Thanks for the comments all - and some really interesting points raised by you seeker.
For what it's worth, I totally agree with where you are coming from seeker - in so far as I understand what you are saying, and believe that if certain circumstances are met - than it is a worthwhile pursuit. However, I still don't really feel as though I can accept it as a personal viewpoint.
The fault I perceive with elections - and indeed pretty much all else - is that things are always compartmentalised. For example, the elections are discussed as a separate issue from the education (indoctrination?) of the voters. The voters are often discussed as a separate issue to our belief system. Our belief system is discussed separately to government. And so on...
This surely makes it easier for us to comprehend key issues, but there is a definite problem with this approach. When things are dismantled in this manner we loose sight of the overarching pattern. When I take a long look at things from this way of thinking – I cannot in all good faith separate the “system” from the mass manipulation. The two are intrinsically linked, and should not just be separated purely for the means of discourse.
I don’t watch TV so I don’t know what the coverage has been like for the upcoming elections here. But if it is like normal, the elections will be shown as a two horse race. The third party barely getting a mention. At the moment about 70 – 80% of all billboards are occupied by election advertisements. The ratio of advertisement isn’t split equally. The third party with just about 10% of the ads. This is a higher percentage than I remember in previous elections.
Anyway – as you point out, it is unlikely these small runners will win. They compete because they believe in Government, and because they hope for change. They have to work within the existing system. When I see this sort of situation – especially as it was in America – I can’t but help wonder at the energy, time and money these small runners put in. They positively glow with hope, and motivation. It’s good they have such a strong belief in something. However, I really do have to consider what else these people could achieve if they put such energy and money into something more productive!
If they cannot win – then become a voice of utter opposition, or of total dissent. If they cannot win, why tow the line at all?
We cannot point at any one part of our civilisation and place the blame of our current state squarely at its feet. And neither can we point at any single place to praise our success. As said – true progress has come through tough opposition and shear will power and never giving up.
Humanities greatest successes could arguably be during those times when we have left behind old beliefs. Those moments when as a whole we have stopped carrying a dead unworkable carcass to which we attribute the underpinnings of our society. These occasions have only occurred during moments when popular opinion has undergone a drastic shift. During times of chaos, or after a momentous event. For a short while after 9/11 people began to wake up – they looked around for a few days, questioning the very foundations of our society. Shortly they went back to sleep again. Point is though it nearly happened.
Other than the above, education and bringing awareness to the people has often proved very successful at causing change. But often this has only occurred through people with loud voices that would never let their message drop.
I look around – and what do we have now? No voices, no moments of change. Just polarized opinions upon compartmentalised black and white issues. And breaking through this overt blanket is a rag tag band of people working, talking, writing attempting to bring awareness. Attempting to educate.
True education as far as I see it is the only way to bring change. Not working within an oppressive system – towing the line 70% whilst spending the other 30% trying to get something new in.
And it makes me wonder at our situation when the forefront of this modern “education” is occurring on the backwaters of the internet.
That’s not to say I see the situation as hopeless.
But I truly believe that change – whether it be gradual or otherwise will only occur through education. From a personal perspective I just can’t see how working within a self-contained, compartmentalised system is going to truly achieve anything…especially when the nature of that system is to stop “unauthorised” change.
It’s like I have seen someone mention here at NR (Lyra I believe?); we need to start living according to our new awakenings and knowledge…not merely talking it or intellectualising it (a bad habit of mine I must admit)…