Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Let's Get Political

Warning: longish post - allow me to bribe you with a video. :D

The BC provincial election will be held in May 2009, which is decently far away. We've just come out of a federal election and a municipal election, not to mention the hugely publicized national election of our neighbours to the south. Me, I'm all electioned out - I'm tired of people vote-grubbing. Already, though, our local MLA's office has been phoning everyone with surveys about issues for the upcoming election.

Ever since the first day we broke out the calendars for this year, American politics has been prolific in every facet of media. After all, picking a new president is hugely important. The US basically has a two-party sytem. Sure, independents can run, but it is widely agreed upon that votes for independents are wasted votes, which is terrible, in my opinion. Many people don't subscribe to either polarized party, but have different stances on different issues. Some people agree with one party or the other on most issues, but may not be as extreme as the parties try to be in their efforts to be as opposite as possible from each other.

In Canada, we have a handful of different parties, which presents its own problems. Other than the Bloc Quebecois, which is centered on looking out for Quebec, we have two parties which are actually decently well aligned and one party which is fairly different, as well as the Green Party, which don't even themselves expect to win. This past election seemed to be all about being 'for' or 'against' the Conservatives, who were at the time also the current ruling party. The problem is that most Canadians were against the Tories this time around, but their votes were scattered among the other three parties (with the exception of Quebec, of course), so the Tories won again.

That election also featured the smallest voter turnout in our country's history, and there's little wonder about why - it happened near the tail end of America's campaign period, and who wants to pay attention to Canada's mostly on-topic and somewhat boring, under-publicized, under-the-radar election when you can watch scandal-rife, entertaining, outrageous politics from next door? You could try and find the Canadian stuff - there might be something on one or two TV channels , or you could watch what's going on in the US on 30 or 40 channels. The radio stations are happy to talk about American politics and only spent marginal amounts of time outside their mandatory Canadian content quota talking about our own election, instead choosing to squeeze American politics into their Canadian time-slots by talking about how they would affect our nation. Our election was also called with short notice, and the camaigning took all of 37 days, by a Prime Minister who was vocally against calling early elections (and yet we let that hypocrisy slide - or at least, 42% of us let it slide by not voting at all, and substantially less than half of the remainder let it slide by voting for them anyways). Here is a cute summary of what happened, for all those who missed it:



When it came time for our municipal election, just after Obama's victory stateside, many of us were just not interested, which is too bad. Municipal elections, in my opinion, are such a breath of fresh air after all the divisive party politics. In the city election, the candidates are not party-affiliated - they are all independents, so we have to choose based on their platforms and qualifications. Further, we vote for 8 of them, plus a mayor. This is excellent, because it means the candidates can't get ahead by pulling their opponents down - they have to prop themselves up instead. It becomes a decision of 'why should I vote for you' instead of 'why shouldn't I vote for your opponent'. The downside is that people have to actually inform themselves about the candidates instead of lazily subscribing to a red vs blue mentality. It's far better for us in the long run, but voter turnout is always the victim because of it.

So, back to BC politics - right now, I frankly don't care. Don't come to my door, don't phone me, don't put propaganda in my mailbox. Give me a breather.

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About Me

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Anacredenza is a screen name I made up back when I first joined a debate forum. At that time, I was just about finished figuring out what my beliefs are, and the name, which means 'renewed belief' reflects that. I cannot claim to know everything (not even remotely close!), but I'm now comfortable with what I believe, which I discovered were my deep, though covered-up, thoughts all along, and have therefore been renewed. I may be right, or I may be wrong, but at least now I'm being true to myself. After figuring this out, I went back and talked with people who hold beliefs that I used to share, to test my new (and old) thoughts on the matter. After several years of that, I am much more comfortable with what I believe. I don't care very much about what other people believe any more, as long as they don't use their beliefs to justify harming other people. That said, I care a great deal about how people come to their conclusions - thorough, critical thinking skills are important, and if more people just knew how to think, the whole world could be a much less hostile place.