On November 6, I do not plan to vote for Jill Stein, Gary
Johnson, Virgil Goode, Rocky Anderson, Stephen Rollins, Stuart
Alexander, Ron Paul, Ralph Nader, or Donald Trump for President. Even if they show up on the ballot. Which most will not. I do not mind telling who I will vote
for.
I just do not want some goon
standing over me while I cast a sacred secret ballot or some filthyrichsonofabitch
telling me I will lose my job if I do not vote his way. You say, easy for me to say, since I do not
have a job. But I already lost my job
because I got sick, and the filthyrichsonofabitch terminated me when I did not
return to work on his timetable.
The thing I love the most about the American democracy is
that afterwards the winners do not get to take the losers out behind the wall
and shoot them. I’m not kidding. There are still places where this
happens. I appreciate it sincerely that
the United States of America
is not one of them. I voted for Al Gore,
John Kerry, Michael Dukakis, Walter Mondale, Jimmy Carter, and George McGovern. Each time, I counted my blessings as an
American loser.
3 comments:
Well said, Bill. I agree completely.
Din noget snørklede tankegang gør, at når man endelig har forstået pointen, så hænger den godt fast. Men det er ikke alene læserens medvirken til at løse gåden, der kan tage æren for det. Det historiske eksempel er med til at slå sømmet virkelig fast. Godt skuldret!
I know that Zlotnik is Polish for "dear friend and expat in Copenhagen," I ran his comment through Google Translator. Zlotnik's native English is vastly superior, even erudite, but here is the translation:
"Your somewhat circuitous way of thinking means that when you finally understand the point, so hang on tight. But it is not only the reader's involvement to solve the puzzle that can take credit for it. The historical example helps to beat nailed really solid. Well done!"
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