From TPMBlog November 4 2008...
I have a confession to make.
I did not vote for Barack Obama today.
I've openly supported Obama since March. But I didn't vote for him today.
I wanted to vote for Ronald Woods. He was my algebra teacher at Clark Junior High in East St. Louis, IL. He died 15 years ago when his truck skidded head-first into a utility pole. He spent many a day teaching us many things besides the Pythagorean Theorem. He taught us about Medgar Evers, Ralph Abernathy, John Lewis and many other civil rights figures who get lost in the shadow cast by Martin Luther King, Jr.
But I didn't vote for Mr. Woods.
I wanted to vote for Willie Mae Cross. She owned and operated Crossroads Preparatory Academy for almost 30 years, educating and empowering thousands of kids before her death in 2003. I was her first student. She gave me my first job, teaching chess and math concepts to kids in grades K-4 in her summer program. She was always there for advice, cheer and consolation. Ms. Cross, in her own way, taught me more about walking in faith than anyone else I ever knew.
But I didn't vote for Ms. Cross.
I wanted to vote for Arthur Mells Jackson, Sr. and Jr. Jackson Senior was a Latin professor. He has a gifted school named for him in my hometown. Jackson Junior was the pre-eminent physician in my hometown for over 30 years. He has a heliport named for him at a hospital in my hometown. They were my great-grandfather and great-uncle, respectively.
But I didn't vote for Prof. Jackson or Dr. Jackson.
I wanted to vote for A.B. Palmer. She was a leading civil rights figure in Shreveport, Louisiana, where my mother grew up and where I still have dozens of family members. She was a strong-willed woman who earned the grudging respect of the town's leaders because she never, ever backed down from anyone and always gave better than she got. She lived to the ripe old age of 99, and has a community center named for her in Shreveport.
But I didn't vote for Mrs. Palmer.
I wanted to vote for these people, who did not live to see a day where a Black man would appear on their ballots on a crisp November morning.
In the end, though, I realized that I could not vote for them any more than I could vote for Obama himself.
So who did I vote for?
No one.
I didn't vote. Not for President, anyway.
Oh, I went to the voting booth. I signed, was given my stub, and was walked over to a voting machine. I cast votes for statewide races and a state referendum on water and sewer improvements.
I stood there, and I thought about all of these people, who influenced my life so greatly. But I didn't vote for who would be the 44th President of the United States.
When my ballot was complete, except for the top line, I finally decided who I was going to vote for - and then decided to let him vote for me. I reached down, picked him up, and told him to find Obama's name on the screen and touch it.
And so it came to pass that Alexander Reed, age 5, read the voting screen, found the right candidate, touched his name, and actually cast a vote for Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
Oh, the vote will be recorded as mine. But I didn't cast it.
Then again, the person who actually pressed the Obama box and the red "vote" button was the person I was really voting for all along.
It made the months of donating, phonebanking, canvassing, door hanger distributing, sign posting, blogging, arguing and persuading so much sweeter.
So, no, I didn't vote for Barack Obama. I voted for a boy who now has every reason to believe he, too, can grow up to be anything he wants...even President.
Hayden joined me this morning, I didn't think of giving him the pen, but I showed him my vote, put it in the machine, and told him, "Today is a great day!"
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
7 comments:
Let's have a small discussion of the mechanics of voting, since it seems to be relatively important these days.
3 questions:
1) How/where/when did you vote?
2) What technology did you use?
3) How long did you wait?
I voted at our subdivision's clubhouse at 7 am (of which we poor apartment dwellers are typically not welcome.) Big paper ballot, basically scantron. Twenty minute wait.
Scantron ftw! I do not trust electronic voting.
early voted 2 saturdays ago, election commission downtown, touch screen voting booths, 40-50 units in the auditorium-like area. 5 min wait.
Church one block from my house, no wait, scantron
Vince, was that an anti-scantron comment? Thats the one electronic voting method I really believe has a future, because it creates a paper trail. Anyway, Voted after class this morning, local elementary school, took me longer to get there than to actually vote, by scantron also. I've heard from friends in indy of lines up to 3 hours. I love small town america.
I am pro scantron Chris. The touchscreen mess is what worries me. (i.e. Ohio in 2004)
Accuracy/security in voting is a whole different debate, but here's the questions I have: what is a reasonable wait for the voting process?
I think 1 hour is the outside edge of reasonable for voting. There are reports of 6.5 hour wait times, which are clearly unreasonable and is res ipsa loquitor evidence of governmental incompetence.
I strongly dislike mail voting (and I can speak to it, hailing from Oregon), but 2+ hour waits are clearly an impediment to voting rights. While the solution may be federal in nature (bad! bad!), the solutions clearly lie in the competence of the local officials.
All of us voted in less than 30 minutes. All of us are on the right hand part of the socioeconomic status bell curve. Coincidence?
So, again: what is a reasonable time for waiting for voting?
Post a Comment