WE MADE YOUR VOTE COUNT.  NOW GIVE US OUR VOTE.

By Natasha H.


This year, when you go to your voting booth and find there is a voter-verifiable paper trail, thank a child for making sure your vote counts.  Not all states will have one.  However, in all the states that do, voters owe much of their gratitude to those who are too young to vote.

Statistically, in countries where the voting age has been lowered, 16 year olds vote in significantly greater percentages than 18 to 25 year olds. When individuals start voting at 16, they make it a habit.  Adults want my generation to wait until we are no longer interested in voting.  What if Mozart had been told at the age of five that he would have to wait to start composing until he had lost his interest in music?  What if Thomas Edison had been told at the age of twelve to stop working on inventions because it was too dangerous and he had to wait until his brain grew?  What if John Quincy Adams, while packing for his trip to Russia as the diplomatic secretary to the commissioner to the Court of Catherine the Great, had been told he was too young, Congress must have been wacko to give him the position and that he would have to hang out in some school learning to enjoy be bored?  What would have happened to all the teenaged Olympic gold medallists if someone had told them to wait until college to compete?   Or maybe we should repeal the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which established a sixth grade education as legal proof of literacy. And what was with those voting-aged adults who put together Title 42, Chapter 20, Subchapter I, Section 1971 (c) of the U.S. Code Or perhaps America should in Title 42, Chapter 20, Subchapter I, Section 1971 (c) of the U.S. Code, which establishes a presumption that anyone who has completed a sixth grade education "possesses sufficient literacy, comprehension and intelligence to vote in any election.

Back in 2000, when it was clear that the Florida voters had not had votes counted, children dragged their parents into the streets to protest the theft of the election.  No one credited the kids, especially not the news media.  Yet it was the children who were often the subject of Rent-a-Thug attacks.   Yes, my generation took the blows for the voters. The police, the news media and most of those with the power to change things didn't care.  The newsmen, whose cell phones were used to report rent-a-thug attacks, didn't want anyone to find out children had an opinion on the issue and pretended we didn't exist. Check out the news footage and then ask people how many kids were really there.   The photographers' main jobs seemed to be to film around any kids. Even when photographers got the footage, their bosses would not allow anyone to see it.   The police weren't interested in arresting any of the Rent-a-Thugs, even though the Rent-a-Thugs repeatedly got violent and bragged about plans to commit 187s. Instead, the police would politely ask the Rent-a-Thugs to leave at their convenience.    And when the thugs who were suppressing democracy got a hold of childrens' email addresses, they sent children pornographic emails, which the FBI traced back to Texas before deciding that sending pornographic emails to children was not a crime.  But that didn't slow down my generation.  Even our parents could not tell us to slow down when it came to democracy.  

When right-wing tyrants from D.C. traveled to California, children again dragged their parents to protest and this time they learned about the free speech zone clause of the First Amendment.  By then, the youth had acquired megaphones and lectured the right-wing tyrants on what democracy was all about.   The boldest of the chants were all from the youth protestors.   The police were relatively polite except for when they roughed up old people and "accidentally" hit kids with their batons while aiming at various people of voting age in the crowds.   Those they were aiming at were just chanting their opinion of certain government leaders.   Unlike adults who are good at quitting on democracy, members of my generation insisted on continuing the fight.  So, my generation has been out on the front lines since 2000 keeping democracy alive.  Where were most of those old enough to vote during this time?      Oh, yeah !  For the most part, they were the ones telling the kids that they could protest on the streets but they had to keep their mouths shut at Democratic meetings.

It was my generation that walked out of schools to protest the war and my generation that walked out of schools and blocked freeways to protest inhumane immigration legislation.  Those who walked out of school were not illegal immigrants.  The protesters were American kids who know more about right and wrong than the voters who elect thugs to Congress and the Presidency or who don't care enough to throw out un-elected officials.  My generation is the conscience of America.  How many Senate Democrats, all of whom are of voting age, showed up at the Senate censure hearing in March of this year?

In 2003, the California Democratic Party adopted a resolution calling for a paper trail, public ownership and inspections of software and other voter protections.  That resolution was written by an eleven year old and a thirteen year old.  Though some adults argued against it, my generation won out.  The momentum from California caused the DNC to adopt a similar resolution.  When Kevin Shelley had his HAVA hearings, it was the youth that called for a voter-verifiable paper-trail or paper ballots and public ownership and inspection of any software.  There were adults there from Common Cause and the ACLU arguing against a paper trail.  As a result of the testimony before those hearings and the call by the California Democratic Party for a paper-trail, all California voters will get that paper-trail this year (2006).  When the adults let the Diebold get rid of Shelley, my generation protested and tried to get him to stay.  If Diebold controls the next election, it will be because the adults did not listen to my generation.  Fortunately, the groundwork Shelley created, at the urging those of us who don't have the vote, may be solid enough to keep out Diebold.

The adults in California and elsewhere in the U.S. will be getting their votes counted this year.  So, when do we get ours counted?

Throughout history, oppressors have always let the oppressed do the work while the oppressors got all the benefits.  This was the case before the Fifteenth Amendment when racists pretended blacks weren't educated or knowledgeable enough to vote and that they (the racists) were protecting the blacks by preventing them from voting.  This was also the case before the Nineteenth Amendment when sexist men claimed that women were too hysterical and stupid to vote.  The men were protecting the women from themselves by preventing them from voting.  That was the men's version.  After all, like many of  today's adults, they had the vote and didn't want to share it. Now, though benefiting from my generations work, many of those of voting age still are acting as oppressors in denying us that which we gave them.  They pretend they care about children, but this kind of egotistical, sick oppressor mentality is no different than the egotistical, sick oppressor mentality that was held less than a century and a half ago by racist slavers and less than a century ago by abusive husbands.   Now, hundreds of Americans have died without a first vote for President because they were too young to vote in the last presidential election before they died.  My generation knows who our friends are because those individuals are working to give us the vote - just like we worked to get their votes counted and give them a paper trail.  In contrast to one currently proposed Constitutional Amendment which would lower the voting age for 1/8 of the 17 year olds and keep the rest dis-enfranchised, the voting age needs to be lowered uniformly and in accordance with the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution.   If you want to know if someone cares at all about America's youth, ask that person if they will back us in getting the vote. If they say "no," they don't.

This year on April 30th in Sacramento, my generation will see whether the California Democratic Party will sit back with the oppressors who only care about their own votes or will join those who support the youth in this country by calling for the lowering of the voting age in their 2006 platform.  Last year, the California Democratic Party passed a resolution calling for the voting age to be lowered.  However, the party has a history of ignoring its own resolutions.  On April 30th, all of America will learn whether the unanimous vote for that resolution was a meaningless gesture or a statement of where the party really stands.

Last month, the adults learned that my generation won't sit in classrooms where students are programmed to become an under-class for those attending elitist country club academies.  My generation won't sit and let a group of irresponsible leaders pass laws that turn this country into a fascist state.  We are through with the classroom mind-control and the futures that have been chosen for us by those who are destroying our world.   We want to determine the future with which we will have to live.  Last month, my generation changed the immigration debate by blocking freeways.   We were wondering where most of the adults were.  Granted, the freeway is not the most elegant voting both.  However, it's all we've got for now.  Give us a real voting booth and we will elect better leaders than the gang that is currently running this country.

Either way, we win by staying active.  By blocking the freeways, we force the adults to go somewhere else to spread their pollution and oppression.  By getting the vote, we can end the attacks on our environment, our planet and the world.   As voters, we will outvote the adults and then the adults can thank us for saving them from themselves.

Copyright © 2006 by Natasha H.  All rights reserved.  May be distributed with attribution and this copyright notice.

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