i voted 3rd party because the candidate aligned well with my fiscally conservative, socially tolerant ideals.and because Libertarians need 2% of the vote to stay on the ballot next time.
11/4/2012 6:10:09 PM
Last I read 2,742,100 people early voted in North Carolina this time as compared to 2,616,779 in 2008, or 125,321 more votes. Though a higher turnout could potentially make that 2% harder to reach, I expect the Libertarians will make it, which I hope they do.Greens have a harder time, without good turnout they depend on petitions to get on the ballot I believe, which I've signed but I don't see them getting a turnout big enough to get on the ballot.
11/4/2012 6:17:39 PM
GO GO GARY OAK
11/4/2012 6:18:18 PM
11/4/2012 8:21:42 PM
When Romney wins, despite polling showing its unlikely, because of electronic voting machines switching votes due to being compromised, maybe we will get reform
11/4/2012 8:29:21 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redskins_Rule
11/4/2012 8:48:28 PM
I voted for Johnson. I decided that for once I was going to vote for someone I believed in the most. I understand the two party system, but in my mind I guess I don't understand how it will never change until enough people get fed up enough to just vote for whomever they want or agree with the most versus the lesser of the two evils.I know I'm basically repeating what others said, though. Regardless, I am actually really happy with my decision. Voted for a Republican senator, libertarian representative, and a few Democrat(ish) judges. I also voted for Ron Swanson.
11/4/2012 11:32:26 PM
11/5/2012 7:17:43 PM
11/5/2012 8:18:12 PM
Chicken or egg argument here.I just vote for the turkey
11/5/2012 8:27:20 PM
^^Yes it can, it's called a Constitutional amendment, no "first-past-the-post" to worry about there.
11/6/2012 5:11:22 AM
11/6/2012 5:58:55 AM
btttI'm Krallum and I approved this message.
11/6/2012 7:27:24 PM