Sunday, September 28, 2008

Back to Politics: Vote 2008

Starting in mid-October I'll be cranking away at this blog again, and I haven't blogged since the midterm elections in 2006 on issues surrounding politics, but if this isn't the perfect time, I don't know when it would be.

I'm now moving from an assistant chief in this year's elections to an actual chief of a polling site. I'm both excited and terrified. Excited to be part of the process and to be taking on a job that I believe allows me to make sure that everybody who shows up at my polling station has their U.S. given right to vote. There are times, of course, in which I've had to turn people away--but it's usually that they showed up at the wrong site, or that they forgot they didn't change their registration after college. I've never had to turn somebody down due to ID purposes (unlike what might happen in Indiana). I'm slightly obsessed and a little bit terrified that I might not get any sleep the night before and be a zombie during the action of the day...

I have seen people being unfairly treated when voting. A woman who happened to be African American was being unduly "processed" at the check-in table before she was given the "a-ok" to vote--I wasn't working this site, just voting at my own polling station, and I think this experience caused me to go volunteer to work the polls. I didn't hear the whole conversation between the woman and the poll workers, so I don't know for sure what went down, but I didn't leave until I saw that she voted. My hope is that it was for a legitimate reason (roll-related) and not racism. I'd like to think that, in Virginia, we don't discriminate, but I've lived in the south most of my life and I know better: discrimination happens everywhere. So I think it's up to us to protect all citizens and make sure not only that they feel safe voting, but that they have every opportunity to vote.

I'm just hoping that this November I get enough sleep the night before and that we get a great turnout. I hope that this process works this time, and that everybody votes. Otherwise, we can't complain about how the world is falling apart if we do nothing to speak up about torture, needless death, environmental protection, illegal wars, a deficit that grows every second, women's rights to their own bodies, better MPG standards on cars, and so on, and on, and on, and on...