Your friend Jim George thinks you'd be a great addition to Ricochet, so we'd like to offer you a special deal: You can become a member for no initial charge for one month!
Ricochet is a community of like-minded people who enjoy writing about and discussing politics (usually of the center-right nature), culture, sports, history, and just about every other topic under the sun in a fully moderated environment. We’re so sure you’ll like Ricochet, we’ll let you join and get your first month for free. Kick the tires: read the always eclectic member feed, write some posts, join discussions, participate in a live chat or two, and listen to a few of our over 50 (free) podcasts on every conceivable topic, hosted by some of the biggest names on the right, for 30 days on us. We’re confident you’re gonna love it.

It actually makes sense, in a calculating strategic sense. In an emotional sense. it would haunt me to the point of insanity that I sent a signal of approval to such a collection of ideas.
I get it. It will require a really dark sense of irony.
Good luck to ya, Midge.
Tempting…. but as a Machiavellian as I am, I cannot bring myself to do it. My vote would be seen as real support for idiocy, moving the country farther left.
Excellent! Enjoyed it.
For me that would actually be the Party for Socialism and Liberation, which is on the ballot in Washington State, natch.
I’ve always (even with McCain) found a reason to vote for the candidate I marked on the ballot. Romney, who was no conservative by my estimation, was a good man. I could vote affirmatively for a good man. My ballot sits with the presidential portion unmarked still because I cannot find in any of the candidates even the tiniest scintilla of a reason to cast my vote for them. I really am contemplating writing in “you’ve got to be [expletive] kidding me…”
Indeed it does!
Yes, that is a risk. The very first time I voted, I faced a somewhat similar situation in a more local race – a stronger Green Party might have been the only way to break the one-party Democrat rule in my region. Even so, I could not bring myself to do it at the time, for the reason you stated.
This year, though, my absurdist streak is seeing less reason to restrain itself. TKC is right about the dark sense of irony involved.
In that case, have you considered writing in Vermin Supreme?
(and don’t he and @jamesofengland make a handsome couple?)
That is exactly why my ballot sits blank…
Write ins have to be on the approved list here in the People’s Republic and Utopian Paradise of Washington State.
I should add, though, that I don’t consider American common sense dead quite yet, and that one potential benefit of lunacy like Stein’s competing with the Democrats is that it might entice Democrats into more of the kind of overt lunacy regular people still reject. On the other hand, it’s also possible a larger, loonier Green Party (Stein seems pretty eccentric even for a Green) would encourage Democrats to make more centrist appeals again… In either case, I guess a conservative vote for Stein is a bet on there being something salutary about drawing attention to lunacy in its unvarnished form. Sort of like what Vermin Supreme does, except Stein is actually on the ballot.
I would add deprive both Clinton and Trump of achieving a majority of the vote.
The problem with the electoral college is the progressive illidea of winner take all. We need to bring back candidate who wins a congressional district wins an electoral vote. Win a State: two electoral votes.
KP’s right. In most states, a vote for a Vermin Supremacy is a wasted vote, morally and practically superior to a Johnson vote, but inferior to a vote for any other candidate. Of all the predictions I’ve made during this cycle, the inevitability of a Vermin Presidency is the one most likely to have to wait a cycle before being fulfilled. The great hope is Oregon, which was always, for a number of reasons, one of Vermin’s strongest states. If Vermin can deny Clinton Oregon and she fails to reach 270 votes elsewhere, it’s possible that it gets thrown into the House. At that point, the only barrier that remains is persuading enough Representatives to cast aside their hide bound notions of economics and adopt a free pony based approach.
They’ve tried to rig the election because they’re afraid of what a true American would do to their precious PACs and Super PACs, but hope remains with the people of Oregon, or perhaps of New Hampshire.
Wow, finally someone I can vote for here in Oregon. As for the Green Party, let’s not encourage the bastards.
Midge, congrats on the Daily Shot mention.
(The voices in my head respond to your post title with a maniacal laugh.)
(The voices in my head do, too.)