I stopped voting in the national elections after Gore won the popular vote but Bush won with the electoral college. I realized my vote really doesn't count.
I didn't talk about it for a long time because in the US it's such a mythical and emotionally charged topic, with folks spouting of pro-voting platitudes like they're pro-lifers, things like, "People died for my right to vote," etc. Some will try to shame folks for not voting, many who do vote wear a button all day that says "I voted." And yeah, I get that as late as the Sixties Black people had to fight with their lives for their right to vote, even when it was already their legal right. But then Russell Brand said something that gave voice to what I think: "I don't vote because I don't want to participate in the illusion." After that, I no longer had any fear of saying, "I don't vote," and no one came after me with torches. Of course, by the time I started saying it, I was in a very liberal state, no longer in the Deep South.
Remember the car stickers "W the President"? When I lived in the South, I had one on my car that said "F the President," it got keyed in the WalMart parking lot.
I hate politics. It's all such a scam and a show.
Rant over. If someone disagrees with me, meh okay. It's my choice, my own offendedness against the system. I don't push it on anyone else. I ain't even gonna hate on @FusRohDracarys in spite of my strong reactionary feelings about his/her candidate choice, still a good and favorite member on the forum.