Letter: These words will inform you
Terre Haute Tribune Star, Nov. 5, 2024
Voting today? Are you uninformed, undecided, unhappy?
These negatives are supposed to tell us why the 2024 election is razor thin close. At least this is what battalions of pollsters report with the seriousness that only numbers can supposedly express. “Margin of error” is the usual term of choice used to make this all sound scientifically irrefutable. Is any of it helpful?
Not a single voter is part of this abracadabra “margin of error” facade. In fact, not a single voter is uninformed or undecided. Polls are all a part of the horse race coverage we get every election. But those horses endlessly pounding around the election track are missing one thing. You. The jockey with the vote.
Uniformed? The so-called uninformed voter is informed by something or someone — be it a yard sign or a loud-mouth in a coffee shop. Or maybe it’s the old guy sitting at the end of the bar who voted for George Wallace in 1968. Now he’s spouting off about criminal immigrants or “garbage” Puerto Rican Americans. You are not uninformed if you sit frozen faced in front of a TV screen watching Fox. You are being informed in the way a silo works. The grain of fear and grievance is poured in, the oxygen of rounded truth is lacking, you ferment with anger.
Undecided? The undecided voter is just the citizen who votes out of confusion. This is understandable. There are tariffs and taxes, women’s rights, health care choices, gas pump prices bobbing up and down. Also, Trump’s felonies. Also, Trump’s impeachments. Also, Trump’s mental health as evidenced in his 39 minute silent, scary zombie trance dance. It’s all part of your decision-making vote.
Unhappy? Each of us is unhappy to a degree in our own, personal ways. Politically we may be unhappy with government. Do you feel government pushes you around? Waiting to cross the street on the corner of Seventh and Wabash, standing next to the stoplight, what do you hear? Is the “deep state” robbing you of your happiness, commanding you to “Wait! Wait! Wait!” when the light is red? Is this curtailing your freedom or working to keep you and your children safe and open to freedom?
Nearby, on the northwest corner of the Crossroads of America, you have the words of a great Terre Haute poet. Read his words. They will inform you, help you to make right decisions, and assure you there is much to be happy about in this world. Read Max Ehrmann’s words from “Desiderata”:
“Avoid loud and aggressive persons. They are vexations to the spirit. ...
"But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings. Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness. ...
" ... many persons strive for high ideals; and everywhere life is full of heroism.”
— Gary Daily
Terre Haute
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