I'm not voting, being in the UK and all, but wherever the elections are, I do tend to get annoyed with people telling me that I should vote.
Personally, I know absolutely sod all about politics, and would prefer to leave it to the people that know what they are voting for.
if you don't vote, you don't have a right to complain either.
Something I've heard so many times, and in my view makes absolutely no sense. If they are doing a bad job, then they should be doing it better, and I have something to complain about, whether I voted for them or someone else or not at all. If I wanted to complain that the other bloke should have got in, then the sentence makes sense, but if I actually thought that then I would have voted in the first place.
If, on September 10th, the world had been sucked into a black hole, we would have had a right to complain (admittedly very little means to do it). Did we vote on whether that experiment was to take place? And yet this is something that could potentially affect all of us! No, because very few of us know a lot about quantum physics. To have an international vote on it would therefore have been very silly. Yet with politics, everyone is encouraged to vote regardless because they have a right and are told they shouldn't waste it, and so on, and you get a lot of people voting because 'Well he seems like a good chap doesn't he?'.
We also have a right not to vote, and I think that if we recognise that our opinion is not based on substantial evidence, that right is best taken.
Oh, and when I say I know nothing about politics, I mean this: a few weeks ago, someone asked me whether I wanted Obama or McCain to win, and at that point I didn't even know who McCain was. Last year, I was randomly browsing stuff on Wikipedia, and suddenly saw "Tony Blair, former Prime Minister". That was well over a month after he'd stepped down, and I hadn't even realised up till that point. My entire knowledge of Republicans versus Democrats comes from reading '100 years of Solitude' a few months ago.
You really think
I should be helping to decide who runs a country? Personally, I think I'd probly be in a better position deciding whether potentially world destroying experiments are carried out.
Ok, perhaps I could go learn about it, but it's clearly a very complex subject, and personally I wouldn't want to come to an opinion on it unless I really knew all the facts, and had looked at things from every angle. There are a lot of people about who have very strong opinions on things, but actually know very little, and they will blindly argue without ever considering the opposing opinion. Maybe people should have to pass a test to get a license to vote?
Ok, by all means correct me here, I am open minded and realise that a lot of what I've just said probly makes no sense, but in that case my point is probly made by that fact better than I actually made it myself:)
"Frankly, I’m suspicious of anyone who has a strong opinion on a complicated issue."
Scott Adams, The Dilbert Blog