By the time this piece appears in the paper, the national
election will begin in less than a day. Plenty of people are saying, “Thank
God!” Others, like me, who are political junkies, will pace all day long and
fret until the final vote counting is finished. In the end, a new president
will be elected, and a void will exist where, for the last two years,
campaigns, ads, debates, and bad news have flowed. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if
the entire country could take a two-week vacation to recover?
One of the first things we’ll all want to do is take a long,
hot shower. Over my adult life, I’ve seen
I don’t recall an election when both candidates were so
disliked. One has no experience in government; he defames minorities, berates
immigrants, and disrespects women. He has questionable business ties to
governments that don’t espouse democratic values. The other candidate is barely
keeping her head above the flood of emails. She’s battling investigations and
accusations of improprieties with the foundation she and her family have been
involved.
The electorate is divided, even polarized, more than at any
other time I can recall. Sure, being for one candidate is fine, but folks have
gone beyond that. Rallies are rife with fights and hecklers, and those in
attendance chant slogans that reflect more emotional bias than intellectual
discernment. An underlying anger bubbles just below the surface, and it has
little to do with the issues. It comes more from fear mongering. The idea seems
to be to whip up those fears so that people no longer can use common sense to
make decisions. Votes are cast not for an individual but against those things
and groups that are claimed to be taking away freedom and security, even if
such thinking is irrational.
My concern is where our country is headed after the
elections. So many people are deeply entrenched in their beliefs, and I don’t
see how in the world they will accept results that don’t fall in their favor.
Some have been told that the process is rigged, even though only a few examples
out of billions of votes have been recorded. Anything other than victory will
occur because the election was stolen. The other side warns that the opponent
is not fit to be the leader of our country. They swear that we will “go to hell
in a handbasket” if he is elected. Forget the fact that he must have the
support of both sides in the government; his own party has thumbed its nose at
him and refuses to stand up for him.
What might well be the probable end to this election is that
our government remains gridlocked. The good of the country will take a backseat
to partisan politics, demagoguery, and hypocritical principles. Many of us who
have been around a while view this election as a defining one. The choices that
we make might well spell the end of our democracy as we know it. The two-party
system is so broken and dysfunctional that new models might be created, ones
that none of us want.
Yes, the election will be over soon. Its results won’t make
everyone happy. However, for the sake of our country, citizens, and children,
let us hope that our so-called leaders will decide the era of partisan politics
is over and that they will replace it with a new commitment to working for the
good of our country and a better life for all citizens.
One last thing I will add. Voting is a privilege and a duty
for each citizen in the U.S. You are defending this country when you cast a
ballot. However, anyone who chooses not to vote HAS NO RIGHT TO COMPLAIN ABOUT
OUTCOMES OR POLICIES. Make your voice be heard tomorrow. VOTE!
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