apocalypsos: (courtesy of thefizz)
[personal profile] apocalypsos
Yay! I have now officially voted. (Which is good, because when I left, the line reached approximately to Guam.)

So, my morning so far has looked like this:

5:00 - Roll out of bed.
5:01 - Get up off the floor where I landed and throw on some clothes.
5:10 - After smacking myself to wake myself up, head out to the voting place.
5:12 - Walk towards the voting place wearing a black hoodie and listening to "Mosh."
5:13 - Pause the first time I look around for other people in black hoodies to officially accept the "World's Biggest Idiot" award.
5:30 - Arrive at elementary school voting place. Wonder where all the other black hoodies are.
5:31 - Realize that it's entirely possible the other black hoodies don't even know that 5:30 is a real time and think it was just made up to scare slackers.
5:33 - Am bored. Get thoroughly tempted to call my dad in PA and ask him whom he's voting for. Figure out my father, the world's only terminal night owl, probably got up early enough for his vote to count as being submitted last Tuesday, if he even voted at all.
5:40 - Take out my AlphaSmart fully intended to write. Spend the next ten minutes staring at it trying to remember what it is. Swear off attempting to even think before six in the morning.
5:55 - Watch as pollsters promptly piss off half the line by announcing they're sorting voters in alphabetical order rather than first come, first serve. Become amused when poor, stupid pollster gets yelled at by members of the line for being too doofy to add that he's only doing it with the first ten people or so.
6:00 - Voting begins.
6:02 - As I'm only twelfth or thirteenth in line, yes, that's exactly when I got in there.
6:05 - Leave voting booth. Gaze longingly at the e-voting machine like the technojoy nerd I am.
6:07 - Exit the building. Am promptly confronted by the sight of a line so long it's probably extended itself to New Zealand since I started this post.

So, yay. Now I need to write. And later, to buy booze, because the 7-11 only has crappy alcohol.

Date: 2004-11-02 06:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sabra-n.livejournal.com
Am promptly confronted by the sight of a line so long it's probably extended itself to New Zealand since I started this post.

Oh, God, don't scare me like that. I'm still in here studying Shakespeare. My head is all full of inverted sentences and words that don't exist anymore for a reason. And I really don't want to contemplate waiting in line for 2 hours that I really need to get my homework done for tomorrow.

*wibble*

The things we do for democracy. :)

-blue

Date: 2004-11-02 06:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-swordman.livejournal.com
How come there's so much queuing for voting in USA, do you have like only one place to vote in each town ??

Whatever time I chose to go to vote, there was never more than 5 or 6 people in front of me.

If it's the same each time, why don't they just set up more polls.

Date: 2004-11-02 07:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] thesumo.livejournal.com
Last year, when my mother went to vote in local elections, she was one of two people in our polling place. Today, the line probably goes to the other side of Cambodia. It's a big, bad election today, and more people are voting for a change- typically, people don't vote, because they're lazy or don't care, or whatever great reason they have. <3

Date: 2004-11-02 03:56 pm (UTC)

Date: 2004-11-02 07:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sabra-n.livejournal.com
You make it sound so simple. :)

There's one polling place per voting district. I don't know exactly how many people there are in each voting district, but I imagine it varies depending on where you live. Live in the nice, densely populated Northeast, and you'll have lots of people in your voting district.

As for why they don't "just set up more polls"- it's the machines, silly. For example, my district uses old-fashioned lever machines that work well but aren't really manufactured anymore, except maybe for replacement parts. Buying new machines or switching to a different type is an immensely complicated bureaucratic process, and an iffy one, too, considering how shady those electronic machines are. Look up Diebold memos if you don't believe me.

So...there's lines. Long, long lines. But it's worth the wait.

I feel sick.

-blue

Date: 2004-11-02 03:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-swordman.livejournal.com
ok, thanks for answering :)

Just in case you're in a good answering mood I've got another question why do you keep the electoral college thing-y ? Is it a tradition or something ? Why don't you try something like everybody votes and the guy who got more voices wins ?
Just wondering.

Date: 2004-11-02 08:35 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wenchamok.livejournal.com
It also depends on time of day. The busiest times are the first couple of hours (people voting on their way to work), 11 a.m.-1 p.m.ish (people voting on their lunch break) and late in the day (people voting on their way home from work). If you have flexible schedules or work near your polling precinct, voting becomes somewhat easier. I work five minutes away from my polling site. I took my lunch at 10:30 this morning and was there and back in half an hour. No waiting. Mid-afternoon (2 p.m.ish) seems to be another fairly good time to vote. Then again, I've always been in rather smallish cities/towns when I voted, so that likely affects things as well.

Date: 2004-11-02 03:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-swordman.livejournal.com
Okay, thanks for the answer :)

True I forgot about that. Why do you elect people on working days, I'm just wondering... maybe there's a perfectly good reason.
Here all the elections are held on sundays between 8am and 8pm and as I said, never ever had to queue.

I've got so many questions about your political system like why do you keep the electoral college thing-y why don't you try something like everybody votes and the guy who got more voices wins ?

Date: 2004-11-03 07:54 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wenchamok.livejournal.com
I've got so many questions about your political system like why do you keep the electoral college thing-y why don't you try something like everybody votes and the guy who got more voices wins ?

When someone figures that one out, please let me know too. :) Ditto for the voting on Tuesdays. It's what the law says, so.... *shrug* I personally think the electoral college needs to go, but gods forbid we change 200-some years of tradition.... *eyeroll*

(P.S. Love your icon!)

Date: 2004-11-03 05:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-swordman.livejournal.com
I wonder if not doing that on sundays like here, got something to do with sunday being god's day or something (my theological knowledge is close from nil).

In France like in the USA, some of our laws goes back to 200 years ago (our civil code is from 1804 and, on some issues hasn't really been touched since).
It would be about time that someone decides to dust them in both our countries.

As for the icon, thanks but it's been made by someone far more talented than me (whose name I forgot, if somebody knows it drop me a line) that actually know how to make icons :)
Yours isn't too bad either.

Anyway thanks for all these kind answers and sympathy for you and your country.

Date: 2004-11-02 12:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sasscat.livejournal.com
It reached to New Zealand. I saw it. Waved to some Americans who looked terribly confused to be in a night-time timezone. Handed out torches and blankets and mugs of hot chocolate. Anything I can do to aid democracy.

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