60 percent of eligible voters will
head to the polls this Election Day.
90 - 125 million people will not.
United Staters rank 120th in voter turnout - out of 169
countries that record such data.
We get tired of voting every year.
The lines are too long.
The candidates are uninspiring.
Our votes don't seem to make a
difference.
Dispirited. Disgusted.
Disenfranchised. Are we.
Other democracies wait years between
elections and choose all elected officials by popular vote.
They skip the hassle of voter
registration. Make voting mandatory for all citizens. Fine those who choose not
to cast a ballot.
Not like Us.
Red State. Blue State. Electoral
College through-and-through states. Are we.
Political scientists like Lyle
Scruggs from the University of Connecticut believe that the best hope for
changing long-term voter turnout in the United States is to encourage teenagers
to vote as soon as they are eighteen years old. "Voting is sort of a
habit," Scruggs says. "We should be out in the high schools trying to
convince people that it's a really great habit to vote."
Methinks we should be out in the
high schools convincing people that voting is a really great responsibility.
And privilege, as well.
Let's tell our teens about the
thousands of women who picketed in front of the White House for some 750 days and
nights between 1917 and 1919; women who were verbally and physically assaulted.
Fined. Arrested. Jailed.
Because they wanted to vote.
Let's tell our teens about Alice
Paul, a suffragist and activist who was arrested for carrying a banner that
quoted President Wilson: "The time has come to conquer or submit, for us
there can be but one choice. We have made it." Sentenced to seven months
in prison, Paul was sent to the Occoquan Workhouse where she and fellow
protestors were forced to endure unsanitary conditions, eat worm-infested food,
and suffer telectric lights being turned on their faces every hour of every
night, depriving them of sleep. Placed in solitary confinement for two weeks,
Paul was given nothing to eat except bread and water. Beginning a hunger
strike, she was eventually sent to a psychiatric ward, where doctors forced a
tube down her throat and poured liquids into her stomach to keep her alive.
Because she wanted to vote.
Let's tell our teens about W.H.
Whittaker, the superintendent of the Occoquan Workhouse, who ordered nearly
forty guards to brutalize the suffragists on November 15, 1917. The guards
"beat Lucy Burns, chained her hands to the cell bars above her head, then
left her there for the night. They threw Dora Lewis into a dark cell and
smashed her head against an iron bed, which knocked her out. Her cellmate,
Alice Cosu, who believed Lewis to be dead, suffered a heart attack. According
to affidavits, guards grabbed, dragged, beat, choked, pinched, and kicked other
women."
Because they wanted to vote.
Let's tell our teens how The 15th
Amendment to the Constitution - ratified
on February 3, 1870 - granted all African American men the right to vote; but
the struggle for equality continued for almost a century before the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 allowed
the majority of African Americans in the South to register to vote and
participate fully in American public and civic life.
Let's tell our teens about the
millions of individuals like themselves who, throughout the short course of
American history, suited up in uniforms and went to war.
More than 1.3 million members of the
United States Military have died defending American rights and freedoms.
More than 1.6 million have been wounded.
So Americans can speak out.
Worship as they like. Choose a vocation. Build a family. Vote.
Let's remind our teens, our kids,
ourselves that beyond all the election noise, the hassles and excuses, in fire
halls, schools gymnasiums and church basements across this country, white-haired
grand-kids and great-grand kids of suffragists and soldiers - many of them
veterans of war themselves - will work from morning until night manning voting
booths this Election Day.
Because they want us to be able to
vote.
Democrat. Republican. Independent.
None of the above.
Make your choice.
Cast your vote.
It's a really great habit.
Responsibility. Privilege.
It's a Gift.
QUING Hereby Decrees: VOTE!
Great...great..great as always...Sue
ReplyDeleteSue, you make me SMILE! Thanks!
ReplyDelete