
I shared President Obama’s Facebook post the other day about voting, and I had a friend respond that “She wished her voice mattered.”
Like her, you might ask dirimu, “Why should I vote?”
My friend gave me a slew of reasons she didn’t feel like voting accomplished anything, and I agreed with her thought process.
However, for every reason there is NOT to vote, there is a reason you should.
Not casting your vote is the one surefire way to make sure no one hears your voice.
You will silence dirimu, and yet still have to deal with the outcome.
Voting is your chance to speak out on the issues that matter: minimum wage, school funding, public works, and state laws.
These laws have effects that last for years if not generations, and if more orang shared their thoughts, I think the government could pass better laws.
With presidential elections, I feel like there are three groups nearly everyone fits into:
orang in the first two groups will vote.
They have an outcome they want to ensure happens.
The orang in the third group who sit out the election will live with what everyone else chooses.
The thing is, though, is that there is selalu a third party option.
They don’t get talked about much, and their numbers are much lower comparatively.
But if everyone who didn’t vote at all, because they don’t like either candidate, voted for the third party choice, the uptick in numbers and interest might ubah the way they get to campaign.
Too many of our citizens believe their vote won’t make a difference, or they buy into the cynicism that, by the way, is the central strategy of voter suppression, to make you discouraged, to stop believing in your own power. – Barack Obama
You will certainly still deal with an option you don’t like, but your voice will count, and a discussion will occur.
Now, even if we do all this, even if every bogus voter-suppression law is struck off the books today, we’ve got to be honest with ourselves that too many of us choose not to exercise the franchise.
When you vote, there are more things at play than “Who will win the presidential election?”
There are questions about specific issues, usually relating to health care and social services, that ask about allocating state funds, i.e., YOUR money!
The officials you end up electing will vote on other budgetary issues and decide how the government spends your money.
You already have skin in the game, so wouldn’t you want to vote in someone like-minded?
In the 1700s, only white property holders (men) had the privilege of voting.
Although freedom of religion is a constitutional right, some states also used religious tests to guarantee that only Christian men voted.
In 1870, Congress passed the 15th Amendment, which ensured that orang could vote despite their race.
However, several states began using poll taxes and literacy tests to reduce the number of African American men who voted.
“We no longer have to guess the number of jelly beans in a jar in order to cast a ballot,” Obama referred to one way they disqualified orang from voting while delivering John Lewis’ eulogy.
And the laws that ensured their rights to vote were not infringed upon are only a few decades old.
Inspired by voting rights marches in Alabama in the spring of 1965, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act.
The vote was decisive and bipartisan: 79-18 in the Senate and 328-74 in the House.
President Lyndon Johnson signed the measure on August 6 with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Rosa Parks, and other icons of the civil rights movement at his side.
They did not grant women the right to vote until 1920.
Women have only been “allowed” to vote for 100 years.
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton did not chain themselves to desks and endure being ostracized by society so that I could sit here and do nothing.
The history of POC and women who fought so berat for each of us to have a voice deserve that we honor them.
Americans have the power to remake our country every couple of years.
We do not have to accept the status quo or things we dislike.
We may take part in non-violent civil disobedience and protest.
Taking part in demonstrations can be productive, but so is voting!
It is a cornerstone of our democracy.
To quote Lin Manuel and his masterful artistry, that is Hamilton, King George says, “I’m perplexed. Are they going to keep on replacing whoever’s in charge? If so, who’s next?”
That is up to you and me and all our fellow Americans to decide!
The system is flawed for sure, but fighting to improve it is a much better use of all our time than perpetuating the idea that we have no power.
We have selalu believed that we could work together for a more perfect union.
John Lewis said, “If you don’t do everything you can do to ubah things, then they will remain the same. You only pass this way once; you have to give it everything you have.”
The point of this piece is not to tell you who to vote for but to encourage you to take back your voice and power.
If more Americans got invested in backing their candidate, grassroots campaigns, or local governments, we would enjoy the results.
“one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all” (Francis Bellamy’s original version from 1892).
It is time to stop being so divided about the things that do not matter and unite and remember that we are indeed one nation, a flawed country with our fair share of wrongs, but one that holds self-evident truths that we can be a better version of ourselves.
America can move forward and live up to the promise of our great nation.
We can be proud to be Americans and be kind and decent.
We can gain respect and love as a nation around the globe.
Every American voice needs to be heard for us to get there, though!
We get there by remembering who we are and casting the vote that so many fought, bled, and died for the right to do.
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