It doesn't matter who you vote for. It's still the same billionaires that run the world.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I always vote for the guy I think can get it done. And it ain't nobody's business who I vote for, but I voted for Clinton twice. And that just blows people's minds when they hear that.
I would never say somebody had to vote for anybody. That would be terrible. I haven't said that.
The beauty of our democracy lies in the American value of equality: if you vote, you have a seat at the table. If you speak, you have a chance to persuade others. A billionaire and a minimum wage earner have the same power at the ballot box.
I'm voting for Bernie Sanders because he doesn't take any corporate money.
There's a small amount of super-wealthy people that want to maintain their billions and billions of dollars. Those are the people who are really making the decisions.
When billionaires can give $50 million, $500 million to a campaign, and there's no limit, then it makes a mockery of 'one man, one vote.'
Elections aren't just about who votes but who doesn't vote.
I learned a long time ago in Hollywood that the only person I should vote for is myself.
I never vote for anyone. I always vote against.
You can't just vote for yourself. All the time, you're thinking what sort of country, what world, what future?