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Related: About this forumGet Off Your Cushion and Get Involved (dharma teaching)
Do the Nitty-gritty Work of Supporting Democratic Elections
As Buddhists, we take up the work of the community. We weed the garden, we wash the dishes. Dan Ellsberg (the peace activist best known for giving the top-secret Pentagon papers to the press) says, "Don't be afraid to do what seems trivial or humble. Don't think: This is a job for somebody else who isn't as busy as I am. "
One way to take up the work of the community is by registering voters. When we register people to vote, especially in neighborhoods where registration is low, we are literally spreading democracy and giving people a bit more power. Many people have absorbed cynicism and hopelessness from the media: a feeling that nothing will change no matter what they do, or that all of the candidates are alike and will do nothing to help ordinary people's lives. On every ballot are at least some issues that are immediately relevant to everyonepublic transportation, schools, public health, prisonsbut often, most people have not heard of these issues. Registering people to vote and talking with them one-on-one about issues is a kind of dharma teaching because it shows people how we all have some measure of responsibility for Out world and an opportunity to participate in making decisions.
At the present time, it is particularly important to register voters in the sixteen states in which the projected vote in the presidential election is uncertain. Anyone of these states could determine who is our next president: Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. If you don't already live in a swing state, plan a vacation or visit friends and family in one of the swing states. Go to www.drivingvotes.org for excellent information about how to help with voter registration in these states.
Sign up to be an election monitor and work for clean elections. See Public Campaign's website: www.publicampaign.org. Volunteer to help out with the campaign of a candidate you support. And beyond the election, work for a cause that speaks to your deepest values: welfare rights, abolition of the death penalty, music in the schools...
As Buddhists, we take up the work of the community. We weed the garden, we wash the dishes. Dan Ellsberg (the peace activist best known for giving the top-secret Pentagon papers to the press) says, "Don't be afraid to do what seems trivial or humble. Don't think: This is a job for somebody else who isn't as busy as I am. "
One way to take up the work of the community is by registering voters. When we register people to vote, especially in neighborhoods where registration is low, we are literally spreading democracy and giving people a bit more power. Many people have absorbed cynicism and hopelessness from the media: a feeling that nothing will change no matter what they do, or that all of the candidates are alike and will do nothing to help ordinary people's lives. On every ballot are at least some issues that are immediately relevant to everyonepublic transportation, schools, public health, prisonsbut often, most people have not heard of these issues. Registering people to vote and talking with them one-on-one about issues is a kind of dharma teaching because it shows people how we all have some measure of responsibility for Out world and an opportunity to participate in making decisions.
At the present time, it is particularly important to register voters in the sixteen states in which the projected vote in the presidential election is uncertain. Anyone of these states could determine who is our next president: Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. If you don't already live in a swing state, plan a vacation or visit friends and family in one of the swing states. Go to www.drivingvotes.org for excellent information about how to help with voter registration in these states.
Sign up to be an election monitor and work for clean elections. See Public Campaign's website: www.publicampaign.org. Volunteer to help out with the campaign of a candidate you support. And beyond the election, work for a cause that speaks to your deepest values: welfare rights, abolition of the death penalty, music in the schools...
More: http://www.tricycle.com/special-section/ten-practices-change-world?utm_source=Tricycle&utm_campaign=8a75bb878b-Daily_Dharma_February_25_201602_25_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_1641abe55e-8a75bb878b-307345881
Canvassing is effective in getting out the vote. If you don't live near one of the upcoming primary states you can still phonebank them and help with your state as soon as the campaign rolls in to your area. No experience necessary. Meeting some like-minded people is a bonus.
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Get Off Your Cushion and Get Involved (dharma teaching) (Original Post)
JudyM
Feb 2016
OP
ellenrr
(3,864 posts)1. jesus, even the Buddhist forum is invaded by electioneering.
don't you have enough places to pedal that?
JudyM
(29,517 posts)2. Though the part of my paragraph that dealt with Bernie was a natural follow-on,
particularly since the piece specifically refers to welfare reform and the death penalty and is, in my opinion, more consistent with Bernie's sense of spiritual service, I removed it in consideration of you.
Peace.
LiberalElite
(14,691 posts)4. It was an
actual article in a Buddhist magazine.
sarath749
(5 posts)3. Best Buddhist Books for Beginners
1}In The Buddhas Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon
. 2) What The Buddha Taught
by Walpola Rahula
3)The Art of Living: Vipassana Meditation as Taught By S.N. Goenka