I've voted third party (or not for a Dem. or a Rep.) since I've been able to vote. The issue is one that was a founding tenet of Nader's campaign - the two current parties are merely as different as automatic and manual transmission vehicles. Both appeal to different consumers, both are petroleum-based vehicles.
Nader wants to be a hydrogen car, or more realistically, a hybrid. He has very solid reasonings for this, that make sense if you have the luxury of thinking outside of the current structure. Bring a third viable option to the forefront, with equal footing and status (given the fullness of time).
Unfortunately, this year we have no such luxury. Stakes are different, and high. The issues boil down to this for me - it's not about the type of fuel if the vehicle is going in the wrong direction. Or driving drunk, on the wrong side of the road with night-blindness.
So my perspective for the upcoming election is to vote to get the car back pointed straight. Because times feel critical, moreso than ever.
Plus, as nicely pointed out earlier in this thread, Nader is now running on pure hubris. If his platform was still entrenched with the Green Party (of which I am not a member and don't plan on becoming), I might have a case for more self-argument about not voting in that direction.
But not much more.
Nader has argued that the current two-party system is like a cancer on this country. Which is an appropriate analogy. But, as
this writer points out:
The problem in the year 2004 is that the body politic is also suffering from multiple wounds and blunt force trauma, we're in the emergency room and it's a damn mess and there's blood everywhere and the doctors are working furiously but it's anybody's guess how things are gonna turn out. We are in triage, and we have to deal with the immediate problems, or the long-term ones won't matter anyway.
[note - I don't agree with every post I read on-line, nor every opinion presented in traditional media, but I did think that this was a succinct categorization.]