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IN OUR VIEW: Here comes the circus!

Ask for what you need, but don't expect miracles
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The B.C. Humanist Association released a report analyzing the prayers delivered in the B.C. Legislature. (Black Press Media file photo)

British Columbia’s election has been unofficially underway for weeks, but on Sept. 21, the official race to run the province began.

The writ dropped on that day, with the final voting day less than a full month later on Oct. 19.

We’ve been packing a lot into that month. Lawn signs and candidates knocking on doors, debates between party leaders as well as local candidates, advertising on radio, TV, in newspapers, on social media.

It’s going to be a lot to take in, as usual.

The important thing is that you don’t have to take in all of it. You do not have to obsess over polls, watch every debate, or memorize each party’s platform.

But if you do want to vote, now is the time to get involved.

Knowing who you want to win can mean volunteering for a campaign, putting up a lawn sign, or attending a rally.

On the other hand, it could mean just identifying the one or two issues you feel most strongly about, and researching what the parties, and your local candidates, say they’ll do about those issues.

There will be plenty of information out there – the parties will be happy to tell you what they say they’ll do, and there will be news stories about what they’ve done in the past.

Check out reputable sources of information where you can, whether that’s news, official reports, or the party platforms. 
Remember that the parties are also composed entirely of human beings.

Do politicians lie? Yeah, sometimes. They also tend to put as positive a spin as they can on everything they say and do.

But in general, they’re people. They’re people facing huge, seemingly insurmountable problems like homelessness, housing prices, inflation, unemployment, and doctor shortages.

We’ll hear a lot during this campaign about possible solutions to those problems.

But none of the parties are going to wave a magic wand and solve all of them the day after the election, or the year after. 

Democracy is about trying to sort out the people with the best plans and the most goodwill, and then fling them at their tasks. That’s what the coming weeks will be about.

– M.C.





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