B
BamaRider
Guest
Really? What makes the right guy for you?None Of The Above.
Mine was definately in the mix.
Really? What makes the right guy for you?None Of The Above.
You’re preaching to the choir bilop. I vote ‘A’ whether Dem, Rep or Indy. I don’t care about any party line of than Christs!I understand secular leftists hating this administration, and I myself, despite being a Catholic conservative, have a lot of issues with Bush et. al.
But still, what has Bush done that would make a faithful Catholic hate him so much as to vote for candidates that uniformaly support the culture of death?
Even if you think the Iraq war was a bad idea, do 20-30,000 deaths in Iraq out-weigh millions of abortion deaths EACH YEAR?
God Bles
Now, now did I say LMCS believes this or that?How dare you imply my feelings. It’s not hatred, it’s disgust.
Further, unnecessary wars and police state laws don’t foster a culture that places life at the head of cultural values.
Element of truth to this. Changing the hearts and minds of half the country, to the point you could pass a constitonal ammendment is a very long way off.Does ‘Pro-life’ mean that they’re actually going to pass a law against abortion, or just that they oppose abortion, but can’t really do anything about restricting it?
Yes. I still wouldn’t vote for B or C but I could not in good conscience bring myself to vote for A.OK. That makes more sense.
But at what point does the clear moral issue over-ride the disagreement on the prudential issue?
If Candidates B and C were advocating enslaving a particular ethnic group, would you still do a write-in vote b/c you disagree about Iraq?
God Bless
Really!? If candidate B supported enslaving a portion of the U.S., real slavery, and he had a chance to win, and the best chance to beat him was Candidate A described above, you don’t vote for A b/c he supports the Iraq War and the Patriot Act?Yes. I still wouldn’t vote for B or C but I could not in good conscience bring myself to vote for A.
I haven’t supported the other two. I haven’t supported any of them. I have followed my conscience and voted in myself if necessary. To require me to vote for A just to defeat B and C is not my idea of voting. I need to vote “for” someone not just “against” someone else.Really!? If candidate B supported enslaving a portion of the U.S., real slavery, and he had a chance to win, and the best chance to beat him was Candidate A described above, you don’t vote for A b/c he supports the Iraq War and the Patriot Act?
Or if candidate C wants to impose Sharia law in the U.S., you don’t vote for A?
Wow!
May God Bless you and open your mind.
I just wonder about this … and I’m not saying I have the answer … but if one votes for a candidate one knows has no chance of being elected, then isn’t one practically voting not at all? And if so, then what would be the point of voting?I haven’t supported the other two. I haven’t supported any of them. I have followed my conscience and voted in myself if necessary. To require me to vote for A just to defeat B and C is not my idea of voting. I need to vote “for” someone not just “against” someone else.
If the only point of voting is to go along with the herd then I don’t want to vote. Voting is a way to let your individual voice be heard not just pick and choose from preselected choices.I just wonder about this … and I’m not saying I have the answer … but if one votes for a candidate one knows has no chance of being elected, then isn’t one practically voting not at all? And if so, then what would be the point of voting?
I disagree. Voting is a process whereby a number of people may elect a single candidate to office.If the only point of voting is to go along with the herd then I don’t want to vote. Voting is a way to let your individual voice be heard not just pick and choose from preselected choices.
That’s why I know who I am voting for in the primaries, we can’t mention names here.I disagree. Voting is a process whereby a number of people may elect a single candidate to office.
If you write in “Joe Blow” as a candidate, and Joe Blow doesn’t stand a snowball’s chance in hell at winning, then who exactly is hearing your voice? The small group of people who tally the votes? And what will that voice mean to them? That one more person has not helped to elect a leader? We must ask ourselves: how can we make our voices count? The only answer I know of is join together and project them loudly. And this is what campaining is all about.
And if you help to select the candidates by voting in the Primaries and participating in the campains, then the choice for your party has not been preselected for you.
But how do we get the selection we want to be in the primaries to begin with. The political big whigs have a monopoly on who gets their support and they don’t match my needs. So again I must opt for the lesser of two evils, even though I would rather vote for something good.I disagree. Voting is a process whereby a number of people may elect a single candidate to office.
If you write in “Joe Blow” as a candidate, and Joe Blow doesn’t stand a snowball’s chance in hell at winning, then who exactly is hearing your voice? The small group of people who tally the votes? And what will that voice mean to them? That one more person has not helped to elect a leader? We must ask ourselves: how can we make our voices count? The only answer I know of is join together and project them loudly. And this is what campaining is all about.
And if you help to select the candidates by voting in the Primaries and participating in the campains, then the choice for your party has not been preselected for you.
Excellent!That’s why I know who I am voting for in the primaries, we can’t mention names here.
Well, I suppose some would say, if you want something done right … do it yourself. Or nominate someone who represents your values and put your life into helping his campaign.But how do we get the selection we want to be in the primaries to begin with. The political big whigs have a monopoly on who gets their support and they don’t match my needs. So again I must opt for the lesser of two evils, even though I would rather vote for something good.
Boy, it’s amazing how often I hear this question.I just wonder about this … and I’m not saying I have the answer … but if one votes for a candidate one knows has no chance of being elected, then isn’t one practically voting not at all? And if so, then what would be the point of voting?
I agree - “Deeds, not words” is certainly key.As it is, when a mainstream candidate claims to be pro-life, unless they have a consistent voting record to back them up, it is pretty much meaningless. There will always be a “pro-life” candidate to balance the dualism of our one party system.
I’m glad somebody said this. I was just unable to put it into words.Boy, it’s amazing how often I hear this question.
Essentially, the claim that “they can’t win” comes down to the circle of a self-fulfilling prophecy.
If it is declared that a candidate “can’t win”, then people run away in fright from supporting that candidate. The resulting lack of support makes the claim that “they can’t win” appear more likely, which causes even more people to abandon the so-called “unelectable” candidate, which again, feeds the “can’t win” fortune telling attempts.
If we buy into the “so-and-so CAN’T win” argument, & then vote for someone else, then we are personally making sure that the person “can’t win”, and are contributing to the continued parade of candidates that we are expected to “hold our noses & vote” for.
It really boils down to “I want to vote for whoever will win.” If voting for the winner is all that matters, then we should all just give up & vote for whoever the media says “will win”.
I agree - “Deeds, not words” is certainly key.
Chris