Echognome, on Oct 24 2007, 04:09 PM, said:
sceptic, on Oct 24 2007, 01:01 PM, said:
Quote
Are you assuming they would have voted against it? What if they had voted for it?
I have no idea how they would vote my only issue is that people in positions like this should vote or why else are they ?
Sorry Wayne, I respect you and all, but this doesn't sound like a statement coming from someone that has actually been in such a situation.
One reason for an abstention is biasedness. You are too closely involved with the situation being voted upon and want the decision to be "fair". A good example here is that if one of your family members was involved.
Another reason is that you might be simply ignorant of the issue at hand. Imagine you are on a committee that goes through 100 different votes in a year. It might be perfectly reasonable to vote on 80 issues and abstain on 20. Abstaining means you are putting your lot in with the majority.
I think to presume cowardice is wrong.
Matt I was just thinking of this situation.. Say one of these women was your daughter....Fully disclose this but vote...do not abstain......
Voting for your daughter is fair.....it is not unfair or unjust...
If people do not like it....kick me out of office.....
As for your second choice, ignorance is no excuse, you have one job....vote...yes or no....if you do not know then ask someone smarter than oneself and learn but geez vote.....it is the only think you really need to do.
If you are too busy to form an "informed opinion" then please leave and put someone in there who is not too busy....
Keep in mind on the tv show "60 minutes" they showed how Congress never reads the Bill they are voting..on......If you do not even have to read the bill, ever read the bill, to vote on it..just how busy can you be to not vote..