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In an election season, I reflect on how politics is conditioned to consider what is placed front and center.
About a month or so ago, I came across some exciting news. Not only is Barrack Obama soon to be the first African American selected as a Presidential nominee, but this season has also witnessed the first selection of an African American woman to be selected as a Presidential nominee for the Green Party. As a former Democratic Congresswoman and single-mother, Cynthia McKinney caught my attention. I not only became captivated by this news story because of the lack of press it received, but also because of her former Democratic roots. With many people tired of the shrinking list of differences between the to primary parties, I became more interested in a party that would consider nominating an African American women to represent their interests in the race for the White House.
Many suggest that third party politics is inconsequential. But several political second runners-up like Al Gore may beg to differ thanks to the likes of folks like Ralph Nadar. When researching the third party’s place in politics of today, several share the same sentiment. Why throw your vote away on a third party candidate? It is such narrow thinking that keeps many doing what they have always done and therefore getting the same results they’ve always got. If enough people demand that the media and political leaders provide more diversity of opinions that truly represent all of us, casting a vote may return to being the most cherished right we have in this country.
It really disgusts me that the only political news coverage we see is focused on the same old fogies operating from behind the scenes while McCain and Obama swing and sway to win the country’s biggest popularity contest. The media claims to only bring the news that interests their audiences but often they get it wrong. We’ve seen it in politics, in CNN’s Black in America series and in the media’s overkill of tributes to Tim Russert. I watched TV all weekend and didn’t see one news bulletin about the deaths of Bernie Mac and Issac Hayes. I found out when I went on the web Monday morning.
Instead of complaining, I am going to assist in providing that broader coverage of political media. This is not to dissuade current political positions but to provide all the options for consideration. I hope you’ll join me in seeking out all that the media, political or otherwise, is not telling you.









