Be Pro-aging But Wear Sun Screen. Sun Protection Is Not Beauty Industry Propaganda It Will Save You.

be pro-aging but wear sun screen. sun protection is not beauty industry propaganda it will save you. wear it. or else.

More Posts from Cutoffsignals and Others

1 year ago

ettingermentum has just published an excellent guide to protest voting state-by-state. for those of you who are bemoaning your choice between biden and trump, for those of you who are against genocide, and for those of you want to utilize your civic duty to vote: this is how you can pressure joe biden for a ceasefire

The Uncommitted Voter's Guide
ettingermentum.news
How to protest the administration in all the remaining primary states.

Earlier this week, when I was talking with my girlfriend about the Michigan primary results, she asked me if we could also vote uncommitted in our state’s primary. Since we live in Georgia, I knew that we didn’t have that option, so I told her that it wasn’t possible and that I personally planned to use my ballot to write in Jane Fonda. Then she asked me if that vote would be counted, which made me realize something: I didn’t know if it would. I looked it up, and and after a bit of searching, I learned that the answer was no. As a Georgia voter, I have to either vote for one of the three names on the ballot or a “validated write-in candidate” or my vote will be discarded. My year-old plan to vote for Jane had always been DOA, and I had never known it until that moment. This got me thinking. If I, someone who writes about politics for a living, didn’t know the exact procedures for a protest vote in my primary in my own state, how many prospective uncommitted voters out there actually know what their options are? I presumed that someone out there had published a guide for how to protest vote in each state, but, at least as far as I can tell, such a guide does not exist. To remedy this problem, I decided to create a guide myself. The following is the first ever state-by-state, territory-by-territory cheat sheet for how you can, and cannot, cast a protest vote against this administration in your upcoming Democratic primary.

Ettingermentum Has Just Published An Excellent Guide To Protest Voting State-by-state. For Those Of You

Category 1: Can Vote Uncommitted

This is the simplest and most straightforward category. In these states and territories, voters are given a Michigan-style uncommitted option on their ballots. These ballots are fully counted in the results like votes for any of the named candidates. If the total uncommitted vote reaches 15% statewide or in a congressional district, it will be awarded delegates.

Although some of these states have additional protest voting options in addition to uncommitted, selecting the uncommitted line is the most direct and straightforward way to register an anti-Biden vote. If available, it should be chosen over all other options, including write-ins, blank ballots, or votes for named candidates like Dean Phillips or Marianne Williamson.

State/territory list:

March 5th: Alabama, Colorado (Called “Noncomitted”), Iowa (Mail-only Caucus), Massachusetts (Called “No Preference”), Minnesota, North Carolina (Called “No Preference”), Tennessee, American Samoa

March 6th: Hawaii

March 12th: Northern Mariana Islands, Washington, Democrats Abroad

March 19th: Kansas

March 23rd: Missouri

April 2nd: Connecticut, Rhode Island, Wisconsin

April 6th: Alaska (Called “Undeclared”)

April 13th: Wyoming (Caucus, Called “Undeclared”)

May 14th: Maryland

May 21st: Kentucky

May 23rd: Idaho (Caucus)

June 4th: Montana (Called “No Preference”), New Jersey, New Mexico

June 8th: Virgin Islands

Category 2: No Uncommitted Option, But Can Vote Write-Ins

Following the set of states and territories that provide straightforward uncommitted option, we reach a small, unique category of primary contests. These states do not provide an uncommitted option, but they do allow for write-in votes, and they take the unique step of tallying every single one of these write-ins in their vote totals. This allows for voters to vote for whoever they want, from Abraham Lincoln to the demiurge, and still see their ballots counted in a broad “write-in” pile of general dissent.

Unlike uncommitted votes, write-in votes will not be able to win delegates as a category—they are only tallied together as a group convenience on election results pages for the sake of convenience. Legally, they all represent votes for entirely different candidates. While it would technically be possible for a write-in candidate to win delegates if they hit the required benchmarks through write-in votes for them, there are currently no efforts to coordinate this. As such, feel free to vote for whoever or whatever you want if you live in these states or territories.

State/territory list:

March 5th: Vermont

May 21st: Oregon

June 4th: Washington, D.C.

Category 3: No Uncommitted Option, Most Write-Ins Not Tallied, But Blank Votes Tallied

Right on the heels of the previous small list with very specific rules is another small list with even more specific rules. Like Category 2, these states do not provide an option to vote uncommitted, but allow for write-ins. Where they differ from the Category 2 states is that they do not count most write-ins in their overall tallies. To save time, only write-in votes for “qualified” write in candidates are considered valid and counted. This means that any write-in vote that says something like “ceasefire,” “uncommitted,” and, yes, “Jane Fonda,” will be discarded.

For most states that do this and don’t provide an uncommitted option, this rules out the possibility of a protest vote beyond voting for the named candidates. These states are the exception, however. Unlike most states, they count blank ballots in their totals. While blank ballots cannot earn delegates, they are counted as a bloc, making them a clear statement of opposition to Biden that avoids providing support for Phillips or Williamson. As such, it is best to send back ballots in these states.

State/territory list:

March 5th: Maine

March 30th: North Dakota (Caucus)

April 2nd: New York

April 28th: Puerto Rico

Category 4: No Uncommitted Option, Most Write-Ins Not Counted, Blank Ballots Not Counted

Category 4 states have easily the most delegates of any section on this list. Unfortunately, they’re also where the options for protest votes become sharply limited. These states have similar rules as Category 3 states. They don’t provide an uncommitted ballot line and don’t tally write-in votes except for those given to qualified write-in candidates. What makes them different from Category 3 states is that they also don’t count blank votes in their tallies.

To register a non-Biden vote in the tallies here, you have to vote for someone pre-approved by the state, whether that be a named candidates on the ballot or a qualified write-in candidate. For most states, this leaves you with Dean Phillips and/or Marianne Williamson if you want your vote to count. Feel free to choose between the two at your own discretion, although you can always vote for another listed candidate or even prick someone from your state’s list of qualified write-in candidates if you really want to avoid voting for either of them.

State/territory list:

March 5th: California (Both Dean and Marianne on ballot), Texas (D and M), Virginia (D and M), Utah (D and M)

March 12th: Georgia (D and M)

March 19th: Arizona (D and M), Illinois (D and M), Ohio (Dean only)

April 23rd: Pennsylvania (Dean only)

May 14th: Nebraska (Dean only), West Virginia (Dean only)

Category 5: No Uncommitted Option, No Write-in Option, Blank Ballots Not Counted

Category 5 is very similar to Category 4, except with one difference. Instead of just making the write-in option functionally useless, these states don’t provide it at all. There’s no way to get around voting for one of the named candidates of you want to cast a protest vote in these states.

State/territory list:

March 5th: Arkansas (D and M), Oklahoma (D and M)

March 12th: Mississippi (No D or M or anyone else. Biden will just get 100% of the vote here. They’re still holding the contest, though.)

March 23rd: Louisiana (D and M)

June 4th: South Dakota (D and M)

June 8th: Guam (Candidate list currently unavailable)

Category 6: No Primary

Here’s the strangest section of them all. These states just cancelled their primaries and handed all of their delegates to Biden. They won’t let you vote against him even if you want to!

State/territory list: Florida and Delaware

---

voting 'uncommitted' aka utilizing the protest vote is now one of the key strategies to let the biden administration know exactly what you think of their policies. it doesn't affect your vote in november, but it does very much affect the US policies being enacted on the ground in gaza right now.

think of it as a "fuck you" to joe biden, in the most democratic way possible.

you're not abstaining. you're not voting third party. you're not voting for trump. this is a protest vote. you're exercising your civic rights and letting joe biden know: fuck you.

2 years ago

“I used to think there was such a thing as emptiness, that there were places in the world one could go to be alone. This, I think, is still true, but the error in my reasoning was to assume that alone was somewhere you could go, rather than somewhere you had to be left.”

— Julia Armfield, Our Wives Under the Sea


Tags
2 years ago

i want to see old men with full beards learning ballet and i want to see terrible art from people in their 30s who have only just got their first tablet and i want to see mothers picking up their old hobbies from before they were told it wasn’t okay to have hobbies and i want to see people in their early 20s figuring out how to be alive by making bad music in their bedrooms and i want zines to be handmade paper pamphlets of devotion and i want creation to be fun again instead of a competition where we all have to monetise joy until we lose the invaluable currency of unashamed love again

1 year ago

fucked up in the club (reading all the wikipedia articles for indigenous north and south american dog breeds)

2 years ago

The contradiction between what we were playing and reality is this: Oftentimes we worked until two or three in the morning. We’re not the only company still shooting, but, yeah, we’re late. Cars are going through the gate, the arm comes down. There’s a line of cars. Then when I get there, the gate comes down and security says to me, “Open your trunk.” I said, “No. Why? All these other cars just … Why? What do you think I have in this Volkswagon Rabbit? What’s in there, the Defiant?” What I’m trying to say is that the contradiction, or the paradox of it all, we can’t get away from. You see what I mean? I wish sometimes that were true; that the fact I played Sisko would make some kind of difference on the street. No, only on the screen. The contradictions are evident. They are inescapable in a way.”

Avery Brooks, quoted in, The Fifty-Year Mission - The Next 25 Years, Volume 2, Edward Gross, Mark A. Altman


Tags
2 years ago

rhinoceros beetle

I’m not normally an admirer of tattoos.


Tags
2 years ago

hayley kiyoko wrote a ya novel about being a seventeen year old lesbian stuck in rural oregon in 2006?????? and there’s livejournal in it????


Tags
2 years ago

I love vague labels that make people go "but that's confusing" or "but that could mean anything" Good. Keep guessing lol

Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • carcharsaur
    carcharsaur reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • shychili
    shychili reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • shychili
    shychili liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • sweet-heartbadmouth
    sweet-heartbadmouth reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • diced-sugar
    diced-sugar liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • pomegranatelycan
    pomegranatelycan reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • pomegranatelycan
    pomegranatelycan liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • ablazeinhim
    ablazeinhim reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • angelsforevr
    angelsforevr reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • angelsforevr
    angelsforevr liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • porcelanitaa
    porcelanitaa liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • giantfigtree
    giantfigtree liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • anqelicbf
    anqelicbf reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • anqelicbf
    anqelicbf liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • parafoxicalk
    parafoxicalk reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • birdlimes-main
    birdlimes-main liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • starspangledspoilsport
    starspangledspoilsport liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • the-neighborhood-rando
    the-neighborhood-rando reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • wingedachene
    wingedachene liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • babybluebanshee
    babybluebanshee reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • theshadowunicorn
    theshadowunicorn reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • hypnobeauty
    hypnobeauty liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • h0neypeachy
    h0neypeachy reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • katrinageist
    katrinageist reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • iloveamberfreeman
    iloveamberfreeman liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • artistformerlyknownas90skid
    artistformerlyknownas90skid reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • invisiblemelonmoose
    invisiblemelonmoose reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • beargirl2
    beargirl2 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • sweatybitchesmatter
    sweatybitchesmatter reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • greenmothers
    greenmothers liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • mei-nyan
    mei-nyan liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • lovinganddreaming
    lovinganddreaming liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • ophelianes
    ophelianes liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • parasitexeve
    parasitexeve liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • bigbootyheretic
    bigbootyheretic liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • bestbloggeralive
    bestbloggeralive liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • peoplespartiesbyjonimitchell
    peoplespartiesbyjonimitchell reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • peoplespartiesbyjonimitchell
    peoplespartiesbyjonimitchell liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • thehousewasalreadyonfire
    thehousewasalreadyonfire reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • thehousewasalreadyonfire
    thehousewasalreadyonfire liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • apuckishsprite
    apuckishsprite reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • heavymetalandreflective
    heavymetalandreflective liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • whoo-dooo
    whoo-dooo reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • coarsesalt
    coarsesalt reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • dk-not-donkey-kong
    dk-not-donkey-kong liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • oat-milk-maid
    oat-milk-maid reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • questionably-audhd-oracle
    questionably-audhd-oracle liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • jester-to-the-king
    jester-to-the-king reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
cutoffsignals - no. 1 goose barnacle fan
no. 1 goose barnacle fan

seth (ambivalent)

213 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags