The Devil playing his golden fiddle at the ballot box in front of the voter.

This Post Has 6 Comments

  1. Kelly Conrad

    The piece presents itself as politically neutral — “this is not a partisan observation” (Section VII) — and largely sustains that neutrality at the level of explicit claim. But the sensibility is unmistakably that of a reader suspicious of populist promises, of emotional appeals over deliberative ones, of spectacle over record. This is a legitimate political sensibility, but it is a sensibility.

  2. People are fools if they don’t take their right to vote seriously, people fight revolutions and die for the right to vote. Think about how your vote will affect you and your country’s future before deciding on who you vote for.

  3. Bryan

    I’ve seen people kill, and be killed for the right to vote. Your right to vote in free and fair elections is a rare privilege in today’s world. Cherish the privilege, and exercise your right thoughtfully and strategically, and most of all, peacefully.

  4. Jen

    If you don’t vote you forfeit the right to complain about the outcome of an election.

  5. Fr Alfonso SJ

    The writing is consistently strong and occasionally excellent. The essay operates in a register of controlled formality — neither academic nor popular, but occupying the productive middle ground of the serious essayist. Sentences are long but not unwieldy; the periodic structure is used for emphasis rather than decoration.

  6. Mick Glass

    Whoever you vote for, don’t vote for that ginger bitch with the whiney voice.

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