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Skin, Bits, Issues, and Voting

Posted by: Karnythia

So I have to confess that I was really hoping a front runner for the Democrats would emerge on Super Tuesday solely because then I could stop hearing pundits discuss whether I was voting with my vagina or the skin that covers it. See, I’m that elusive creature in the current political landscape. That’s right, I’m a black woman. *cue gasps from the audience* Want to hear something even more shocking? I don’t vote based on either factor. I’m all about the issues. I don’t think I’m alone in that attitude either after looking at yesterday’s results. Despite the hype from various pundits on demographics and what they’d mean to the election, it looks like Americans voted based on something besides race and gender.

Originally I had planned to analyze the platforms of the two front runners after we knew who was most likely to be facing off in November. But, since I have several more months of hearing “Black women are voting based on race” if Obama wins a primary, and “Black women are voting based on gender” if Hillary is in the lead? I’ve had to change direction in the interests of preserving my sanity. I want to pull aside anyone reading this and break some very important news to you. Black women? Don’t share the same brain. In fact women don’t all share the same brain. Men? Not sharing a brain either.

Shockingly voters (whether male,female, LGBT, black, white, Asian, Latino/a or NDN) are usually capable of deciphering which candidates share their personal belief system. And while that belief system may be influenced by gender or by race, there is no central authority dictating that black men may only experience X or white women may only believe Y. This idea that you’re a traitor to your gender or your race based on voting for a candidate that doesn’t look like you is absolutely ridiculous. I’ve been a registered voter since I was 18 and generally candidates don’t look like me. But no one seems to be interested in insisting that voting for the white guy is influenced by race or gender, it’s only when the candidates differ from what we’ve been taught to view as the norm that suddenly our votes can’t possibly be based on issues.

Well, I’m here to tell you that the issues are all that matter, in fact they’re all that should ever matter in an election. Not tears, not spouses, and not the way a name sounds or what’s being circulated in email forwards of dubious provenance. This isn’t a beauty pageant or a popularity contest, this is us choosing a leader that will be in a position to impact the course of the entire world. So if I’m not voting for the candidate you support? Please stop insisting it’s because I’m black or because I’m a woman. It’s because I don’t agree with your candidate’s platform, or I doubt the veracity of their claims that they had no idea that a racist newsletter was going out in their name for nearly 20 years. Respect your neighbor’s right to think for themselves and to choose which issues matter the most to them. Remember when America’s goal was to be a democracy? Maybe we can bring that idea back. This time without the partisan politics.

“Karnythia is a writer, a historian, and occasionally a loud mouth. In between raising hell and raising kids she usually manages to find time to contemplate the meaning of life as a black woman in America.” Her posts on any topic (including a copy of this one) can be found at her LiveJournal.

9 thoughts on “Skin, Bits, Issues, and Voting”

  1. Pingback: Thus wisdom is spread to the masses… « The random musings of a 1973 Original
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  3. Kay says:

    I volunteered to work my Ward’s polling site in New Mexico and it was non stop people. Everyone got to vote and we didn’t leave until the last voter left. The results are still not and we don’t know who won New Mexico, so I’m being patient. I voted for Obama because he is eight days older than me and maybe its time my generation ran things, since the Woodstock generation has made a mess of everything. One of the older Clinton supporters told me I should for vote for Clinton because she is a woman. I replied in that case then we should vote for Condi Rice because she is a woman. Obama seems to have character and his policies are good. My argument is to not vote with your gender or race but also by if the person has character. For me it seems as if for Hillary that this election is all about her and she will do anything to win. Those type of people (male or female, not matter what color) are the type of people that don’t care who they hurt and are more likely to back stab anyone. These people are in every work place through out the world don’t enjoy working with them. Obama seems to be someone I wouldn’t mind working with because he would care about everyone doing well and working towards the same goal. Now I’ve got two Obama lawn signs in my front yard.

  4. Kay says:

    Sorry for the errors in the above post but I’m getting over an ear infection. I don’t have health insurance and I can’t afford a doctor.

  5. thewayoftheid says:

    —Remember when America’s goal was to be a democracy? Maybe we can bring that idea back. This time without the partisan politics.—

    Ever the idealist. Nothing wrong with hope, though. ;)

  6. Diane J Standiford says:

    I just love al the thouhts and passions, anger and joy, this election is bring out in so many people. We are a part of something so much bigger than each of us. The issues are so overwhelming, a city lost, innocent people murdered by our military, middle class turning to poverty, our private phones tapped, children with no health care, our dollar shrinking, our big companies moving overseas, high school, college kids gunned down, gangs growing stonger. polar bears going bye bye; we all sat too long, but now it feels like people care again and realize that we have to fix these problems, not wait for politicians.

  7. joe says:

    I’m a white male. Should I vote my race or my gender?

  8. the angry black woman says:

    It would be wrong of me to suggest that joe just not vote, wouldn’t it? I’ll just settle for suggesting he ponder this question on his own blog.

  9. joe says:

    Actually I was trying to make a point – that nobody asks white males this condescending question.

  10. Pingback: Feminists for Obama « P i l l o w b o o k
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