I will be the first to tell you that I am not any kind of a
political or historical expert. I’m the artsy-fartsy one in my set—and in my
family. Of course, you can’t grow up listening to people debate the Magna
Carta, Hobbes and Locke, or Reconstruction, among other things, without picking
up an idea or two.
And, believe me, when the other kids are playing Robinhood
and Prince John is the bad guy, you will NOT make any friends by pointing out
that if he hadn’t caved to the barons and signed the Magna Carta, we might not
have the rights we have today.
In any case, there hasn’t seemed to be much place for the
pure thinkers, the writers, the artsy-fartsy people in recent days as we
struggle to elect our next president. Yet I’ve always believed that those
folks, the artsy-fartsy ones, offer the world visions of what might be. Then
the statesmen, inventors, engineers, and leaders—the sensible folks—make the
best visons real.
Here’s my vision for our country: start now.
Republican reformers and loyal Democrats, Democratic
reformers and loyal Republicans, start refining your parties’ platforms now. Start standing for something now rather than falling for anything later.
Start now by supporting the representatives
within your party who responsibly represent their constituents. Start reviewing
your policies and procedures now. Start
discussing term limit reform, campaign finance reform, and districting reform now. Start now—listen, learn, apply the lessons.
Independents, skeptics, and outliers—would you like more
options? Start now. Educate yourself now. Run for local office now. Find others who share your views
and get your third parties rolling now,
not in the summer of 2020.
I have hope now. I have a vision for the future because of
what is happening now.
The last few elections have shown that previously
disinterested, disenchanted, and disenfranchised citizens of our country can
mobilize and raise passionate voices, altering the nation’s discourse.
This most recent election has shown the power of every
single vote. Just the math for Florida alone boggles the mind—as of this
writing, Florida’s 29 electoral votes were awarded by a margin of approximately
129,000 popular votes out of 9,350,000 or about 1900 votes per county. Every vote counts.
Our recent election has given me a vision of our country
accepting, considering, and electing women, political outsiders, and third
party candidates as often as traditional candidates. Our country is on its way
to drawing from its entire pool of talent to govern wisely, according to the
will of the people.
Start now. It's a new day. Start now.