prog: (moonbat)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2006-11-04 06:27 pm

Ballot info for local yokels

Welcome back to LiveJournal! Enjoy your stay.



This makes me very pleased: If you're voting in Massachusetts next week, you can use this website to plug in your address and see what your ballot will look like, including referenda. Heretofore I have always been surprised by a couple of these questions, and peeved. I have wanted to see exactly this service for many election cycles.

http://www.wheredoivotema.com/bal/myelectioninfo.php



I will throw in the rule of thumb that I think I picked up from, erm, either [livejournal.com profile] cortezopossum or [livejournal.com profile] wrog (both of whom are electionistas in their respective communities), that if a referendum doesn't make any sense to you even after you think about and (if you get the chance) research it, a good rule of thumb is to vote NO.

This seems pretty obvious, since the alternative is basically playing a game of "what does this button do?" with your vote, but I hadn't seen it spelled out like that in the past, and I can dig it.



My hope and anger are both rising together as Tuesday draws closer. They are both definitely exceeding levels seen in 2004. I am continually crafting and refining my Schrodinger's Cat of an LJ post for that evening, at once a cathartic victory howl and grave-pissing, and a vomiting of hate-fueled rage calling for the obliteration of the enemy. I will not actually post it because in either eigenstate it's rather horrible, really.

Anyway, I am very excited.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2006-11-05 04:47 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, I think that's the idea. The assumption here is that NO always means "Whatever this is, keep it the way it is."

But OTOH it's not the same as not voting on it, because a NO vote cancels out a YES, were a NULL doesn't. Hm.

[identity profile] cortezopossum.livejournal.com 2006-11-05 05:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Not necessarily. Every once in a while we get some goof-ball referenda questions with double and triple negatives so nobody is ever really sure what they're voting for -- and as election officials we technically aren't allowed to help the voter understand the question.