Wednesday, November 01, 2006

America, and the vote

Unmarried women targeted in election

Besides my telling whoever reads to vote... which they should be doing anyway if they are of the legal age, the article just goes to show how many females don't do it. I remember voting for the president in the 2004 election, even though the outcome wasn't as nice as I'd hoped. Guess next time I should skip the rallies... or perhaps I should try harder. Maybe when I get back to HMC I'll have to join the league of women voters or whatever it is in order to sign more people up. I think it's one of the things I'm opinionated about (voting=good thing) that's not controversial at all. Most people agree, and not voting is just ridiculous.

A excerpt from the article:

"In 2004 they were 22 percent of the electorate yet there were still 20 million unmarried women who did not vote," she said. "If they voted in higher numbers ... they could literally help determine the agenda in this country."

Unmarried women tend to lean Democratic, political experts said.
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This article just makes me more interested in the matter. The lecturer in my British history class defined Federalism and referenced America. Yes, we are federalist, or at least that's a part of the government. America's democracy is interesting -- especially in the way it's all done, especially in comparison with other countries. And in response to the excerpt -- they'd determine the agenda because everyone should get a voice. There are 52% females compared with males who are registered to vote. Another fact. Enough rambling.

Back to history research paper writing...

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