Thursday, April 28, 2016

Accidental Patriot

When I was younger I didn't understand patriotism.

It felt contrived and forced, a way to get people to blindly accept the things that a faceless government chose to do in the people's "best interests". Even though I've always voted since I turned 18 in 1999, I got a bit caught up in my generation's idea that our votes don't matter. It was like a seed that lay dormant for decades, waiting for the just-right climate to sprout: and that climate wound up being the 2016 Presidential Primaries.
Whether or not my thoughts on patriotism and the power of votes were correct at the time, they seem to have become correct. And suddenly I'm not willing to simply contemplate or accept either of them.
I'm angry, beyond angry, that the men and women of this country, in their own way and their own time, fought, died, were ridiculed, arrested, ostracized, and forced to wait too long for our freedom to vote, our RIGHT TO A VOICE spoken on a ballot and heard by the government. Because other than civil uprisings, voting was the original act of protest where the PEOPLE DECIDE and the GOVERNMENT OBEYS, serves, carries out the wishes of the people. It is the American pact.
This pact has been broken.
I'm not angry for myself or my own situation. I was able to vote without issue.

I'm angry for the 70 year old woman in Ulster County, NY, who was turned away from the polls without being offered an affidavit ballot. She'd been on the Democrat rolls her whole life.

I'm angry for the 67 year old veteran in Niagara County, NY, whose affidavit ballot still hasn't been counted. He was a lifelong Republican whose registration was changed to "O" for other: with "Conservative" written in by someone other than himself.

I'm angry for the 90 year old immigrant couple in New York County, NY, who became citizens before I was born and never missed an election. They weren't offered affidavits and are too infirm to have gone through the process of a court order to vote.

I'm angry for the people just like them, and nothing like them, in AZ, DE, RI, CT, PA, and who knows how many other states whose right to vote has been stolen from them.

I'm angry for the people who died or were injured in body and soul bringing democracy to other countries and defending the democracy here at home for the last 241 years whose deaths and injuries have been insulted by this sham of an election.

I'm angry for the suffragists who gave ME the right to vote and whose daughters and granddaughters have taken a 100-year step backwards this election.

I'm angry for the black Americans who were insulted and assaulted and killed for exercising their hard-won and hard-kept right to vote in my own parents' lifetime.

I'm angry for every silenced voice, every wasted trip to the polls, every uncast ballot, every uncounted ballot, every 18 year old whose first voting experience taught them that their vote truly doesn't matter and who may never vote again.

I'm beginning to understand patriotism and why so many people have sacrificed so much for nothing but an idea. That idea is that our pride comes from a hard-won democratic process. Our ability to speak, to hold our government accountable to the people it serves, was and is still worth sacrifice.
The enemy to democracy is no longer "out there" somewhere but within.
Patriotism, as I understand it now, is not allegiance to a government but to one another, to individual people in individual states in individual counties. In those counties are towns with homes and actual human beings who owe far more to one another -- for the sacrifices already made and the ones which may become necessary in the not-so-distant future -- than to any agency, candidate, or political party making up that government.

In silencing any one voice, ignoring any one vote, our government insults every single one of us: and it is to one another that we owe our allegiance.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Casting Your Ballot: A Magic Trick!

All over the country there are stirrings: growing numbers of American citizens are realizing that our innate trust in bureaucracies is not only misplaced but also potentially dangerous. As voters encounter problem after problem in state after state, those stirrings are sounding more and more like responsible, conscious responses to gross silencing of citizen voices.
One of the simplest and most poignant argument in response to this broken trust is this: 

Why do voters get no proof of their transaction? 

When that sank in for me, really sank in, I felt like a fool for never having questioned it myself. As Americans we value privacy and could counter-argue that we don’t want a record of who we’ve voted for in the hands of anyone but ourselves. And that is fair, and I actually quite agree with it. But a receipt, something so simple we get one whenever we conclude any transaction and which can be set to include any information we want (or don’t want!), gives us our own record. There is no requirement to trust a machine to perform some secret magic: if the information isn’t correct, we know it! We can file for redress!
There are shady things going on at the polls this year: machines which don’t “allow” voters to vote for particular candidates; unofficial and incomplete ballots being handed out in front of polls and allowed for submission by workers; misinformation about delegates; shorter hours and changes in locations; party switches and voter purges; voters being turned away when workers don’t know about affidavit ballots; affidavits not being counted.
While the poll receipt wouldn’t solve most of these, the fact at hand which thrills me right now is that people are questioning things they never before questioned, are outraged by being silenced.
It’s at least a step in the right direction.

Saturday, April 23, 2016

Contact Us with Your NY Primary Voting Issues and Concerns

WE ARE COLLECTING DATA OUTSIDE BROOKLYN:

If you are a NYS voter who encountered any issues at polling sites on Tuesday or who witnessed the issues of other voters, this is for YOU:


We are a grassroots team in the mid-Hudson Valley who were "in the thick of it" on Tuesday, advocating all day for voters' rights. We began seeing testimonies from voters all over the state of disenfranchisement and immediately began reaching out and documenting.

If you: 
a) have been consistently a registered Democrat or Republican;
b) are a new voter, registered Democrat or Republican for the first time by March 2016;
c) switched from any other party to Democrat or Republican by October 2015; or
d) weren't certain what your party affiliation was,
AND you:
a) managed to obtain a court order to vote;
b) learned your affiliation was changed online but spoke directly to the BoE and were reassured of proper affiliation and ability to vote;
c) learned at the polls that your affiliation had changed (whether or not you spoke to BoE);
d) were forced to cast an affidavit ballot; 
e) were denied an affidavit ballot; and/or
f) had any other issues at the polls OR WITNESSED OTHER ISSUES AT THE POLLS,

PLEASE EMAIL voter.transparency@gmail.com

and include the following information:

1) Your full name
2) County and Zip code
3) Polling Place
4) Your phone number
5) Length of Democrat or Republican voter status
6) Your particular Primary Day issue
7) When you learned of your particular Primary day issue
8) If you: got a court order, cast an affidavit ballot (and whether you were informed of this or had to press for one), were denied an affidavit ballot
9) Any other information you wish to share, details that feel important, the attitude of anyone you encountered during this process, and how many other voters you saw or heard directly from having Primary day issues.

Further, if you were a poll worker, poll watcher, or voters' advocate, we want to know what you saw.

Finally, if you are a citizen or organization collecting data on disenfranchisement, an attorney, or any other interested citizen, join our casual coalition TODAY by emailing us: voter.transparency@gmail.com. We will not ask for your data nor require any information from you which you believe may compromise your ability to continue your work.

PLEASE SHARE OUR EMAIL, WEBSITE, AND MISSION ALL OVER!


We are New Yorkers and do not sit idly by when we've been stripped of our basic rights!

Don't wait for someone else to do for you what you can do for yourself right now, with that beautiful conscience of yours. The tragedy and beauty of this all is that YOU ARE NOT ALONE.