Guy Chamberlin
Well-known member
But again, it is about what YOU have done??
Well I've voted in every election available to me since 1980. When I was out of the country one year during a primary, I voted at the U.S. embassy.
As a 9 year old I was fascinated by the 1968 presidential election and can still name the primary candidates on both sides. I think I saw it like a sports competition. I wanted RFK as my starting quarterback.
I was on Jr. High Student Council, and my best friend and I were President and Vice-President of the 11th Grade. I don't recall any of our campaign promises, but my position allowed me to be a judge for the cheerleading tryouts. Our posters were pretty great.
In college I went to a protest against Jerry Falwell who was giving a speech at the Nebraska State Capitol. I stuck around to argue with some of his acolytes and got to meet Jerry himself.
I moved to San Francisco where going to protests was as simple as falling out of bed. But I probably attended only one or two. I generally agreed with the cause, but never cared much for the speakers. I'm not much of a chanter, either.
2020 was the first year I involved myself in campaigning, joining a letter writing group to registered Democrats who hadn't voted in recent elections. I did that again this year, for the better part of an afternoon. In 2020 I also spent two hours phone-canvasing some mid-Atlantic states. It was fascinating and harrowing at the same time, and I decided I didn't want to do it again.
I donate a bit of money here and there.
I've written and punched up a few speeches for a U.S. Congressman, a network news executive, and a group that had to testify before Congress.
I was recently the co-president of the San Rafael High Drama Boosters, which earned me a seat on the PTO board, where I was often the only male and forced to endure the flirtations and harassment of the PTO mothers. But we got that new curtain for main theater, goddamnit.
When the internet came along, I jumped into all kinds of political discussions. Like here, they weren't political sites per se, but places were politics invariably broke out. It starts to suck the life out of you. On Facebook I now ignore 90% of the political posts, and engage with about 10%. HuskerBoard is the only actual forum I visit. As I've mentioned before, HuskerBoard P&R is pretty remarkable for the quality of content and sanity of its posters.
I also read books and magazine articles on a pretty wide swath of political and politically adjacent subjects. It gives me a depth and breadth of knowledge that appears to carry zero weight against the guy who found something another guy posted on Twitter.
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