In other countries, citizens
vote, bindingly, on national issues.
In Denmark a few years back, the people voted not
to join the European Economic Community (EEC) until changes favorable
to the Danes were made in the treaty. Changes were made, another national
referendum was held and only then did the citizens of Denmark decide
to join the EEC.
When the United States faced entry into a similar
economic treaty, NAFTA, the decision was left up to the U.S. Congress
and the Clinton Administration. The strongest voice to break the corporate
media barrier on NAFTA, coming out against the treaty, was that of
Ross Perot. This is like sending Ronald McDonald to a beef convention
to argue on behalf of vegetarianism. It's no wonder Congress voted
to sign on. All other efforts to stop the treaty, particularly those
on behalf of environmental and labor groups, were unjustifiably ignored.
Do you think NAFTA would've passed if the citizens of the U.S. had
been given the opportunity to vote on the issue?
Around the same time the votes were being counted
in Denmark, a national referendum took place in New Zealand. There
the citizens voted on the very political structure which governed
them. The majority of New Zealanders decided to abolish their two
party system in favor of a proportional representation system. Their
former system, similar to that of the present day United States, was
judged to have not withstood the test of time: It was easy to corrupt
and social progress was all too often stagnated. The proportional
system they switched to allows any political party that can gather
15% or more of the vote to have a proportional number of seats in
the New Zealand legislative body. New ideas can now enter their system
much earlier as a result. What would happen here in the U.S. if the
voters could say "see ya!" to the decrepit and boring Democrat vs.
Republican routine?
Now take this notion a step further. What if, within
the confines of the constitution, every major national issue was put
to the vote of the American public? This way we'd learn how U.S. citizens
truly felt about the issues instead of relying on deceptive polls
that often measure half-baked prejudices rather than the ideas which
result from real political involvement. What if American voters
had the final say on healthcare, defense spending and public education?
It's not surprising to find that in Australia, New Zealand, Denmark,
Switzerland and other countries with periodic national referendums,
there are also things such as: little or no military spending, guaranteed
publically-funded healthcare, and higher education free of tuition
and the need for student loans. The citizens of these nations pay
for this type of system out of their taxes and they do so willingly.
We know this for a fact: they themselves decided what their taxes
would be spent on when they were at the polls.
What do we Americans get for our tax dollars?
A big, fat, bloated military. Next time you read about
a military base closing here at home or abroad, and you thank your
lucky stars that they're finally cutting the military budget, remember
there are still new weapons systems being developed and top secret
space shuttle missions going up now and again. Even Dan Rather will
tell you, right there on the evening news, when space shuttle missions
are top secret. Accepting this, we can ask ourselves two questions.
First, what the hell are they doing up there that we can't know about?
Next, who the hell is paying for it? We can only speculate on the
answer to the first question, but number two is easy: You, the taxpayer,
are footing the bill for all space shuttle missions, top secret or
not, and these missions are costing you a fortune.
Running a distant second to the military in the "sucking
up of our tax dollars" category is the penalizing of the American
people for national debt, not to mention passing on to them the cost
of every banking scandal, from sea to shining sea.
Our taxes are not being used to benefit American society.
Putting the vote to the people could change all this. However, as
long as the decisions are left to politicians who get elected thanks
mainly to the corporate financing of their campaigns and not because
of any real public debate....we may never know.
How can the American people consider the U.S. political
system the best one around when it doesn't allow it's own citizens
the vote on national issues?
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