Over the years since people have left High School and News stopped being a thing certain political groups, terms and definitions have come into being that fly under the radar of their political base by not being known by them.
Today while discussing the upcoming election with my stepdad he asked me the question "Wait what are SuperPACs"
This is a man who in theory hates Political Favors but whom has repeatedly voted for more politicians taking money from SuperPACS, ones specifically known for hitting up said politican for favors after elections, than for politicians reported as sticking to donations made by independent citizens.
Apparently all of these years when the "News" has said "And the X Candidate has refused SuperPAC money and will only accept from Private donors" the "News" channel that he watches heavily implied that Private Donors meant "Rich Assholes with Money" when in most of those cases it meant people like him who can only donate $5 and thus not being beholden to any company when my city wants to drill for the clean water instead of building a more expensive and environmentally unfriendly water treatment plant.
So he only votes for the people that the "News" reports as not taking money from Private Donors. The channel has turned Private Donors into a curse word. Meanwhile not even saying the word SuperPAC apparently since he's never heard it. In this way they have skewed his vote towards the ones making a buttload of money off of his ignorance.
This leads me to wonder? Should we allow people to vote without education? It used to be our News Networks would say "here are the facts these are the things neither side can dispute because hey facts." and then do roundtable discussions about each sides interpretation of the facts."
"Sure this process is cheaper and has less impact this way but other way creates jobs" That would be fine let people decide what they care about but instead it's become "this is the POV we want you to have" Voter Fraud is not the biggest threat facing this country rather it's voter miseducation.
I have multiple times had to go over ballots with my folks to explain what exactly a measure does because the language is written in such a way that they think a yes vote means lowering their property taxes where it really means raise them.
I am not talking about a class that says "Vote this way or that"
I am saying a class or hell at least someone at the polls going "Here is what this is" with full monitoring to ensure it remains impartial while ensuring our older voters don't suddenly wonder "Hey why did they cut off my social security check" "Oh because that measure passed dropping it to 11 instead of 12 months of the year you get money" "I thought that was supposed to increase my funds"
I know realistically it's our responsiblity to make sure we are informed but too many people grew up in a time when the News cared about being honest and informative rather than "how many people can we get to watch" and so they still trust networks that get better ratings talking about Brangelina breaking up than discussing what's on the ballot. Seriously it's been years since any of my local news stations have actually covered a measure if it wasn't a controversial issue.
Today while discussing the upcoming election with my stepdad he asked me the question "Wait what are SuperPACs"
This is a man who in theory hates Political Favors but whom has repeatedly voted for more politicians taking money from SuperPACS, ones specifically known for hitting up said politican for favors after elections, than for politicians reported as sticking to donations made by independent citizens.
Apparently all of these years when the "News" has said "And the X Candidate has refused SuperPAC money and will only accept from Private donors" the "News" channel that he watches heavily implied that Private Donors meant "Rich Assholes with Money" when in most of those cases it meant people like him who can only donate $5 and thus not being beholden to any company when my city wants to drill for the clean water instead of building a more expensive and environmentally unfriendly water treatment plant.
So he only votes for the people that the "News" reports as not taking money from Private Donors. The channel has turned Private Donors into a curse word. Meanwhile not even saying the word SuperPAC apparently since he's never heard it. In this way they have skewed his vote towards the ones making a buttload of money off of his ignorance.
This leads me to wonder? Should we allow people to vote without education? It used to be our News Networks would say "here are the facts these are the things neither side can dispute because hey facts." and then do roundtable discussions about each sides interpretation of the facts."
"Sure this process is cheaper and has less impact this way but other way creates jobs" That would be fine let people decide what they care about but instead it's become "this is the POV we want you to have" Voter Fraud is not the biggest threat facing this country rather it's voter miseducation.
I have multiple times had to go over ballots with my folks to explain what exactly a measure does because the language is written in such a way that they think a yes vote means lowering their property taxes where it really means raise them.
I am not talking about a class that says "Vote this way or that"
I am saying a class or hell at least someone at the polls going "Here is what this is" with full monitoring to ensure it remains impartial while ensuring our older voters don't suddenly wonder "Hey why did they cut off my social security check" "Oh because that measure passed dropping it to 11 instead of 12 months of the year you get money" "I thought that was supposed to increase my funds"
I know realistically it's our responsiblity to make sure we are informed but too many people grew up in a time when the News cared about being honest and informative rather than "how many people can we get to watch" and so they still trust networks that get better ratings talking about Brangelina breaking up than discussing what's on the ballot. Seriously it's been years since any of my local news stations have actually covered a measure if it wasn't a controversial issue.
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