we're forced into sheer speculation.

Secondly, there is no reforming/redeeming/helping the Democratic party. You might as well try to reform the thugs of J.H. Blair.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nzudto-FA5Y]

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

The fraud issue has forever turned me as well. The fact that it is a "nothing burger" in the eyes of the media, and ignored by the general public is terrifying. So here we are...election observers here in the good ole USA...and nobody cares!!! WTF!

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And they have no friend in him. He has alienated the whole party, so much so that they are all running from St Ronnies 11th commandment.
He would have a very very limited presidency, with everyone in DC gunning to take him down.

She, however, would have very smooth sailing getting what her benefactors want. The bought and paid for this election, and they will get a return on it, dammit.

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movie buff's picture

why I think Trump would be a very weak president. He couldn't even rely on his own party for support. Hell, they may even do the unthinkable and back a primary challenge to their own incumbent.

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"The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum." --Noam Chomsky

absolutely right

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I've lost my faith in the Judicial Branch of our government, but still cling by my fingernails to faith in the power of the Senate and House to hold the reins on an idiot like Trump. And I completely agree that a Clinton presidency is going to be scary because of her Wall St, Beltway, MIC connections. Our only hope, and it is a double edged sword that will cut deeply as it swings, is that the GOP will not lose the Senate if Clinton wins the WhiteHouse. With that scenario, painful as it seems, there will be some strings attached to limit a small degree of the corruption that Clinton will unleash on our way of life, and governing. Sad to say,...but, we, as the electorate, are getting what we deserve. It is the innocent that will suffer the most under either candidate.

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Bollox Ref's picture

I can't cope with the selfishness of much of the Libertarian ethos.

And the other two, Clinton and Trump, are just dead ends of one sort or another.

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Gëzuar!!
from a reasonably stable genius.

Meteor Man's picture

A vote for any candidate but Jill Stein is a throwaway vote. Might as well stay home. Same effect as voting for H or T.

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"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn

Hawkfish's picture

The ones I was watching today seem more professional. Anyone else notice this? Or am I just imagining it?

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We can’t save the world by playing by the rules, because the rules have to be changed.
- Greta Thunberg

the only question is which one will be impeached first.

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They say that there's a broken light for every heart on Broadway
They say that life's a game and then they take the board away
They give you masks and costumes and an outline of the story
And leave you all to improvise their vicious cabaret-- A. Moore

a President H. Clinton is very likely to be the first president to be impeached and removed from office.

We should keep that in mind when voting for congress persons this election. The R in my district is a tea party ideologue, but she opposed TPP and would be a vote for impeachment of Killary.

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Mary Bennett

Left out is a Clinton defeat likely means the end of the Clinton machine's death grip on the democratic party. To see that destruct is reason enough to vote third party.

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let's hope wooden stakes are provided so that we can be sure.

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Without any disrespect to all the great diarists around here, this is one of the best posts I've read on this site.

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movie buff's picture

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"The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum." --Noam Chomsky

The "must vote Clinton because Trump!" hordes contort themselves to justify their fear-based stampede and mischaracterization of third-party votes. How is a vote for what we want a "protest"? How is a third-party candidate a "spoiler" unless you buy the idea that any party is entitled to your vote and would have had it in the absence of a non-duopoly option?

Bernie Sanders opened a lot of voters' eyes. For others, he reinforced what they already knew and strengthened their resolve not to accept the rigged rules in a rigged system. Hands have been forced in this election; ugly realities have been revealed. Hard for many to accept, so they deny it, and in so doing, become complicit in the charade that the US is in any meaningful way a democracy.

I supported Bernie's candidacy. That support was for his issues, which he championed believably, and isn't transferable by him to anyone else. One candidate remains who speaks ardently and believably on issues that matter greatly to me: Jill Stein. For that reason, I'll vote for her.

Do I think she has a chance of winning? No. Does that mean my vote--my voice--is wasted? No again. That vote speaks for what I want. It also shows my refusal to support what I don't want, in the form of Clinton or Trump. Voting for the greater good, regardless of odds of victory, is the opposite of selfish.

Simple, really. The "must vote Hillary because Trump!" forces cannot allow us to see how simple it is.

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"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." --Jiddu Krishnamurti

movie buff's picture

that candidates lose elections, not voters, and thus got over their fear of being "spoilers," then I think a lot more people would do what you and I both plan to do, which is say, "I'm voting to the left of the two main parties because what they offer isn't good enough." Then, and only then, they might finally listen.

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"The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum." --Noam Chomsky

Hetrose's picture

That is all.

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divineorder's picture

Only sane one running?

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A truth of the nuclear age/climate change: we can no longer have endless war and survive on this planet. Oh sh*t.

As a "strategic" voter, I have yet to cast a vote for a winning presidential candidate. I have been voting since 1972. This is getting old! I am getting old! But yeah, I'll vote for Jill Stein again.

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"We've done the impossible, and that makes us mighty."

a question: Would you have felt better if you'd voted for any of those successful presidential candidates? I'm guessing no.

Stick to your principles; it's the only action that makes sense in the spreading global insanity of 2016. Tune out those who insist that's a [fill in the blank: quixotic, selfish, childish, unrealistic, irresponsible, futile] gesture. Many of us suspect that our votes have been potentially futile gestures since electronic voting machines became ubiquitous, even without the inequities of the Electoral College.

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"It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society." --Jiddu Krishnamurti

Cassiodorus's picture

I concur: they are awful. And they'll likely always be awful.

If the Democrats came out for ecosocialism, the Republicans would opt to promote Swedish-style social democracy. The current crop of Republicans is a response to Barack Obama's wannabe politics.

Because this year, we're electing someone for one term only.

I wouldn't count on this. If we can elect Hillary Clinton on the basis of nothing, we can re-elect her on the basis of nothing just as easily.

And needless to say, the GOP will emerge victorious in the 2018 midterms, possibly with a supermajority.

It wouldn't surprise me, though I'm imagining a midterm election turnout of maybe 5, 6, or 7% of the public. The current situation is conducive to deep and unproductive despair.

I'm saying that I demand a viable option on the ballot to the left of what is currently being offered. And if I don't get it from the Democrats, I have no problem going elsewhere.

Yes! This is what it's all about.

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"The war on Gaza, backed by the West, is a demonstration that the West is willing to cross all lines. That it will discard any nuance of humanity. That it is willing to commit genocide" -- Moon of Alabama

Dragonkat's picture

Well written sir. This may be another I link to my hillbot friends to annoy them further.

One of these days I may get through to them.... Well probably not, but I can dream.

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See, their morals, their code... it's a bad joke. Dropped at the first sign of trouble. They're only as good as the world allows them to be.

-The Joker-

polkageist's picture

Quite a few of us have written essays on the fallacy of the lesser of two evils. I did so back in March.

You are the first person I've read who has made the point that a vote is a complete endorsement of whomever you select. There is no nuance in a vote. It is a complete action and a complete affirmation. What an excellent point to make. It's obvious when it's pointed out, but we seem to forget it. Thanks.

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-Greed is not a virtue.
-Socialism: the radical idea of sharing.
-Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy, In a speech at the White House, 1962

I was no fan of John Anderson's platform, but I knew back then that we Americans needed to break up the duopoly.

The good news for me is that more people see this than ever before. The bad news for me is that not enough people see this necessity and are willing to act on it.

I will, however, keep on keepin' on in the hope that I can inspire others to don the mantle and carry on after I'm gone, until the duopoly is as well.

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Vowing To Oppose Everything Trump Attempts.

Bisbonian's picture

I have no idea what John Anderson's platform was, any more. It was enough, at the time, that he was the odd man out. Perot, too...though I knew more about his platform, and rapidly came to the conclusion that yes, he was nuts. I wish Bernie would not have run as a Dem, but I switched, just to vote for him in the Primary, and switched back about two days later, as soon as I could confirm my vote had been counted (not easy to find, but you can actually do that, online, in AZ. FWIW) He would have been the first in the two party stranglehold to get a presidential vote from me, but it was not to be, and probably never will be. So Jill Stein will get her second vote from me, and (I think), the Green Party their fifth.

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"I’m a human being, first and foremost, and as such I’m for whoever and whatever benefits humanity as a whole.” —Malcolm X

gulfgal98's picture

First, I am voting for Jill Stein. I said early on in the primaries that I could never support Clinton because of her affinity for war and regime change. But one thing we rarely see in evaluating a Clinton Presidency is that she will push to privatize Social Security and I believe this is one area where both Dems and Repubs will support her. It is something that does not get talked about much and it should frighten every American.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

Cant Stop the Macedonian Signal's picture

politicians and pundits will all support her, right?

Republican & Democratic voters will all oppose her. (It's been difficult for the Corporatists to convince the people to desert Social Security. They've been fighting with a dead woman and losing for 30 years. So they have to destroy democracy to achieve their goal.)

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"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha

"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver

gulfgal98's picture

I fear the Dems in Congress will march in lock step to "protect" Social Security which means privatization. Bill Clinton wanted to do this. Obama wanted to do it too. It will take a Dem to do it and Hillary will gleefully do it. It will be incremental, but I think it will be one of the first things she will do if she is elected.

The people will be pissed, but we have no power left. After Sandy Hook, an overwhelming majority of people wanted stronger gun regulations and Congress did nothing.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

I too will be voting for Dr. Stein. A vote for $hillary, is a vote for evil. No more lesser evil for me, thank you.

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ggersh's picture

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I never knew that the term "Never Again" only pertained to
those born Jewish

"Antisemite used to be someone who didn't like Jews
now it's someone who Jews don't like"

Heard from Margaret Kimberley

While google seems to have abandoned its first principles, I came into it in four years ago. Never again will I vote ill-informed. Never again will I assume that Democrats are the good "guys." Never again will I vote for evil.

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Lenzabi's picture

This is our time to break the wall, to get more parties into the fray, to have our actual left party, it may also open doors for crazier parties, but at least we will have regained some shreds of democracy with a multiple party election arrangement.

To get that done, we here need to spread the word to vote 3rd party. I have been sloganizing on FB with Jill NOT Hill, or Jill Before Hill, Jill Not hillary or Trump.

IF we do not get that wall broken, we do not get back the United States of America that the Corporate States of Oligarchia replaced.

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So long, and thanks for all the fish