Just Vote

October 30, 2008

 

Last week I toured the Midwest, stopping for presentations in Chicago and St. Louis. Long ago I learned that, if I have enough time, it’s actually easiest to ride the “el” from Chicago’s O’Hare to downtown. In St. Louis, however, travelers are pretty much stuck with either renting a car or grabbing a taxi.
 
As soon as I jumped into my St. Louis taxi, I identified my driver’s political preference. He had Obama buttons everywhere. When I asked my driver whether he thought Senator Obama would win the election, he replied, “McCain doesn’t have a chance.” He then continued, “Just look at where McCain spent the day. He’s in New Hampshire. That state has a total of four electoral votes. He should have been here in Missouri, where we have ten electoral votes.”
 
I’ll be honest. I was born and reared in Missouri. As an undergraduate, I studied political science at the University of Missouri, and I had absolutely no idea the state had ten electoral votes.
 
So why did my driver know so much? In part, I suspect, it’s because he is not a native of Missouri. In fact, he is not a native of the United States. He was born and raised in far away Senegal and became a citizen less than a decade ago.
 
Too often, I fear, we take this little experiment called “the United States” for granted. We forget that throughout the vast majority of the world, a relatively small number of individuals have the right and ability to select the people who will lead them.
 
I don’t care whether you vote for Senator Obama or Senator McCain or even for some third party candidate. Just make sure you vote.

 




 



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