Vote Down Ballot - The Presidency Isn't The Only Office Of Importance!

Vote down ballot - the presidency isn't the only office of importance!

Time for another political essay. If you’re not an American citizen or able to vote in this upcoming election, my apologies.

I make no secret that I fucking despise Donald Trump. I actually like Hillary Clinton, which seems to be a weird rarity considering the amount of good work she’s done and the fact that all of the bad press about her is the result of the Republicans trying (and failing) to tear her and her husband down for thirty years.

Trump is now trailing far behind Clinton, which I consider a cause for celebration. But it is NOT a cause for complacency.

The biggest landslide election in US history was the election of Warren G. Harding in 1920, when Harding won with about 60% of the vote to his opponent’s 34.2%.

Some polls are reporting Trump with as little as 35% of the popular vote right now.

If turnout is large enough and loud enough, we can make Donald Trump the least supported major candidate in US history. Since the recording of him bragging about sexual assault came out, he has turned to dragging the whole election into the mud by striking back at Bill Clinton’s affairs; the usual goal of that kind of tactic is to drive down voter turnout. Trump’s band of Redcaps is pretty much guaranteed to vote, so they figure if they reduce turnout enough, they’ll win.

I want their plan to fail. I want their plan to fail so fucking spectacularly that NO ONE will dare to run for President on a platform of thinly-veiled fascism again.

The Republicans thought the House of Representatives was safe this year. In 2010, they gerrymandered the shit out of district lines to keep the House safe for them for at least ten years. But there’s a problem with gerrymandering: if the demographics shift unexpectedly between censuses, then suddenly a lot of districts wind up flipping against the party that the gerrymandering was meant to support. And Donald Trump is driving away the Republicans’ most secure core of voters, the evangelicals. And as I’ve said before: Congress is MORE important than the presidency.

If turnout is strong enough, and if people vote down ballot, the possibility exists for a massive upset. A Democratic presidency, a Democratic House, a Democratic Senate. They’re within our grasp. All you need to do, voters, is show up.

Motherfuckers don’t want you to vote. Young people, people of color, women, LGBTQ+ folks–they want you to be scared away, or to be convinced that voting doesn’t matter. They want your voice silenced. Don’t give the fuckers the satisfaction of letting it happen.

GO VOTE. VOTE DOWN-BALLOT. MAKE TRUMP THE BIGGEST LOSER IN US HISTORY.

IF YOU CAN’T BE BOTHERED TO VOTE OUT OF CONVICTION, THEN DO IT OUT OF SPITE.

More Posts from Stubborn-turtle-blog and Others

8 years ago

I'd never heard about this before

Islam is the toughest religion to leave because of the restrictions and consequences associated with leaving. I know there are a lot of people out there contemplating leaving Islam and are already feeling agnostic. My piece of advice to them would be to not come out publicly with your apostasy. You can leave Islam if it feels like the right move, but if you are afraid of the consequences, then keep a secret. There are many ex-Muslims on tumblr, such as myself, you can speak to anonymously if you just need help or someone to share your views with.

8 years ago

And yet GDP is a fairly useless metric

State-level GDP, 2015

State-level GDP, 2015


Tags
8 years ago
Four Regions With The Same GDP

Four regions with the same GDP

8 years ago
Happy Ada Lovelace day - here's why we should all remember her
Today is Ada Lovelace Day. Who's that? Just the first computer programmer. Ever.

Lovelace’s friend Charles Babbage designed a concept for a machine he called the “Analytical Engine” – essentially a mechanical computer that would have relied on punch cards to run programs. He recruited Lovelace to translate some notes from one of his lectures, but while Lovelace was translating she added to the notes herself.

The notes grew to three times their original length, as Lovelace described what many call the first computer program. Because of funding issues, the machine was not built during her and Babbage’s lifetimes.

But Lovelace’s published article on the Analytical Engine later became a source of inspiration for Alan Turing’s work to build the first modern computers in the 1940s.

Women are sometimes considered outsiders in the science and technology fields, but Lovelace and many of the female computer programmers who followed her are proof that this paucity is a function of society, not capability. We forget or never learn about the female “computers” who programmed early mechanical machines in World War II, or that the women’s magazine Cosmopolitan once ran articles suggesting that women were perfectly suited for programming.

If the lack of acknowledgement of women’s contributions to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields grinds your gears, then Ada Lovelace should be one of the first names you go to right that wrong.

Further reading:

Wikipedia profile

10 Things You May Not Know About Ada Lovelace

What if there were more women in tech?

Why we ALL need to celebrate Ada Lovelace Day


Tags
8 years ago
Elevated Walkway And Visitor Centre Added To 12th Century Abbey Ruins By Binario Architectes »
Elevated Walkway And Visitor Centre Added To 12th Century Abbey Ruins By Binario Architectes »
Elevated Walkway And Visitor Centre Added To 12th Century Abbey Ruins By Binario Architectes »
Elevated Walkway And Visitor Centre Added To 12th Century Abbey Ruins By Binario Architectes »

Elevated walkway and visitor centre added to 12th century abbey ruins by Binario Architectes »


Tags
8 years ago

A Brief Intro To Pre-historic Egypt

Humans have lived in the Nile River valley since at least 30,000 BCE. Stone age communities hunted, gathered, and fished in the fertile river valley. Then, around 5,500 BCE, agricultural communities emerged. Over the next 3,400 years the communities became self-governing. Each community developed independently and at different rates politically, economically, socially, and culturally.  Then suddenly, by 3,100 BCE, Egypt was politically unified with a highly efficient bureaucratic system and elaborate kingship rites worshiping a single ruler. How the transition happened between each of these stages of Egyptian history is an argument historians and archaeologists are still having.


Tags
8 years ago

debugging is a science. a really boring science, but a science nonetheless.

hypothesis

procedure

results

conclusion

repeating when you don’t get the result you were god damn looking for, why is it still printing that, there are zero print statements in this program what the fuck


Tags
8 years ago
Computer Room Not Found

Computer Room Not Found

8 years ago

It’s Friday...Come Space Out with Us

It’s Friday…which seems like a great excuse to take a look at some awesome images from space.

First, let’s start with our home planet: Earth.

It’s Friday...Come Space Out With Us

This view of the entire sunlit side of Earth was taken from one million miles away…yes, one MILLION! Our EPIC camera on the Deep Space Climate Observatory captured this image in July 2015 and the picture was generated by combining three separate images to create a photographic-quality image.

Next, let’s venture out 4,000 light-years from Earth.

It’s Friday...Come Space Out With Us

This image, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, is not only stunning…but shows the colorful “last hurrah” of a star like our sun. This star is ending its life by casting off its outer layers of gas, which formed a cocoon around the star’s remaining core. Our sun will eventually burn out and shroud itself with stellar debris…but not for another 5 billion years.

The material expelled by the star glows with different colors depending on its composition, its density and how close it is to the hot central star. Blue samples helium; blue-green oxygen, and red nitrogen and hydrogen.

Want to see some rocks on Mars?

It’s Friday...Come Space Out With Us

Here’s an image of the layered geologic past of Mars revealed in stunning detail. This color image was returned by our Curiosity Mars rover, which is currently “roving” around the Red Planet, exploring the “Murray Buttes” region.

In this region, Curiosity is investigating how and when the habitable ancient conditions known from the mission’s earlier findings evolved into conditions drier and less favorable for life.

Did you know there are people currently living and working in space?

It’s Friday...Come Space Out With Us

Right now, three people from three different countries are living and working 250 miles above Earth on the International Space Station. While there, they are performing important experiments that will help us back here on Earth, and with future exploration to deep space.

This image, taken by NASA astronaut Kate Rubins shows the stunning moonrise over Earth from the perspective of the space station.

Lastly, let’s venture over to someplace REALLY hot…our sun.

It’s Friday...Come Space Out With Us

The sun is the center of our solar system, and makes up 99.8% of the mass of the entire solar system…so it’s pretty huge. Since the sun is a star, it does not have a solid surface, but is a ball of gas held together by its own gravity. The temperature at the sun’s core is about 27 million degrees Fahrenheit (15 million degrees Celsius)…so HOT!

This awesome visualization appears to show the sun spinning, as if stuck on a pinwheel. It is actually the spacecraft, SDO, that did the spinning though. Engineers instructed our Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) to roll 360 degrees on one axis, during this seven-hour maneuver, the spacecraft took an image every 12 seconds.

This maneuver happens twice a year to help SDO’s imager instrument to take precise measurements of the solar limb (the outer edge of the sun as seen by SDO).

Thanks for spacing out with us…you may now resume your Friday. 

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • disabledbisexualfroggy
    disabledbisexualfroggy liked this · 2 years ago
  • curiousorigins
    curiousorigins liked this · 5 years ago
  • nofuckyouthanks
    nofuckyouthanks reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • nofuckyouthanks
    nofuckyouthanks liked this · 5 years ago
  • poeticlytrash
    poeticlytrash reblogged this · 5 years ago
  • sinstersadfemme
    sinstersadfemme liked this · 6 years ago
  • itchwitchsandwich-blog
    itchwitchsandwich-blog liked this · 6 years ago
  • recoveringdeviant
    recoveringdeviant liked this · 6 years ago
  • casualmuffinpastadiplomat-blog
    casualmuffinpastadiplomat-blog liked this · 6 years ago
  • thesunwillcxmeouttomorrow
    thesunwillcxmeouttomorrow liked this · 7 years ago
  • rhysreece
    rhysreece liked this · 7 years ago
  • gofforiluubb-blog
    gofforiluubb-blog liked this · 8 years ago
  • psychopat70
    psychopat70 liked this · 8 years ago
  • ghostnoahx
    ghostnoahx liked this · 8 years ago
  • heavens-vault
    heavens-vault liked this · 8 years ago
  • hi-im-a-daughterof-somone
    hi-im-a-daughterof-somone liked this · 8 years ago
  • thedepthsofyourself
    thedepthsofyourself liked this · 8 years ago
  • ergoincognito
    ergoincognito reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • frogsrmammals
    frogsrmammals liked this · 8 years ago
  • straightonuntilmorning
    straightonuntilmorning liked this · 8 years ago
  • straightonuntilmorning
    straightonuntilmorning reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • popcorn-fart
    popcorn-fart liked this · 8 years ago
  • exphautaz
    exphautaz reblogged this · 8 years ago
  • a-random-blue-bookworm
    a-random-blue-bookworm liked this · 8 years ago
  • kai-kryppz
    kai-kryppz liked this · 8 years ago

Gaming, Science, History, Feminism, and all other manners of geekery. Also a lot of dance

243 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags