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Jill Stein Is Not The Answer

Lately, I’ve been seeing a lot more coverage about a third party candidates than I would during a traditional presidential election. Then again, this is anything but a traditional election. We’ve watched a pathological liar of a businessman gain the prestige and power behind an established political party with its roots in the founding of America; an Independent candidate ran on the Democratic ticket and gained a powerful following that worried even the establishment Democrats, and sparked a political revolution (whether that spark takes flame is still yet to be seen); and for the first time in decades (or perhaps, ever) people are seriously considering a vote for a third party, either Green or Libertarian.

I’ve already expressed my support of Bernie Sanders, and I understood his reasoning when he threw his support behind Hillary Clinton. However, many disaffected Bernie Sanders voters–dubbed the “Bernie or Bust” movement–have instead found a home in the leftist camp of Jill Stein, the presidential nominee from the Green Party. Jill Stein and other members of her party have promised to continue the political revolution, taking up Sanders’ platform and drawing in voters with seemingly great success. They think she’s the answer now that Bernie has “sold out” to the establishment.

They’re wrong. And for two reasons that I’ll lay out.

I’ve been criticized for voting with a major party because it takes away the spotlight from third parties that bear the standard for the things I value. I argue in return that a vote for a third party is a cosmetic, and therefore, wasted vote. I believe in pragmatism as well as values, and therefore, I stand with the Democratic Party. I value what the Democratic Party stands for (if not what they uphold).

In a political system such as the one the United States has, power lies in the constituency. Suppose, in the infancy of the United States, there were 10 political parties (and for the sake of simplicity, we’ll call them A, B, C, etc.), each having unique values held by its members. In an ideal representative democracy or a democratic republic, the government would have in power the person (or party) that best represented their interests. Because each party holds unique values not held by any other, none of them would be able to “best represent” the people of the United States. Therefore, it is within its own interest (as well as the interest of the people) for each party to begin co-opting values of other parties and perhaps attempt to make more powerful stances in order to draw more constituents.

So Party A begins adopting values of Party B, and Party C begins adopting the values of Party D. Having 1/5 of the nation’s interest is hardly a majority and so value adoption continues until there are only two major parties left vying for the middle. Sound familiar?

It’s our modern-day two-party political system.

Like I said: any vote for a third party is a cosmetic vote. You used your one chance to try to make a point that won’t be heard, unless of course, there were enough of you to truly sway the vote (and the direction of the election) in one way or another. I think on a subconscious level, most people know this. On the other hand, because of the strange nature of the 2016 election, many people have become more politically aware, and are a little more privy to what their party is doing. According to a Gallup poll in January, major party membership is at an historic low, with 26% US citizens identifying as Democrats and Republicans at 29%. However, when factoring in “leaning” voters, those percentages almost double (46% and 42% respectively).

In short, most of our voter base already largely agree with the two major parties. Now, that being said, in order to make the votes count and enact the policies you want, you need to go with parties that have power. That is neither the Libertarian Party nor the Green Party. More importantly, the President is not the one who holds power over legislation; that power lies with Congress. Regardless of who is elected president, the importance of the general election lies within the votes for the House and the Senate. Your vote for President matters far less than your vote for Congress.

That being said, however, Jill Stein is a dangerously anti-science candidate. The media yammers on about how Trump has a loose grip with reality, but Stein is hardly better, even if, ideologically, she fares far better than Trump. For those who don’t know, Stein is a Harvard-trained physician, but seems to be pandering to the uneducated and easily-scared left. She seems to play off the fear of Big Business, Big Pharma, Big Whatever, fear of which the far left has cornered the market.

From Big Pharma, she sells the line that vaccines cause autism (or at the very least makes the implication that some vaccines cause autism). The conspiracy in question dates back to 1990 when former doctor Andrew Wakefield performed a study that appeared to link austim with vaccinated children. When the study was peer-reviewed, it was discovered that his study was severely flawed, but because Wakefield stuck to his guns, his license to practice was revoked, and he has been reviled by the medical community the world over.

While Stein ultimately admits that vaccines have been undeniably a benefit to all countries, she seems to implicate that the regulation of vaccines by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and the CDC (Center for Disease Control) is controlled by shills for Big Pharma. Without discussing the ethics of the medical community, suppose the conspiracy were true: there are millions of doctors, nurses, physicians, and other members of the medical community, many of whom are independent. How could those millions be part of one singular conspiracy, and yet not one has spilled their beans?

Vaccines do not cause autism. 

There is the further implication that if these shills are quiet about vaccines, what else are they keeping in the dark? GMOs (for which there is no substantial or compelling evidence that it causes any sort of harm, except for the emotionally distressed for the feeble-minded among us)? Cancer (for which there is no catch-all cure for the hundreds of kinds of cancer)? She is either woefully ignorant, meaning her Harvard education is a sad waste; or she is intellectually dishonest in which case she is harming families and children who could have otherwise benefited, whose lives could have been saved, with the help of vaccines.

But backtracking to GMOs (and the environment overall), she (like Senator Sanders and a good portion of the far left) has implied that there are nefarious goings-on behind GMO science, and therefore creates fear within a field that has been shown to be solid as far back 1980 when the first patent was created, and even farther when DNA was discovered. Without GMO, we wouldn’t have medicines like insulin created by E. Coli bacteria. But instead of promoting science and research, Stein and her ilk have instead demanded labeling of GMO products. In an informal “study” conducted by magicians Penn and Teller, people have described GMO products as better-looking and better-tasting than so-called “organic” products. Certain crops, like golden rice, actually provides nutrients for countries that are lacking certain vitamins, like Vitamin A in large swaths of Africa and Asia.

However, because of people like Stein, campaigns to have vaccines and GM foods have effectively stopped in many countries due to lies being spread that vaccines sterilize, poison, or otherwise harm you. Likewise with GMOs.

In terms of green energy, she has a childishly idealistic view of our green energy output. Her stance is to completely oust fossil fuels as well as nuclear energy in favor of green energy resources (wind, solar, hydroelectric, geothermal, etc.). According to this website, energy input is woefully less than energy output. For example, there is a lot of wind capacity (55 gigawatts), but when we convert it to usable energy, it comes out to less than half (approximately 21 gigawatts). Similar trends follow with other renewable energy sources; it cannot provide for the needs of a country that consumes 25% of the world’s energy resources. Green energy needs to be supplemented until such a time when green energy can be harvested and sustained efficiently. Fossil fuels are no longer an option, and nuclear energy is our next best choice. According to this report, we can cut our energy costs by nearly 90% (supposing we’re using purely wind and solar farms) if we implemented Molten Salt Reactors (from $29 trillion to merely $1 trillion) with “with no water cooling, no risk of meltdowns, and the ability to use our stockpiles of nuclear “waste” as a secondary fuel.”

But no, Stein would rather scare you into voting for her because Big Business, Big Pharma, and Big Energy. As a rational human being, she is everything that should scare you because, like Donald Trump, she posits very dangerous ideas; they’re simply another breed of danger. Most worryingly is the idea of student debt forgiveness. Before anyone else jumps on my back and attempts to stab me, I’m for  the idea of free college and forgiving student debt, but there is a difference. A Slate.com article states that “a disproportionate amount of student debt is held by comfortably paid professionals who went to private colleges or graduate school. Forgiving their loans in a mass jubilee would not be the greatest use of limited resources if you’re interested in fighting equality.” This is a bad idea because it forgives all debt, including those accrued and due to private and graduate schools. Private schools shouldn’t be funded by taxpayer money.

More than that, Stein apparently fundamentally misunderstood the Wall Street bailout (to which she equated this student debt bailout): she believes that the bailout occured when the government bought the debt owed by banks and cancelled it out. It did not happen this way. The debt was owned by the banks, bought by the government, who held onto those debts in order to drive down interest rates in the financial market (and make it easier to make loans and invest). Nothing was ever “cancelled out.” She either fundamentally misunderstands the financial system, or she is being intentionally misleading.

Yes, voting for Hillary is going to be hard. She will be hawkish in her foreign policy, she will be in bed with the corporations that funded her, she will be beholden to her donors.That is why we should vote for her, and the one thing we should do is hold her responsible for her promises and her actions, just as we did for Obama when he began running for his second term and we checked on how many promises he made and broke during his first campaign. By all suggestions, it looks like Trump will lose the presidency because he wants to. It’s largely over at this point because he no longer has time to make the general election pivot. He is no longer a threat to the United States. Hillary is. So when and if she becomes president, we must hold her accountable or otherwise make her a one-term president.

Why I Will Absolutely Yell At You For Being A Conservative: A Response Part 3

Thankfully, this is the last post I’m writing for now. There was too much stupid to handle with a modicum of intelligence.

8. “You’re ignorant.”

Yeah, you kinda are. Considering I’ve written over 2600 words (and counting) compared to your meager 1000, I’ve written a more substantive article than you, and I have a better understanding of the world around me as well as my country. I’ve backed up my claims with the available evidence. I’ve used the ideas of those better than myself as rebuttal to why you’re wrong. Saying “I know what I’m talking about” doesn’t make it so. I think I’ve pretty much proven that you’re ignorant. What I cannot determine is whether or not you’re willfully or unwillfully so.

9. “You’re crazy if you’d vote for Trump over Sanders or Clinton if he’s the chosen GOP candidate.”

Crazy is a relative term. Again, I would say you’re ignorant. You say you’ve watched the debate, read the articles, and gone to the websites. If you have, then you would understand why this is a dangerous man. This is a man who would force the military to perform war crimes. This is a man who, as I’ve said, would go to war with Mexico over a wall. This is a man who would “open up libel laws” so he can sue the press. So much for the man being for your constitutional rights. He also supports the Patriot Act, the act that employs the use of wiretaps, searching business records, surveillance of internet activity, recording phone calls, and text message interception. In short, he wants to violate your fourth and eighth amendment rights.

As for your claims about Hillary Clinton, the FBI investigations found that emails found on Clinton’s personal account had not come from her, but in fact her aides. As for Bernie Sanders, please see my article A Response to “Why I’m Not ‘Feeling the Bern’”.

I don’t hate Trump for being mean. He has a right to his speech, just as I have a right to mine, and you to yours. I hate him for his racist rhetoric. I hate him for setting this country back not 10 years, 20 years, but 60 to 100 years. I hate him for his xenophobic attitude for anyone who isn’t white, who doesn’t speak English. I hate his contempt for the poor. I hate that he called Mexicans rapists and drug dealers. I hate that he wants to ban Muslims, that he alienates those who need to be integrated. He has been used in Daesh recruitment videos.

He is America’s single greatest terrorist. He is Hitler reincarnate.

As for your wise man, I have two Bible quotes to throw back at you:

I do not suffer a woman to teach or assume authority over a man.

1 Timothy 2:12

And also this:

Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.

Matthew 10:24

Why I Will Absolutely Yell At You For Being a Conservative: A Response Part 2

3. “You’re voting for him?!”

You’re entitled to your opinion, but when your opinion affects public and foreign policy, no matter how little, then I reserve the right to mock and ridicule your choice for the presidency, just as you hold the right to do the same to mine.

First Amendment rights are a bitch, aren’t they? But I guess Donald Drumpf understands that, which is why he wants to “open up libel laws” so that he can sue those who have dissenting opinions. You know what that’s the beginning of? Fascist dictatorship.

4. “The GOP candidates this time around are horrible.”

As they have been for the past 16 years.

No, they’re not the ideal presidential candidate, but it’s not for any one reason. They’re not ideal because they’re beholden to the powers that be. They’re beholden to their SuperPACs, to corporations who want to make more money, to certain industries such as oil and coal. They’re not ideal because they want to fleece the poorest populations of the United States. They’re not ideal because their idea of foreign policy is carpet bombing the Middle East (Ted Cruz); attacking, torturing, and killing civilians which is against the Geneva Conventions (Donald Drumpf); expanding the military when we spend more than the top 10 countries combined, and don’t spend enough on education; voting for untenable and unsustainable wars; voting for bills that hinder education for our GIs; blocking the President from trying to do what he thinks is best for no other reason than that he’s black; repealing socialized healthcare when in fact, it was a right-wing idea in the first place (see: Mitt Romney’s plan in Massachusetts); there are far too many reasons to count.

On the Democratic side, Bernie Sanders (the so-called “radical” democratic socialist) has been consistently for SAGA (Sexuality and Gender Acceptance) rights, has been anti-corporations, has been for universal healthcare and a single-payer system, has been an advocate for free education. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been a supporter for gun control (and when gun deaths averaged about 1 death per day as of 2015, it is sorely needed). She, like Bernie, is for campaign finance reform. She wants affordable healthcare and education. President Barack Obama has lowered the government deficit from over $1 trillion to about $400 billion. Obama has lowered government spending just like conservatives have been clamoring for for the past two elections. And yet he’s still hated, all because of his skin color.

However, obviously, the Democrats aren’t without their criticisms. Bernie (although I agree with him) voted to grant immunity to gun manufacturers. Hillary supported the Iraq War in 2003, and followed the advice of former Sec. of State Henry Kissinger who performed war crimes in my home country of Vietnam. President Obama agreed to the TPP, the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Senator Sanders is quoted as saying, “the TPP is much more than a “free trade” agreement. It is part of a global race to the bottom to boost the profits of large corporations and Wall Street by outsourcing jobs; undercutting worker rights; dismantling labor, environmental, health, food safety and financial laws; and allowing corporations to challenge our laws in international tribunals rather than our own court system. If TPP was such a good deal for America, the administration should have the courage to show the American people exactly what is in this deal, instead of keeping the content of the TPP a secret.”

All of that being said, I would still rather have a Democrat in the Oval Office instead of a Republican.

5. “You’re so selfish.”

I get it. The United States was founded on the Lockean idea of security of Life, Liberty, and Property. You want what is yours, and what you’ve earned, and I can respect that. But that idea has been warped by American individualism. It became an idea that everyone should pull themselves up by their bootstraps and get on with their lives, regardless of whether or not they have boots, or whether or not they can walk.

Political philosopher John Rawls has this interesting idea called The Veil of Ignorance. Suppose you were born into this world without knowing nothing about yourself or the society in which you live. When you’re selecting the principles upon which your society is to be built,  the veil of ignorance prevents you from knowing about who you will be in that society. For example, for a proposed society in which 50% of the population is kept in slavery, it follows that on entering the new society there is a 50% likelihood that the participant would be a slave. The idea is that parties subject to the veil of ignorance will make choices based upon moral considerations, since they will not be able to make choices based on self- or class-interest.

More or less, this is an elongated version of the Golden Rule (which I prefer to attribute to Confucius). If placed in a position other than the one in which you occupy now–a middle class, white college student–would you consent to taking that position? If, instead you were born into a lower-middle class African American family, would you still hold the same political and economic positions you do now, or would you prefer to have a little help when you needed it? You wrote the caveat, “I am confident I can survive without the government’s help.” But the Veil of Ignorance asks in return, “What if you weren’t?”

6. “But don’t you care about the old people/the kids/ the environment/the homeless people/etc?”

I am willing to bet my bank account that if taxes were abolished, you wouldn’t donate a single penny to any charity. Then again, I’m cynical of humans and I believe that most, if not all, humans are fundamentally selfish (see: John Locke and Thomas Hobbes on the Social Contract thought experiment). But all of that is beside the point. If you believe that taxes are “forced donations”, then you fundamentally misunderstand taxes.

Taxes aren’t donations to the poor. They’re the revenue that runs the country in which you live. Without taxes, we wouldn’t have the roads on which you drive to and from universities. Without taxes, we wouldn’t have the schools which gave you the education to write this drivel. Without taxes, we wouldn’t have state hospitals, prisons to keep violent criminals, or a military for defense.

It’s fair because all citizens of the United States pay into it, and all citizens receive the same benefits.

7. “But what about the minorities? You’re just racist.”

I agree. It would be fair for members of minorities to get jobs and earn their way to success, to receive citizenship. Except you, and others like you, often discriminate them because their skin is darker. They’re automatically dumb and ignorant because of their skin color. They’re simultaneously lazy and complacent, and stealing your jobs. Once again, they’re not afforded the same opportunities to receive the same comforts you do. Their daily battles are not ours.

I wanted to contribute this next bit to a young Korean American woman by the name of Heejeong Kim who brilliantly slammed Kristi Russell:

You need to check your privilege. Maybe take an ethnic studies class. Since you are a proclaimed basic white bitch, I’ll recommend you some media/articles you probably haven’t been informed about.
“The house I live in” –it’s a movie on Netflix about the racial and class discrepancies in our country’s mass incarceration due to the war on drugs.
“La femenista” by Anna nieto gomez–an article on the intersectional struggle of Mexican-American women
“No mas bebes por vida”– some clips and articles available on the coerced sterilization of minority women and the history of eugenics in the u.s.
“A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America” by George Takaki– a book dedicated to the injustices forced upon marginalized groups and how the ignorance of mainstream society refuses to acknowledge the obstacles that froze the socioeconomic progress of mutiple cultural and class groups.

Read up on the racial discrimination that black veterans faced after ww2 and how the lower class became a racial group. Listen to the black lives matter movement and the history of police brutality on marginalized groups. Pay attention to Cesar Chavez’s last fast and the Delano Grape strike and realize your precious money earned by your hard work was given to you though privilege and exploitation of marginalized communities. When you start to support institutions and politicians that encourage these structural and representational discrimination, how the hell would no one yell at you?

“I Am Tired of Hearing About Your Damn Gun Record!”

Watching the #CNNDemDebate, I’m getting really tired of Clinton bringing up Sanders’s gun control record. Yes, he voted in favor of immunity for gun makers. But it’s a ridiculous point to make. Do we hold retailers and manufacturers accountable for the use of knives in murder? Or bows and crossbows, and arrows and bolts? Or car manufacturers for vehicular manslaughter? No, because it’s ridiculous.

The sins of the father should not be placed on the son, and neither should the sins of the owner be placed upon manufacturer and the retailer. Once you take ownership of any item, that item becomes your responsibility, and you should be held accountable for your own actions with your property. If you drink and drive, and happen to take out the wall out of your home, you don’t sue the construction workers who built it for not making your walls out of titanium.

If you want to get rid of gun crime, pass stricter gun laws. Outlaw them like the UK. It took one mass shooting (Dunblane massacre) for the UK to ban firearms in 1997. Gun crimes happen in places that allow open and concealed carry. The narrative that a “good guy with a gun will stop a bad guy with a gun” is not only ridiculous, it is patently false. It was sold to us by the NRA–the Church of Guns of America–and Hollywood, the Vatican of America.