
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Carl and Vanessa close out the Vote or Be Ruled series with a grounded discussion on why voting still matters—even when it feels futile. They explore voter apathy, political longevity, age in leadership, and how personal participation keeps democracy from decaying into complacency.
⸻
Key Topics & Corrections
Voting Frequency and Civic Power
• There’s always an election happening somewhere in the U.S.—federal, state, or local.
• Correction: “California Proposition 50” is a fictional placeholder in the conversation; no such 2025 measure exists. However, the point stands: local and state propositions often decide key policy shifts.
• Voting is the direct mechanism for accountability. Calls for “term limits” often ignore that voters already have that power—they just don’t use it.
⸻
Career Politicians and the Age Debate
• Carl and Vanessa discuss longevity in office, using examples like Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and President Biden.
• Correction: Pelosi is a representative, not a senator. She has served in the House since 1987.
• The conversation expands to the cognitive and generational gap in leadership—how older politicians may struggle to represent younger constituencies.
• Correction: No sitting U.S. president has died of old age in office; several have died from illness or assassination, but none solely from advanced age.
⸻
Informed Voting and Breaking Tribalism
• Blind party loyalty keeps entrenched incumbents in power.
• Educated voting—based on candidate background, policy record, and lived impact—creates real change.
• Correction: Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) did not die in office; he is still serving as of 2025. (Carl was referring to another member of Congress who passed earlier that year.)
• Abstaining from uninformed voting can be better than supporting a candidate whose platform contradicts your values—but it’s not a substitute for civic engagement.
⸻
Local Elections: The Real Power Base
• Local offices—mayors, school boards, city councils—affect zoning, policing, education, and representation far more immediately than the presidency.
• Correction: In North Carolina and many other states, local election schedules can shift when municipalities vote to align with federal cycles, often to improve turnout or reduce costs.
⸻
2024 Election Breakdown (Corrected Data)
• U.S. population: ~336 million
• Registered voters: ~174 million
• Ballots cast: ~154 million
• Donald Trump: ~77.3 million votes (49.8%)
• Kamala Harris: ~75.0 million votes (48.3%)
• Margin: ≈2.3 million votes
• Trump won via Electoral College, not popular mandate—his total represents roughly 23% of the total U.S. population, not “half the country.”
⸻
Takeaway: The “Why” of Voting
Voting isn’t about believing your single ballot will swing a presidency—it’s about building the conditions that make accountability possible.
Democracy isn’t self-cleaning; if voters don’t show up, the system calcifies under those who do.
⸻
Crayon Box Politics Update: Politician Baseball Cards
Carl announces the upcoming Politician Baseball Cards project—a quick-reference tool for voters to see who represents them, what they’ve done, and how they’ve voted.
A pilot release is planned for summer 2026, with public feedback rounds in early 2026.
⸻
Next Episode Preview
November kicks off the State’s Rights series—exploring how state power, federal limits, and historical battles still define American freedom today.
By Carl AbleCarl and Vanessa close out the Vote or Be Ruled series with a grounded discussion on why voting still matters—even when it feels futile. They explore voter apathy, political longevity, age in leadership, and how personal participation keeps democracy from decaying into complacency.
⸻
Key Topics & Corrections
Voting Frequency and Civic Power
• There’s always an election happening somewhere in the U.S.—federal, state, or local.
• Correction: “California Proposition 50” is a fictional placeholder in the conversation; no such 2025 measure exists. However, the point stands: local and state propositions often decide key policy shifts.
• Voting is the direct mechanism for accountability. Calls for “term limits” often ignore that voters already have that power—they just don’t use it.
⸻
Career Politicians and the Age Debate
• Carl and Vanessa discuss longevity in office, using examples like Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and President Biden.
• Correction: Pelosi is a representative, not a senator. She has served in the House since 1987.
• The conversation expands to the cognitive and generational gap in leadership—how older politicians may struggle to represent younger constituencies.
• Correction: No sitting U.S. president has died of old age in office; several have died from illness or assassination, but none solely from advanced age.
⸻
Informed Voting and Breaking Tribalism
• Blind party loyalty keeps entrenched incumbents in power.
• Educated voting—based on candidate background, policy record, and lived impact—creates real change.
• Correction: Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) did not die in office; he is still serving as of 2025. (Carl was referring to another member of Congress who passed earlier that year.)
• Abstaining from uninformed voting can be better than supporting a candidate whose platform contradicts your values—but it’s not a substitute for civic engagement.
⸻
Local Elections: The Real Power Base
• Local offices—mayors, school boards, city councils—affect zoning, policing, education, and representation far more immediately than the presidency.
• Correction: In North Carolina and many other states, local election schedules can shift when municipalities vote to align with federal cycles, often to improve turnout or reduce costs.
⸻
2024 Election Breakdown (Corrected Data)
• U.S. population: ~336 million
• Registered voters: ~174 million
• Ballots cast: ~154 million
• Donald Trump: ~77.3 million votes (49.8%)
• Kamala Harris: ~75.0 million votes (48.3%)
• Margin: ≈2.3 million votes
• Trump won via Electoral College, not popular mandate—his total represents roughly 23% of the total U.S. population, not “half the country.”
⸻
Takeaway: The “Why” of Voting
Voting isn’t about believing your single ballot will swing a presidency—it’s about building the conditions that make accountability possible.
Democracy isn’t self-cleaning; if voters don’t show up, the system calcifies under those who do.
⸻
Crayon Box Politics Update: Politician Baseball Cards
Carl announces the upcoming Politician Baseball Cards project—a quick-reference tool for voters to see who represents them, what they’ve done, and how they’ve voted.
A pilot release is planned for summer 2026, with public feedback rounds in early 2026.
⸻
Next Episode Preview
November kicks off the State’s Rights series—exploring how state power, federal limits, and historical battles still define American freedom today.