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Nine Reasons Not To Vote...
by The Ministry of Subjectivity Saturday October 02, 2004 at 11:14 PM
smashthespectacle@yahoo.com

.....And Why We Should Build Real Democracy Instead

What we know as Democracy is nothing more than a fleeting moment of illusory power. Once every few years we are allowed to select a new ruler from a virtually identical selection – very similar to our sacrosanct freedom to choose from a myriad of prosaic commodities. In our supposedly democratic political system, our participation rarely ventures beyond the ballot box, resulting in apathy and boredom. Voting extinguishes our yearning for direct action and stultifies our ability to organise together without hierarchy. We are constantly placing our desires in the hands of someone more competent, someone more deserving……..always someone else.

The political system exists as an integral State apparatus. Its primary concern is self-preservation. As such, electoral politics permits only nominal, superficial and ultimately innocuous change. If there was the slightest prospect of the political system inducing systemic change, the State would promptly disassemble it.

Irrespective of a party’s’ alleged progressiveness or the faithful promises of politicians, the most “radical” of governments will only ever be able to implement the most tenuous of reforms. This is because regardless of ones position on the political spectrum, government’s will always be subject to the intolerable pressure of both state and capital. Both these powers have inveterate interests - the continuation of current economic and political structures – and wish to maintain their own existence. If a government was to threaten the interests of these powers, both have effective means – including bureaucratic campaigns and economic disinvestment – at their disposal to deter and prevent such actions.

While governments may implement piecemeal policy changes for the better – such as the reformation of Australia’s immigration policy or the improvement of Medicare – these ameliorations will never challenge capitalism, the state or our hierarchical society. How can problems such as patriarchy, racism, heterosexuality and ecological destruction be solved by the very system that creates them? A government does not posses the power to radically alter economic and institutional structures; this power is monopolised by international commerce, trans-national corporations and their protector – the state. That is, until we recognise and seize our capacity to transform the world and our lives.


By participating in the electoral system you validate government. Will an isolated and exclusive body of politicians – governed by elite powers - ever be capable of making the correct decisions for you, your family or your community? Can anyone accurately represent your interests? In fact, do you really want representatives to make and implement decisions for you? Surely we can resolve dilemmas, discover solutions and determine our own lives without recourse to alienating mediation, that is, indirect action and representation.

Voting is incredibly disempowering as it abdicates control over our own lives by forwarding that control to someone else. By voting we are involved in perpetuating our own oppression and reinforcing the notion that government authority of any mannerism is right, effective or superior to self-governance through voluntary association.


Political abstention does not entail apathy. To the contrary! By refusing to endorse the farce that is representative democracy you can channel your efforts into direct action and the free self-organisation of your workplace, neighbourhood and community. By refusing to vote you oppose the eternally oppressive state and the very concept of representation and take back the right to pursue and achieve your goals through cooperation rather than an external authority.

We are individuals who, knowingly or not, lust authentic life. Renouncing control within the political and economic spheres of society results in losing control of our personal life. If your life appears vacuous or lacking sensation and excitement you can be assured it’s largely due to the fact that we are excluded from decisions and actions that affect our lives profoundly.


We can construct an alternative to the state, capitalism and faux democracies. We can build truly democratic assemblies in our community, self-managed workplaces without bosses and self-managed schools, all replete with passion and colour. We can coordinate transport and health locally from the bottom up, ensuring our needs and desires are met. These can then multiply and evolve, allowing real participation, communication and genuine individual freedom to germinate in the most unexpected of places. As such organisations grow and expand, becoming increasingly self-sufficient, we can federate with others and manage resources through non-hierarchical networks. In doing this, we create a sizeable counter-power, one that can directly confront and destroy the state and all forms of power, reclaiming our world and our lives in the one impetuous grasp.

-The Ministry of Subjectivity

This article will soon appear in leaflet format at http://www.geocities.com/smashthespectacle/

Please distribute the leaflet (or similar) widely, particularly Australian readers as the electoral spectacle is fast approaching.

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LATEST COMMENTS ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
Listed below are the 10 latest comments of 16 posted about this article.
These comments are anonymously submitted by the website visitors.
TITLE AUTHOR DATE
Votes are counted? I feel stupid. Wednesday September 14, 2005 at 12:17 AM
hysteria yvgrvny Sunday October 10, 2004 at 07:49 AM
Three reasons to vote... Sustainable Eugenics Australia Saturday October 09, 2004 at 09:39 PM
dikhead cookie Saturday October 09, 2004 at 07:26 PM
MR simon dalton Thursday October 07, 2004 at 09:24 AM
indymedia tricks mitch Wednesday October 06, 2004 at 02:48 PM
indymedia agenda?? mitch Wednesday October 06, 2004 at 02:43 PM
tactics ..... Wednesday October 06, 2004 at 07:58 AM
31 reasons why not to vote ... and I'm ignoring them Wednesday October 06, 2004 at 07:46 AM
fuk the system no one Tuesday October 05, 2004 at 09:19 PM
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