Voting has always been the equivalent of playing the lottery, in the that the odds of your single vote making the difference is very, very small. Even the ancient Athenians knew that. Nobody with any grasp of statistics denies that.
But if you're implying that even the race for your local school board, or mayor, or city councilman seat, all of which are in odd years, and which are often nonpartisan, and which are decided by a few hundred votes, are as corrupt as 2020, then you're as wrong as can be.
It depends. In a local government race where these guys set your property taxes, it certainly does.
........does it really though
Voting has always been the equivalent of playing the lottery, in the that the odds of your single vote making the difference is very, very small. Even the ancient Athenians knew that. Nobody with any grasp of statistics denies that.
But if you're implying that even the race for your local school board, or mayor, or city councilman seat, all of which are in odd years, and which are often nonpartisan, and which are decided by a few hundred votes, are as corrupt as 2020, then you're as wrong as can be.
So what exactly ARE you saying, eh?