Archive for the 'politics' Category

[Yet Another Election Post. Sorry.]

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008
yet-another-election-post-sorry

As we all know, I vote absentee, but I find it comforting to take my ballot to the closest poll to my office and slide it into the secure box.

If I can get a sticker, so much the better.

i voted

Today at lunch, after spending a bit of the morning figuring out the last few items, I took it on over to the local community center. There was no line, though things were a little busier than they have been in prior elections.

I slipped my ballot into the box, asked the lovely poll worker for my sticker, and headed off to get lunch. On my way out I was stopped by a gentleman, likely a newer citizen. He wanted to make sure he knew which people on the ballot were Democrats, so I showed him in the pamphlet, and found an endorsement sheet for this district.

It was kind of awesome.

My sticker says “farewell to polls” because this is the last election in King County before it switches over to 100% vote by mail. I’m kind of sad about that.

Go Obama! Go Gregoire! Go Mass Transit! And NO NO NO on Prop 8.

[Today I…]

Monday, November 3rd, 2008
today-i

…am wearing these shoes

fluevogs

…am already this far on my February Lady sweater

lady sweater

…cast this vote for President

vote obama

…and am on my way to Ballard, where I saw this last week on the new release whiteboard at Sonic Boom

witch at sonic boom

[Is it November yet?]

Saturday, October 4th, 2008
is-it-november-yet

I’ve been carting my wee little queer issues soapbox all over Ravelry lately, so I might as well haul it over here too. There’s an educational meme going around the web this week which I love. It’s a response to one of the questions in Katie Couric’s Vice Presidential Questions series, and it got kind of long and full of sex, so I am sticking it all after a jump. Click through for it, community organizers, and Yet Another Admonition To Vote.
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[Yes We Can]

Monday, February 18th, 2008
yes-we-can

On February 9th, the Washington State Democratic Party held its caucuses. The turnout was amazing. I didn’t get to participate because I was working; we had our annual International New Year that day. It happened to be at a community center, which was possibly a little overbooked.

2.09 just a few things going on

They officially expected 100-200 people for 8 precincts. They got easily 600. I spent the vast majority of the afternoon directing traffic. “The bathrooms are that way, the gym is around the corner, no, this isn’t a caucus in this room.” Caucus participants lined up all the way down the street, took over our event spaces, moved precincts outside, and cast longing looks at the multipurpose room we were still using for our party. I got to see most of the caucus because one precinct was caucusing in the lobby in front of our room. It was energizing to see the turnout, the passion, and the process. It was exciting to watch so many people there, involved in politics and their neighborhood and the party. It was, basically, a hell of a thing to see.It still sucked.

See, the Washington Democrats choose their delegates exclusively via caucus, in spite of the fact that the State holds a primary for both parties. The Republicans caucus too, but they use both the caucus and the primary to choose delegates. If you’re a Dem, though, and you can’t take three hours on a Saturday afternoon, you’re out of luck. If you’re working, if you can’t stand up for that long, if you’re uncomfortable declaring your vote out loud and having to deal with someone trying to talk you out of it, if you didn’t understand that the primary is meaningless, if you’re out of the country, if your English isn’t that good, well, you’re out of luck. You can cast your ballot on February 19th, but it’s just a beauty pageant. A popularity contest.

I vote absentee. I’ve spent a lot of time in the past month thinking what I might do with my ballot. It has people on it who aren’t even running anymore. Should I do something strategic with it? Will it even be counted since it’s absentee? Hard to say. I decided in the end to not play games. It might be a popularity contest, but that’s no reason to not win it. I was sad to be denied the opportunity to stand up for my candidate earlier this month, and so I’m taking the chance now, no matter how meaningless it may be. I have the opportunity I’ve never had, to cast a vote for someone I was proud to support. I’m taking it. I’m casting my vote for Barack Obama.

vote obama

The caucus may have been a powerful, energizing thing for us at this time. But with its record turnout it didn’t come close to the numbers a primary would have. I could look around the room, in a neighborhood I serve daily, and see quite clearly that only a limited demographic was there. I saw lots of people I work with. I saw no one who we serve. Even though I’m happy my guy won, it wasn’t representative. I hope the party puts due consideration into this in the next four years.