This is the time in the election cycle when I’m starting to hear from a lot of people asking for support in the 2014 election. Some people want moral support. Others want money. (Well, they all want money.)
Many of them are good people and I like a lot of them. But I can’t support any of them in good conscience, because I can’t support the system they’ve chosen to join. To save myself from having to reply to every candidate personally and explain the reason, let me explain to everybody all at once.
If you’re running for office, I don’t necessarily oppose you personally, but I oppose the entire system of coercion that majoritarianism represents. You’re probably a decent person. You probably mean well. But for anything to change, the entire structure of the system has to change. Just electing you — or even hundreds or thousands of people like you — isn’t going to change anything.
If you grew up in this country, you were probably taught to revere the political system that’s in place. You heard propaganda in school about how great the system was. You were taught that “democracy” and “freedom” mean the same thing. (You were lied to.) You were taught the fiction that if honest men (and women) would just “do the right things,” the system would produce peace, prosperity and freedom for all. After all, it worked in “Mr. Smith Goes to Washington,” didn’t it?
Sorry, Hillary: Research shows it doesn’t take a village to raise a kid
Brush with high-speed blowout leaves me thinking about death
Moral principle: What you do with your money is your business
Trusting Obama to create jobs is like trusting an arsonist to put out fires
Public discourse is distorted by constant outrage over anecdotes
If we keep waiting for perfection, we’ll always keep traveling alone
Today’s kids learning they should fear police, not respect them
Giving up politics left me flat broke; it’s time to earn some money again