There are 122 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #1 by Helium's members.
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| Yes | 21% | 227 votes | Total: 1069 votes | |
| No | 79% | 842 votes |
The question of appropriate voting age begs a difficult distinction: can anyone identify the point in a person's life when they cross the border between "too young to vote" and "old enough?" The vast array of determinant variables make the voting age target too mobile, so we make the decision based on: "If they are old enough to go to war, they are old enough to
vote."
The pool of voting age citizens was expanded to include 18 year-olds precisely because their older political leaders could no longer let slip the the common perception that they were using America's young like cattle being herded off to the killing fields. If an American citizen is old enough to be asked to die for his or her county, then they must also be allowed to participate in the processes that lead to or away from war.
Ironically, this voting-age challenge is not necessarily age specific. The criteria is more dependent on informed awareness, a state of mind that, unfortunately, evades too many of us. Think of it: despite overwhelming evidence, much of it provided by the man himself, that the President of the US is an incompetent leader who does not believe in either democracy or democratic process, about one third of the voting age public still believe that our president GW Bush is the best thing since Jesus and compare the massive, worldwide public outcry toward his incompetence to the persecution the carpenter from Nazareth endured 2000 years ago. Shouldn't those people be disqualified from voting because they are not paying attention; because they are not staying informed?
If eighteen year olds are denied their voting rights, then they should not be allowed to vote for the same reasons that many 21, 30, 40, 50 and 60 year olds (and all dead people) should be prevented from voting: with all too few exceptions, many of our older adults don't give a damn about democracy enough to stay informed. They have no fear of the consequences of uninformed and misinformed voting and they do not recognize the difference between freedom and tyranny. Give them a thousand channels and a set of head phones and the world looks rosy. In short, the reasoning (sic) goes, when they stop acting like children, allow the young adults to vote.
Until the US public school system is resuscitated by an earnest effort on the part of our elected leaders, so that it fully prepares our students to openmindedly wield the weight of their governed lives, eighteen will continue to be too young to vote. However, rather than a reason
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by Eric Wolf
18 years of age is the voting eligibility age in most democracies and the present generation of teenagers is arguably better
by Ted Sherman
Hell, no. I agree with the lament of all Armed Services members we've heard loud and clear since World War II: If I'm old
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