In the fifth month of the year, on the
appointed day, you shall hold a solemn ceremony. This is the ritual of
sacrifice you shall make.
You shall shake yourself from the dust and
arise; lo, even before the morning newspaper is before your dwelling you shall
have your loins girded. You shall fill
your backpack with mule-loads of snacks and books. But woe unto you for packing
your snacks into a paper bag: a paper bag makes more noise than all the
chariots of Egypt, and you shall wake the family.
And you shall make haste on that morn to the
polling place by dawn or 6 AM, which ever seems earlier. For you are charged this day with setting up
iVotronic machines; it has been decreed that you shall follow the ordinances
found in the Election Officers Reference Manual. You shall not delay to tape all manner of
official notices to the wall, for this is democracy: you shall post an exceeding mighty number of documents
that no one will read. Lo, you shall also affix your signature to documents
more numerous than the stars. You shall
swear unto the Board of Elections that you did not bet on the outcome of the
election.
Behold! There shall be tidings of great joy
that morning when you find that there are only six absentee ballots, for they are
vexatious and must be tallied by hand.
You shall have set before you the file-card
box of democracy. In it shall you find
the voter cards of both parties; you shall not separate them by the house of
their party affiliation. The cards for Dems and Reps shall be joined together
in one box, for it is an abomination to ask the voters to state their party out
loud. In a great kindness to you, the wife of your Judge of Election has seen
fit to combine the voter cards of both parties into the one box; lo, she has
even alphabetized the cards for you.
This is just and merciful.
Take you the book of all the congregation of
the registered voters, and open it before you, to check signatures. If an independent voter shall sojourn among
you, saying to you, “I wish to vote today,” you must send him away. If the voter’s wrath burns hot, you shall say
to him, “Why is your countenance fallen? You have not chosen wisely: In order to vote
you must be either D or R this day. This
is the way your forefathers have designed the primary election. Just because you are a youth, ruddy and
good-looking, do not think that you know better than your elders. You may write to the ancient masters in the
State House and Senate and exact from them an open primary.”
And the young voter will say unto you, “Ha. That’s
ridiculous. I am not writing to the State
House or the State Senate.” He shall depart from you, nursing his anger
within him. And you shall hang your head with shame at the ordinances of your
state, which seem to be leftover from the 18th century.
And on that day, the wolf shall dwell with
the lamb; Republican shall sit next to Democrat and make pleasant and bland
conversation all the day long. Behold,
how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity! You shall speak of gardening, and crock pot
recipes, of yard work and travel to Nebraska; of shoes, and ships, and sealing
wax, of cabbages and kings, and why the sea is boiling hot, and whether pigs
have wings.
Be careful to obey this commandment, lest you
incur the wrath of the Board of Elections: you shall not speak of partisan
politics; neither may you wear clothing endorsing your candidate. Even though your very name is on the ballot
for an office one notch below Catcher of Dogs, your mouth may not utter of it.
Photos are strictly forbidden in the polling place. I downloaded this sample ballot beforehand. |
As the day approaches the fifth hour of the
evening, a great, momentous and special vote must take place. This is the vote for pizza. And lo, you and your fellow poll-workers shall
choose pizza with pineapple and Canadian bacon. Likewise shall you choose pizza
with mushrooms and peppers. This is what
democracy looks like.
Primary election day texting to Younger Daughter, who had the whole day off of school to lounge around. |
Let not your hearts be troubled when you find
that by the noon hour, you have processed 55 voters which is 11 voters per hour. Though at the poll closing,
after 13 hours of mind-numbing boredom, there are only 139 ballots cast, do not
be weary of democracy. The system shall
render to the populace what they deserve.
If the people of the land wish for a mere fifteen percent of the
eligible voters to decide who shall judge and who shall direct the school
board, then they shall neither complain nor gnash their teeth. If the citizens of the county wish to pay
$175,000+ of their own tax money for an election they won’t show up for, then
lo, that is their problem.
- The Book of
Admonitions 5:16-6:20
Post
election-day notes:
This blog post is
not nearly as long and boring as primary election day is for a poll worker.
Also, autocorrect
changes “primary” to “Pretty Mary.”
Also, I won the
primary election for the office I was running for. (It's not too hard when you are running against somebody named "Write-in.") This means that, come November, I have to do
this all over again, except it will be darker when I get to the polling place
at 6 AM.
-->
Also, you really
should vote in the primary election. For
the sake of democracy. I mean, you’ve
already paid for it, you might as well vote.
1 comment:
"This is what democracy looks like"
Show me what democracy looks like!
I was delighted when the band at one of the recent marches had the tuba "chant" this refrain along with us.
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