The Daily Stoic - This Is Why We Do Our Part
Episode Date: October 30, 2024Being virtuous, like voting, is within our power. Whether it visibly changes the world is not. But we act because it is our duty, and that alone is reason enough.Register to vote at https://v...ote.gov✉️ Want Stoic wisdom delivered to your inbox daily? Sign up for the FREE Daily Stoic email at https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Get Stoic inspired books, medallions, and prints to remember these lessons at the Daily Stoic Store: https://store.dailystoic.com/📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, and FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome to The Daily Stoic podcast, where each day we bring you a passage of ancient wisdom
designed to help you find strength, insight, and wisdom in everyday life. Each one of these
passages is based on the 2000 year old philosophy
that has guided some of history's greatest men and women.
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This is why we do our part.
Why bother?
Doesn't matter, won't count. This is what people say when it comes
to voting, especially in America. And they're not totally wrong. It's hard to argue with the
statistics and the realities. One person out of so many when more than 50% of the population doesn't
even bother in a country of gerrymandering and voter suppression. On the other hand, it's stunning to think that in an election,
the 2020 election, that saw something like 150 million votes,
the presidency, the most powerful and influential position in the world,
was decided by roughly 44,000 ballots across three states.
Less than half of a college football stadium, Arizona was swung by just 10,000 voters.
But actually the Stokes would say that none of these stats matter either way.
Whether your vote is the one that makes a difference isn't why one should engage in
the democratic process.
First, the Stokes are quite clear that a philosopher has a duty to contribute
to the wellbeing of the polis,
including active political participation,
which they saw as a clear distinction from the Epicureans.
But more important is the idea
that you should only do something
if the preferred outcome is guaranteed.
Well, that just violates everything we talk about here.
As Marcus Aurelius wrote in Meditations, you must build up your life action by action and
be content if each one achieves its goal as far as possible.
And no one can keep you from this.
The act of casting a vote is within your control, the outcome of the election is not.
But that doesn't absolve you of the responsibility
to participate.
Consider how flawed the logic of non-voting becomes
when applied more broadly.
Most individual acts of goodness,
whether it's doing the right thing,
telling the truth when a lie would be easier,
being a good parent or taking pride in your work,
these things make little visible difference on their own.
But does that justify lying, cheating, neglecting your duties, or being careless? Of course not.
Imagine the kind of world we would have if everyone had embraced that mindset.
A better world is built action by action, vote by vote, even if the vast majority of those votes
and actions are thwarted. Being virtuous like voting is within our power.
Whether it visibly changes the world is not,
but we act because it is our duty
and that alone is reason and motivation enough.
The same thing applies to voting in this election
and the next election and every election.
You make your small contribution to the common good
because even if it doesn't reshape society, it shapes you.
That's the story of the boy and the starfish
that I tell in Right Thing Right Now.
It matters to the starfish.
And what if the choice, what if the candidates feel like
picking the lesser of two evils?
Marcus Aurelius reminds us not to expect Plato's Republic.
This is the real world.
Who you vote for is your decision.
Let the stoic values of justice and fairness
and interconnectedness guide your choice.
I think you know what that means.
If you're Heming and Hong,
you know what the principle of choice is here.
You know who discusses you.
You know who you would never put in charge.
Not even of your kids' college savings or, you know,
you wouldn't even want them coaching
your kids' soccer team.
You wouldn't want your daughter to work for them.
You know they shouldn't be in charge of nuclear weapons.
We have a great video on sort of stoic principles
applied to the different choices and candidates.
I'll link to that.
Again, I'm not pushing you either way.
I just wanna give you some things to think about
and I'll link to that in today's show notes.
But the important thing is you get out there.
I voted today, I'm recording this on the 21st,
I guess, of October.
I voted today, the first day of early voting here in Texas.
Texas gets a lot of voting stuff screwed up.
They believe in a bunch of nonsense and conspiracy theories.
They generally try to make it hard for people to vote.
You can't get an absentee ballot
unless you've got some ridiculous sets of circumstances,
but they do get early voting right.
My wife and I went and waited in line about 40 minutes, the County
courthouse, and we were proud to do it and gave the stickers to my kid after.
I did my part.
You got to do your part.
Hopefully we squeak this thing out.
And by we, I just mean people who believe that virtue is important.
Who believe that virtue is important and not just raw power and grievance
and punishing your enemies
and keeping themselves out of prison.
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