Monday, March 30, 2009

What can I do? VOTE!

THERE ARE NO "OFF" YEAR ELECTIONS. They are all equally important.

Can someone please explain the thought process of only voting during Presidential elections? This completely baffles me.

There is absolutely no excuse not to vote.

Here's what you can do:
  1. Register to vote, do it now, don't wait until it's too late!
  2. Vote on election day.
  3. If you want to vote early, request an absentee ballot (from your county's board of elections).
  4. Make sure your family members vote, at least the conservative ones. If you don't trust them to vote on election day, due to work, forgetfulness or laziness, get them absentee ballot applications, make sure they vote. If they don't vote absentee, drag them to the polling location.
  5. Make sure your children are registered as they hit the required age. If they are in your house, they should be a reliable conservative vote. Then make sure they vote.
  6. Make sure your conservative neighbors are registered to vote.
  7. Make sure your conservative neighbors actually vote.
  8. Make it as easy on them to vote as you can, just like your family members. absentee ballot applications, etc....
  9. Don't spend time on making sure your Marxist neighbors vote or not. Let ACCORN take care of that.
We need to vote at every election, period! There are always issues that need more conservative votes. The Statists are happy to see you not vote so their voting effect will be exaggerated due to less overall votes.

A good reason (there are plenty more) we need to vote every time is:

Many State Representatives / Senators were former Township Trustees or City Council members.
Many of our US Representatives were former State Representatives / Senators.
These folks started out in local elections, usually, not a presidential election cycle. You need to vote every time and know who you are voting for just because they are the pipeline to higher office when someone else moves on.

Figure out who is the conservative candidate and vote for them. Even if it's a "non-partisan" election.

More examples where one vote would have changed an outcome in an election:

Here is a link to a previous post detailing two contests in Troy Township that were decided by one vote.

Here's 2 tie votes in one election in Athens County.

Jill Thompson lost in the conservative 92nd Ohio House district by 514 votes. Not much, taking into consideration the amount of votes cast. Meigs County alone could have assured a conservative victory if only 258 of them would have voted for Thompson rather than Phillips.

Meigs would have had a real clean coal promoter, not a do nothing, say nothing to support coal State Rep that Debbie Phillips has turned out to be.

One final comment, conservatives have to turn out in massive numbers. Enough so, that even ACCORN / can't come up with enough fraudulent ballots to change the election results.

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