re old:
Larssen wrote:
The people are failing themselves. In the information age it is easier than ever to inform yourself, but emotional and political preferences are strongly guiding the vast majority to consume only that which confirms their own preconceived notions and self-image.
Which Dilbert, ironically also applies to your views on race and culture...
Voting and politics in the US isn't always straightforward. The pamphlets are incomplete, uninformative, and sometimes wrong. The measures and such on the actual voting sheet are often ill-described and up to the ears in misleading language. If you actually want to "do a research, noob," beyond just cracking open your favorite "progressive guide" or "conservative guide," it could take the entirety of a weekend just separating the wheat from the chaff beyond what pittance you're given. I open like 150+ different links every time: articles, endorsements, guides, fulltexts, etc. I don't think that's very common here, no boast.
I would hazard that it isn't very encouraged. You're supposed to just vote on party lines alone, or people will call you an idiot.
That said, I only voted for one Republican (I think state-level).
e: It's super useful being able to vote from home. I don't have to rifle through a phonebook of garbage seeing who or what is up. I can just check my ballot and take my time.