Wednesday, March 22, 2006
Most Retarded Election Ever
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But this particular off-year primary was special to me because it was the most retarded election ever!
Let me tell you about it.
First of all, the Democratic Machine(tm) put up their lamest slate of candidates, even by Illinois standards and even where there was real competition.
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In absence of real leadership, the governor occasionally comes up with pie-in-the-sky ideas along the lines of "let's send all of our pre-schoolers to Mars" or "free healthcare for all newborn kittens." This guy is so lame he actually makes me long for our last governor, who is probably about to go to prison.
Unfortunately, the only slated competition from another Democrat was (surprise) a machine politician.
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For those of you not from the area, Cook County is kind of like a giant jobs program for people with connections who are looking for easy work or have small-time political ambitions. Can you believe our county government employs more than 20,000 people?
The king of this patronage empire is John Stroger. Ambitious from the start, Commissioner Stroger cut his teeth in the 1980's by being the only black politican to offer early support to Richard M. Daley, who has returned the favor ever since. But even Daley--the most successful and beloved corrupt Chicago politician in 40 years (going back to his dad!)--realizes that Stroger has gone too far and accumulated too much power.
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Stroger has managed to build a major cult of personality around himself. The signs with his name on them that dot almost every single front lawn in my neighborhood remind me of the statues of Joseph Stalin that one used to see across the old Soviet Union. The guy even had a hospital named after himself!
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For me, it wasn't just the candidates that made this year's vote particularly retarded, but the election experience itself. In my precinct, the vote was held as usual at our local community center on the corner. You really have to be a local to find this place. Only one small sign out front designates the building as a polling place, and the view yesterday was obstructed by about a dozen school busses parked for the church across the street. I pity anyone who just moved to the neighborhood and was looking to vote for the first time.
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The vote was held in the basketball court (also no sign) and was staffed this year by the most confused bunch of misfits ever. As I was sent from table to table, given conflicting directions, and generally turned around like I was playing some big game of Twister, I felt like I was back in Asia again.
Even the actual act of voting was retarded.
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But it was too late.
My faith in local government is now completely dead.
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On a brighter note, here is a cute snapshot of Holly, caught snoozing under a blanket on the sofa.
As democracy around me crumbles to dust, I am at least comforted by the face lickings and/or rambunctious barks of my pug dogs when I return home from work each day.
Comments:
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The voting experience was a hella lot better in the burbs. We still had the same slate of (mostly) jackass candidates, but at least there were signs, and the machines worked! And the nice old ladies who were election judges NEVER tried to read my ballot. (Note: in 10 years of Cook COunty elections, I have never met an election judge younger than 60.)
Altogether, it was a clean, safe, friendly voting experience!
Altogether, it was a clean, safe, friendly voting experience!
In Urbana, I was the 101st voter in my district. This was at 5:30pm. Sigh.
There was one touch screen, but I didn't even notice it until after I was given my paper ballot and ball-point pen. At least we had little ovals to fill in, no Xs for us!
And I was unhappy about the vote scanner too. The voting monitor didn't try to look at my votes, but there was no cover sheet to hide my ballot from prying eyes, and instructions on how to feed the ballot into the machine were sorely lacking.
Color me not impressed.
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There was one touch screen, but I didn't even notice it until after I was given my paper ballot and ball-point pen. At least we had little ovals to fill in, no Xs for us!
And I was unhappy about the vote scanner too. The voting monitor didn't try to look at my votes, but there was no cover sheet to hide my ballot from prying eyes, and instructions on how to feed the ballot into the machine were sorely lacking.
Color me not impressed.
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