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Actually, Chomsky doesn't discourage people from voting. When I saw him on C-Span a while back, he said he almost always votes in local elections, but not always higher level ones. He supported Nader in 2000, has signed fund-raising letters for the Greens, but has said he believes there is enough of a difference to justify getting a Dem in office in 2004. He said he favors "tactical voting" whereby people in "safe states" vote for the Green nominee and people in "swing states" for the Dem.
Personally, while I'm a big fan of Chomsky's in general, this doesn't make sense to me. Given his own definition of democracy, you should vote for people who will represent the things you want or at least who don't represent policies you are absolutely opposed to. That is to say, for example, that if Howard Dean gets the Democratic nomination, and you disagree with Dean's explicit plans to keep the troop in Iraq for a long time "to get the job done," then you shouldn't vote for him. Although of course if you do support continuing the war but think Duhbya isn't handling it well, it makes perfect sense to vote for him.
Don't get me wrong, I don't discourage voting. The right to vote is a hard-won gain by our side, and you'll pry my ballot from my cold dead finers. But I don't think one is taking democracy very seriously if they vote for people who they know will carry out policies that contradict everything they (the voter) stand for. I think the best way to dump Bush would be for the Dems in Congress (assuming they re-gain a majority in November) to simply impeach him and the next several people in the line of succession for his numerous war crimes and violations of the constitution.
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