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Peace concert brings political ideas to youth....
.... raising the next question:
HOW can voter turn-out be increased in California?
HOW can voter turn-out be increased in California?
Dear freedom-seekers, progressives, queers, and allies:
[1] THANKS to Mahtin
for taking + posting photos of
Power to the Peaceful
concert/festival ( 9 Sept. 2006):
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/09/09/18307398.php
[ 2] I attended the latter part of this concert,
stayed till the end.
Photos confirm what I saw there --
this crowd is hella younger,
on average,
than my fellow leftists ( as seen at peace demos, etc)
or my fellow queers & pervs
( as seen at Dore, Folsom, sex parties, etc).
[3 ] So Pwr2Peaceful is,
IMQO,
a brilliant way to deliver progressive ideas
to young people.
[ 4 ]
Alas, I don't know how to get the college-age youths
(like 18 to 26 )
to actually VOTE in California elections.
The general guesstimate is that voting percentage
ROUGHLY matches decade of life --
like around 20% of 20-somethings usually vote,
30% of 30-somethings,
40% of 40-somethings,
50% of 50-somethings,
60% of 60-somethings,
and so on upwards
--- on AVERAGE.
If a precinct contains a college dormitory,
you can expect relatively low turnout
(compared to the median precinct of the county).
If a precinct contains a convalescent "home" for elders
and the physically ill (like SF's Laguna Honda),
you can expect relatively high turnout
(compared to median precinct).
[ 4 A ] Of course, "average" only predicts behavior of
large classes of people,
numbered in thousands or millions.
Your individual actions AREN'T predicted by statistics
of your age-class,
your money-class, your ethnicity, whatever.
Even if most queers vote for Democrats,
some vote for small progressive parties,
and some (yuck!) even support the homophobic Republican Party.
[ 5 ] Political activists may not notice this age/turnout problem,
as activists tend to hang out with activists.
Some young activists may deny
the percentages cited above;
with rebuttals like,
" Bullshit!
I'm 33 --
and at least three-quarters
of my 30-something friends vote!"
[ 6 ] But personal experience isn't everything.
The voter/age statistics are simple and objective.
Computers can easily compare
millions of public records;
to see which of the registered voters actually voted,
and what each person's birth-year is.
Thus I'm willing to bet
that Californians born in 1956
are way more LIKELY to vote in November 2006
than Californians born in 1976 or 1986 --
on average.
[ 7 ] Because of history,
some issues are "generational" --
like, you usually make up your mind
by the time you finish your formal schooling,
and you usually keep that stance until you die.
Often these issues involve private life
( sex, reproduction, drugs, religion, etc.);
more than volatile public issues
( world affairs, economics, etc.).
Among non-queer Californians born in 1976 or later,
who know very little of the pre-Stonewall USA,
most favor equal rights for queers.
Among non-Q Californians born in 1946 or 1956 or earlier,
who were alive (and maybe aware) when Stonewall happened,
a much smaller percentage support equal rights for queers.
So queers and our allies should HOPE that
more post-1976 citizens would register AND VOTE.
[ 7 A] Indeed I'd like to see U.S. voter turnout increase among ALL age-groups;
not just among younger citizens.
In western Europe, turnout is usually far higher than in U$A.
[ 8 ] I wish I could offer some useful suggestions
on how to increase voter turnout.
Unfortunately,
I don't know the answers. (Oy!)
[ 9 ] So I'm asking fellow progressives
to think about this,
and to publish their constructive ideas.
-- TBL
politically active since 1956 or so;
writing on the day after p2p
and the day before Nine-Eleven 2006...
in San Franistan
....
............
For more information:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/09/0...
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Comments
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Voting is most closely related to education: The higher the level of education, the more likely one votes. Education is of course a money issue: the more money one has, the more likely one has a better education. Thus most of the 50% of American adults who never vote are primarily workingclass, selling their labor for less than $76,000 a year, and overwhelmingly, those who make less than $30,000 a year. The level of education usually, but not always, declines with income. The reason we have such a problem in the US is because of the viciously UNDEMOCRATIC election laws, making it impossible for workingclass parties which have at least 5% of the vote to win a seat in any legislative body, unlike most of the rest of the parliamentary systems in the world, where one votes for a party's candidates, not individuals, and in one house of the legislature, the party is represented according to its votes. We need to eliminate the US Senate (and all corresponding state senates), which is nothing but a millionaire's club created as a concession to the slaveholding states. Instead, the House (Assembly) needs to be expanded so that parties are represented.
As to age, college students are more likely to vote than non-college students in their 20s as they have a vested interest in the system. To reach old age is to have achieved a good deal of economic security which means older people have a vested interest in the system. Property owners, who are usually older, always vote because they have a vested interest in the private profit system. The older one is the more likely one has an interest in hitting back; voting is also an act of vengeance. Remember, the over 60 crowd is only 12% of the population (and the under 18 group is by rule of thumb 25% of the population), so if we had a democratic election system, age would not be so important.
As to the gay rights issue, it is both a generational issue and an education issue. Even once gay marriage is won, and it will be by the end of this decade in some states, for the workingclass, whether gay or not, it will make no difference. Marriage is a money issue benefiting those with property and a vested interest in the system. Ideally, once gay marriage is achieved, we can then proceed to abolish marriage as it is nothing more than a bourgeois institution, more appropriately called a partnership agreement, delineating assets and liabilities for each partner, in other words, a money arrangement.
To make the needed changes, we need a labor movement. Elections simply reflect the class struggle that has preceded them, and there is not much class struggle in this country. The few labor disputes we see are usually settled for practically nothing. Most of the labor disputes involve healthcare benefits as labor is so backward in this country that it cannot even win a national healthcare system paid for with our tax dollars, free of charge upon demand, guaranteeing healthcare to all who live here from cradle to grave, as exists in the rest of the industrialized world. In addition to healthcare, a labor movement also guarantees the end of scapegoating of gays, non-whites and women with non-discrimination clauses in union contracts and improving economic security for all. These are issues that only Peace & Freedom Party and the Green Party seriously address; the twin parties of capitalism, the Democrats & Republicans, have nothing to offer. There are lots of P&F and Green Party candidates on this November's ballot. See http://www.peaceandfreedom2006.org and http://www.krissyforcongress.com/
As to age, college students are more likely to vote than non-college students in their 20s as they have a vested interest in the system. To reach old age is to have achieved a good deal of economic security which means older people have a vested interest in the system. Property owners, who are usually older, always vote because they have a vested interest in the private profit system. The older one is the more likely one has an interest in hitting back; voting is also an act of vengeance. Remember, the over 60 crowd is only 12% of the population (and the under 18 group is by rule of thumb 25% of the population), so if we had a democratic election system, age would not be so important.
As to the gay rights issue, it is both a generational issue and an education issue. Even once gay marriage is won, and it will be by the end of this decade in some states, for the workingclass, whether gay or not, it will make no difference. Marriage is a money issue benefiting those with property and a vested interest in the system. Ideally, once gay marriage is achieved, we can then proceed to abolish marriage as it is nothing more than a bourgeois institution, more appropriately called a partnership agreement, delineating assets and liabilities for each partner, in other words, a money arrangement.
To make the needed changes, we need a labor movement. Elections simply reflect the class struggle that has preceded them, and there is not much class struggle in this country. The few labor disputes we see are usually settled for practically nothing. Most of the labor disputes involve healthcare benefits as labor is so backward in this country that it cannot even win a national healthcare system paid for with our tax dollars, free of charge upon demand, guaranteeing healthcare to all who live here from cradle to grave, as exists in the rest of the industrialized world. In addition to healthcare, a labor movement also guarantees the end of scapegoating of gays, non-whites and women with non-discrimination clauses in union contracts and improving economic security for all. These are issues that only Peace & Freedom Party and the Green Party seriously address; the twin parties of capitalism, the Democrats & Republicans, have nothing to offer. There are lots of P&F and Green Party candidates on this November's ballot. See http://www.peaceandfreedom2006.org and http://www.krissyforcongress.com/
For more information:
http://www.peaceandfreedom2006.org
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