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Tales From The Other Side - Alternative Culture to enlighten a mediocre mood

 
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Let under 18s Vote.

May 30th 2007 11:01
I was a pretty angry kid during High School. I guess I know why now… a whole lot of things. But one of the things which still makes me angry is the way in which the Government is happy to boot around students.

Unfortunately, students aren’t exactly high up on the agenda for Governments. At least, not so far as their actual welfare is considered. Some problems in schools? Make the students work harder. Or make them read Shakespeare. Or make them… whatever. Point is, students tend to get the arse end of the deal.

What if children were given the right to vote though? Here’s how it would be done. At sixteen, you are permitted to vote. Your vote counts for a quarter vote. At seventeen, it counts for half a vote. At eighteen, the rest is history.


Maybe if they had a say, Governments would be less inclined to use students as pawns for political gain. Maybe if there were consequences for stressing students out to the point of mental instability, then they’re be less inclined to push education policy in a direction that threatens this.
John Howard Graffiti
Who says politics isn't considered 'cool'?

Arguments against this? I can think of three.

Firstly – Under eighteens, especially when involved in a school’s culture, are victims of peer pressure. However, in response I would really have to suggest that everyone in the entire world is a victim of peer pressure.


Second, students knowledge of Politics is pretty limited. This is a totally valid concern. In grade 12 I remember oodles of people asking which political party was in power. However, I would believe that permitting under eighteens to vote would have a positive effect in this regard. Kids are detached from politics throughout their schooling. If politics represented an actual relevance to their lives, perhaps they would be able to form habits of making well informed choices at a younger age, while they are in a learning environment.

Finally, the argument could be made that one should ‘let kids be kids’, and not push politics onto them. However these are not kids who are unaffected, or uninterested in the political world. They are ready and willing to care and act. The question is, will society embrace this desire, or slowly squeeze it out of their system until the very idea of voting seems horrific?

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Comments
8 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by Damo

May 30th 2007 11:42
Firstly as a concept I am not against the proposal.
It makes more sense than a blanket 'everone who can walk should vote'.
Yet I believe that it will be a hard barrow to push.

Kids do need a voice in society and I think that too often we hear from young reps speaking scripted lines to the media.
I also see a lot of older groups (not parents or family) using kids to push an agenda or worse trying to say what the kids think.

Vote or no vote I am interested in what the average 16-18 thinks and what they want from the future.

Comment by Brenton

May 30th 2007 11:46
i was that age when i heard a version of the diea. I really liked it then.

It would be good to know what that age group thought. Seeing how i'm an out of touch old fogy these days.

Comment by Ahmed

May 30th 2007 12:21
umm, Brenton, on what authority do you claim people unsder the age of 18 know less about politics than people over 18? Has there been any research done into this?

Comment by Brenton

May 30th 2007 13:02
Haha, Ahmed... I'm pretty sure that your question needs a bit of rewarding.

However, i don't know any proof that under 18s are less politically aware, but i find it likely. I'd love to be proved wrong haha.

Comment by pieceofmymind

May 31st 2007 01:03
I’m surprised to read something like this. In today’s society where we are bombarded with an overflow of lazy young people who seldom want to work, your proposal lacks merit, in my opinion. We already have a president who doesn’t know whether he is coming or going; why in the world would we want to arm him with a country full of people who know more about playing PS2 than they do politics? Even if we did allow people under the age of 18 to vote, they have such a short attention span, they might forget the issues before they got to the polls. Our voting system sucks for a number of reasons. Those of us who do vote rarely see the benefit of the time we spent standing in line to push those few little buttons; however, I say if it ain’t broke don’t fix it...yes, it’s messed up, but we’re used to it. People under the age of 18 have enough to worry about; their priorities are not in order though, so they often fail to see that. Our young people identify with rap stars and other celebrities…that’s scary. Let’s not give them an early vote; let’s help them focus on other things, like avoiding AIDS and not killing anyone by driving drunk.

Comment by Brenton

May 31st 2007 03:24
It's disturbing that you seem to think so little of anyone under eighteen.

I was reffering to Australia for the ststem to be employed, where we have compulsorary voting. maybe that makes a difference. But I think that the rejection of grounds of everyone under eighteen being incompetent, studid of having a short attention span, is pretty dodgie.

Comment by pieceofmymind

May 31st 2007 10:45
I can appreciate your position; however, what is disturbing to me is that the majority of "everyone under eighteen" usually gives us all something new each day to show how incompetent they can be. I do recognize that there are some who are more mature than others, so I don't want to take away from them, but it is unusual these days to find a responsible young adult lurking around. In Australia, it may be different. In America, it is like Animal House...

Comment by Brenton

May 31st 2007 12:16
Yeah, valid point.

Personally though i still think it works as

1. Dickheadedness does not discrimninate by age.

2. I doubt that ignorent under18s would want to vote - this being the option, not the compusion.

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