Democratic Primaries
In reply to the discussion: Young people are the most progressive generation in history. [View all]StarfishSaver
(18,486 posts)I came of voting age in the 1980s and the last thing I was looking for or expecting was to be "inspired" by politicians. In fact, I thought that was no longer possible, that that sort of feeling had died with Bobby Kennedy. But that didn't stop me from getting involved, trying to make a difference in my community, and working as hard as I could to try to elect people whom I thought would be best for us, even if they didn't send a tingle up or down my leg.
When Bill Clinton came along, he DID inspire me and I saw that as a wonderful, unexpected bonus. It was thrilling to feel that way and I have often since felt that way with other politicians, such as Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Paul Wellstone, John Edwards, and plenty of others at the national, state and local levels, etc. But I still see that as a "nice to have" not a "must have." I believe that it's my responsibility to work for change - and that includes being directly engaged in the political process and voting like my life depends on it in every election - regardless whether the people running or in office give me warm fuzzy feelings. And I truly believe that if inspiration must be had, it's on ME to be that inspiration.
I really wish people were less concerned about being inspired - and stopped threatening to or actually sit it out unless and until someone tickles their fancies - and actually put their shoulders to the wheel to work for change and be inspirations themselves.
Hey, y'all. It's not about you. It's about we. And we need all of you to get engaged and VOTE and we don't care whether you want to invite the candidate to your next cookout.
primary today, I would vote for: Joe Biden