I have written a letter which I am sending to major newspapers in swing states.
I live in California.
But I want to talk to you, as swing state voters, about voting.
You are being courted because you have a whole vote, and because both parties can hope to win your hearts and minds. The electoral college has relegated my vote to a fraction of yours. I'm going to take my little piece of a vote and cast it in the voting booth, cast it with all my diminshed might in the direction I want to see my country go in. And if you fail to vote on that November Tuesday because you think the election is in the bag, you will have thrown away power I wish I had.
Now, I'll be voting for John Kerry. I'm looking for a president who does not count himself above the law. And I'm looking for a president who feels that he owes his position, not to just a few privileged people, but to the broad mainstream of American society -- people like my family and my neighbors. And where I see these characteristics is in John Kerry, not in George W. Bush.
You may disagree with me -- but go cast your solid, whole, full vote. Remember, there are voters in this country who don't have one.
I've sent it to the Detroit Free Press, the Miami Herald, the Jacksonville I forget what, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and a newspaper each in Cincinnatti and Cleveland. And I wrote a thousand words, skimming over the gamers explaining the genie class and writing a rather truncated version of the mugging, which I can already see how it should and can be expanded.
Oh, and I did a couple other things -- made progress on the kitchen, and went to a training for the FIrst Flush program. No, Zara, not the kind of flush you've been talking about. This is water quality monitoring for the grassroots coastal organization whose name I always mix up with the government one. During the dry season, they conduct Urban Watch measurements of the runoff going into the bay. And after the first significant rain of the season, which could happen any time now but probably not until October, we skedaddle it out to the storm drain outflows and sample the water. I've never done it before, and I'm a little anxious because they could call at any time, and they almost always call after midnight.
This is part of my ongoing attempt to be a real person.
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But I don't count this as much in the way of activism. It took me a couple of hours to write the thing, pare it down to letters-to-the-editor size, find some newspapers, and send it. I'll do another one tonight or somewhere down the road soonish, so that I'm not sending the exact same letter to everybody.
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