• Where (Not) to Vote for the Green Party

    As a skeptic, I have profound concerns regarding the Green Party. They have promoted “the use of complementary and alternative therapies such as herbal medicines, homeopathy, naturopathy, traditional Chinese medicine” and claimed that “[c]hronic conditions are often best cured by alternative medicine,” in their official platform statement on social justice in health care. They have a long history of fear-mongering on GMOs, currently “support[ing] a moratorium until safety can be demonstrated by independent (non-corporate funded), long-term tests for food safety,” despite widespread scientific consensus that GMOs are safe for consumption. The party even opposes the fluoridation of drinking water in their most recent statement on ecological sustainability.

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    To put something of a fine point on it, the Green Party is the party of woo. I do not expect to see self-identified skeptics flocking to their banner any time soon. Not all atheists are skeptics, though, and my heavily secular social feeds are telling me that there is support building for #DemExit among some disaffected secular voters.

    I’m not sure what “100” is supposed to denote here, but probably you get the idea. Jill Stein actually needs to get to 270 (electoral votes) and it is at least theoretically possible that she could, given that she is already on the ballot in most of the heavily populated states. As of this month, the dark green states are where the Green Party will be on the ballot in November:

    final_ba_map-ppt-Vermont

    Realistically, though, we cannot reasonably expect Stein will actually win any of these states. She may well have an election-altering effect, however, just as the Green Party did back in 2000 when they helped put George W. Bush over the top in the key swing state of Florida.

    Might history repeat itself this time around? In grey we have the so-called “tipping point states,” that is, those which are most likely to swing the 2016 election, according to FiveThirtyEight:

    Via 270toWin
    Map generated via 270toWin

    Taking these two maps together, we can see that the places where a vote for Jill Stein is most likely to help tip the election (in favor of Donald Trump) are Florida, Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Colorado, and New Jersey. If you live and vote in any of those six states, please carefully consider whether you are willing to risk tipping the election in favor of the least qualified and most unpredictable candidate in living memory. If you live anywhere else, go ahead and let your freak flag fly.

    Category: PoliticsSkepticism

    Article by: Damion Reinhardt

    Former fundie finds freethought fairly fab.