Arizona
Related: About this forumLet me know if you get a postcard from me -
Long shot, I know, but on Sunday I'm mailing 200 handwritten postcards to AZ residents tagged as likely to vote for Democratic candidates, as part of https://postcardstoswingstates.com/mailing-dates
I'm curious to see when they arrive.
If you get a postcard postmarked from Akron (likely) or Cleveland (the nearest sorting facility), let me know!
marybourg
(13,181 posts)Ms. Toad
(35,519 posts)but signed up for both and got the stack of 200 before I got much done for postcards to voters.
I'm not a door knocker or phone caller. (That's my nature, and the Kerry race burned out my willingness to extend myself in that arena again. I spent a lot of time and energy - and intentionally hid my sexual orientation, since Republicans were using my marriage to drive people to the polls to vote for the marriage discrimination amendment and I knew there were potential Kerry voters who were going to vote for the marriage discriminatio amendment. I decided Kerry & potential supreme court positions were more important. Then Kerry conceded long before the votes I drummed up for him were even counted. )
So, since postcards seem to be effective - and aren't as emotionally stressful for me - I decided I could at least do postcards.
marybourg
(13,181 posts)And she said Thanks, Mom. This is the perfect electoral activity for introverts! It is.
Kali
(55,737 posts)I'm on the permanent early vote list so may not be in your target group, but they are pretty cards.
Ms. Toad
(35,519 posts)When I did GOTV efforts a few years ago, they targeted people who didn't necessarily vote in every single election, but when they voted in the primaries they voted democratic. I suspect it's similar.
Kali
(55,737 posts)no return address but postmarked from Colorado. to my street address not POBox (very rural and all mail is to PO, other deliveries use street address so wondering how I got on this particular list) it was a fairly generic print out encouraging me to vote Dem, including Mark Kelly. The odd thing was a line of what looks like Indonesian writing at the top and the beginning of the note that says "As a fellow South Asian..." and it seems to be from an individual volunteer with no formal group identified.
my first name is Kali, but my last name is very much German and I have no Asian background other than teenage years travel. So it would seem my first name got me noticed by this group. Interesting.
there is a disclaimer at the bottom that says "This flyer was printed and distributed by a grassroot volunteer and was not authorized by any campaign."
I just noticed the image of a hand dropping a ballot into a box has a mehndi (I think) design on it. cool!
Ms. Toad
(35,519 posts)I had a fun time with the names & trying to figure out ethnicities and ages.
The reason I was even thinking about it is (1) younger people would not necessarily be able to read cursive and (2) my ESL students have far more trouble reading cursive, or even hand-printed, content that shows up sometimes on bar exams.
I printed most of my cards, but when I needed a break I looked for an older/traditionally spelled name to write an occsional cursive note.
Kali
(55,737 posts)but I can't even read my own, much less most others.
Ms. Toad
(35,519 posts)I worked as a politial beat reporter for the local paper when my daughter was an infant. Mostly I covered the local meetings. I had to write my story as soon as I got home, or I couldn't read the notes I had taken.
Otherwise I can read it . . . except my signature.
Kali
(55,737 posts)add not being able to read them and might as well forget it. thank goodness for small cheap recording devices!