ShotgunBlast wrote:You say you can't vote for the improbable, yet you're going to pull the lever for someone who has been behind in this race 10-12 points since it started.
You ask how Gillespie became the nominee in the first place. Well the Virginian GOP decided that a few people knew what was better for Virginia and chose a convention process instead of a primary where the people have a voice.
Face it: the Virginia GOP left you. Fortunately, the Libertarian Party has been making inroads in Virginia politics, between fielding candidates for the state GA and governor's elections last year, along with Senate and House candidates this year. You say you want a change and to send a message. I'm thinking voting for improbable Ed will only send the message that you want more candidates like him from the Virginia GOP. You may not want to vote for Sarvis because he has no chance of winning, but neither does improbable Ed. However, Sarvis only needs 10% of the vote for a win in Virginia politics - attaining major party status where they don't have to spend tons of resources just to get on the ballot and can field more candidates in races (many that currently go uncontested) that line up with your self-described Libertarian views.
Something to think about.
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I have a hard time seeing Sarvis as being an alternative to the admittedly grim prospect of voting for a less-than 100% suitable candidate. Sorry, but as I see it, Gillespie is STILL the least objectionable alternative. Hell, even if he can't name 3 federal programs he would end, Warner can't name 3 he wouldn't expand; and Sarvis seems to me to be not only questionable as to his ideology, bona fides as a libertarian, and his likely policies (or lack thereof), but he would also be an outsider to both caucuses and totally outside the power structure and therefore inconsequential and without influence. The day might come when the thing to do is put libertarians or other 3rd party people in office, but Sarvis is clearly the wrong man in the wrong place at the wrong time. The only thing I'd be confident about surmising about Mr. Sarvis is that here's another guy who wants to hold national office however he can get there. He'd set the libertarian cause back 100 years.
From the NATIONAL REVIEW, 10/31/2013:
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/3 ... -c-w-cooke
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"Sarvis a Libertarian? Nope
In polite society at least, questioning the fundamental claims that people make about themselves is rather frowned upon. If a person says that he is a Catholic, then one is expected to believe that he is a Catholic, even if there is no evidence for this whatsoever. If a person says he is a conservative when he clearly agrees with not a single conservative position, we are likewise expected to smile and nod grimly. “No, you’re not!” is not a socially acceptable response to erroneous self-description, alas.
There is some virtue in this convention, I suppose, even if it is just that it helps to keep the peace. But there is an awful lot more virtue in the integrity of our political language and terminology. This is to say that if we lose the capacity to demand that words and actions remain linked, then we will lose our ability to discuss current affairs with any meaning. And that, I’m afraid, will be disastrous.
It is with this in mind that I have taken a certain exception to Robert Sarvis, the supposed “Libertarian” candidate for governor of Virginia. “Libertarian” is, admittedly, a fairly broad term, and one that is claimed by a considerable number of people across the ideological spectrum — sometimes reasonably and sometimes farcically. Nevertheless, whatever the various internecine disagreements that surface inexorably among its adherents, it does have a core meaning, and one that I would argue is generally understood. A majority of people know approximately what the definition of “libertarian” is, I would venture, and know also which position in any given race they might expect the “libertarian” candidate to stake out.
I can only imagine, therefore, that the better-informed voters in Virginia have been somewhat perplexed by Robert Sarvis, for in recent weeks he appears to have been doing his level best to give the impression that his party label is incidental. In a recent Reason interview, Sarvis explained that he was “not into the whole Austrian type, strongly libertarian economics,” preferring “more mainstream economics” instead. The candidate expanded on this during an oddly defensive interview with MSNBC’s Chuck Todd, in which he seemed put off not so much by “strongly libertarian economics” as by libertarian economics per se. As governor, Sarvis told Todd, he would be hesitant to cut taxes, unsure as to how he might “reduce spending,” and open to indulging the largest piece of federal social policy since 1965 by expanding Virginia’s Medicaid program. I am generally a critic of the tendency of small-government types to try to purge their ranks of those deemed sufficiently impure, but I must confess that this interview left even me wondering whether Sarvis is in need of a dictionary.
Worse yet was Sarvis’s rambling interview with the Virginia Prosperity Project, in which the candidate expressed his enthusiasm for increasing gas levies, and for establishing a “vehicle-miles-driven tax.” It strikes me that it is almost impossible to square such a measure with any remotely coherent “libertarian” position on that most sacred of rights: privacy. Virginia’s mooted VMT plan requires the installation of government GPS systems in private cars — an astonishingly invasive proposal. Even if this isn’t what Sarvis has in mind, the fact remains that there is simply no way of determining how far an individual has driven without the government’s checking. On Twitter, an amusing fellow with a username not fit for print in this column responded to this idea by contending: “I’m no extremist, but if you put a black box in my vehicle and tax me per mile I will burn down everything you’ve ever loved.” What sort of “libertarian” doesn’t feel this way?"
"The Bill of Rights is what the people are entitled to against every government, and what no just government should refuse, or rest on inference." -Thomas Jefferson
Gun-crazy? Me? I'd say the gun-crazy ones are the ones that don’t HAVE one.