Thought for the Day

“I propose that voting, like cheering at a football game or sending a get-well card, should be understood as primarily an expressive rather than an instrumental activity. One votes for Alfred E. Neuman rather than Pat Paulsen as an act of expressing support for Neuman rather than as a deliberate attempt to raise the likelihood of Neuman’s victory. Rational individuals will indeed vote provided that the value they assign to the expressive returns obtained through a vote is greater than the costs thereby incurred. Despite the exceedingly remote chance of swinging the election, voting is as rational as attending football games and cheering lustily for one’s team (and sitting out an election is as rational as spending one’s Saturday gardening if one prefers flowers to football).” — Loren E. Lomasky, “The Booth and Consequences: Do Voters Get What They Want?”

(link via Gene Healy)

Comments

Leave a comment