Black voter registration effort launched at ‘Black Panther’ screenings

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Arkansan:
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niceatheist:
In the name of the “common good” has been the means by which a great many injustices have been committed over the millennia.
Then what standard do you propose for making political decisions?
I don’t propose a standard at all
If you don’t have any ideas about how political decisions should be made, then I’m not sure why you’re arguing about a political question.
Because the constitutions of virtually every modern democratic industrialized country guarantees that and a number of other political freedoms. In other words, in the West, we decided about a century ago (give or take) that all law-abiding adults had the right to vote. In some countries, like Australia, it’s even mandatory.
And you’ve still not presented any argument for why this is a good idea. Lots of bad ideas are widely put into practice.
Who are you to say that everyone shouldn’t vote?
This is another ad hominem.
 
Your arguments are circular. There is no test for voting, no hoop through which to jump. It is a right guaranteed to all citizens.
 
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niceatheist:
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Arkansan:
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niceatheist:
In the name of the “common good” has been the means by which a great many injustices have been committed over the millennia.
Then what standard do you propose for making political decisions?
I don’t propose a standard at all
If you don’t have any ideas about how political decisions should be made, then I’m not sure why you’re arguing about a political question.
I have plenty of ideas. I just don’t think I have any authority or right to decide who should be encouraged to vote based upon what I think are serious reasons to vote for any candidate. I can make my argument, and that’s where my rights to influence others begins and ends.
Because the constitutions of virtually every modern democratic industrialized country guarantees that and a number of other political freedoms. In other words, in the West, we decided about a century ago (give or take) that all law-abiding adults had the right to vote. In some countries, like Australia, it’s even mandatory.
And you’ve still not presented any argument for why this is a good idea. Lots of bad ideas are widely put into practice.
It’s a good idea because every citizen has a stake in how their country is governed. You know, that whole “government of the people, by the people and for the people”. the very core of that greatest of speeches on liberty. Lincoln didn’t say “government of the smart people” or “government of the white people” or “government of the serious people.” We are all “the people” in whatever state, province or country in which we vote, and those people we elect to those public offices are there to govern in our name and for our benefit and with our democratic approval, so darned straight it’s only appropriate that “the people”, however white or brown or smart or dull they may be, have their say.
Who are you to say that everyone shouldn’t vote?
This is another ad hominem.
No it isn’t. It’s a reasonable question based on your belief that targeting certain groups with voter registrations will somehow lead to more “irresponsible” voters.
 
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I’m not sure in the US that mandatory voting laws would be able to pass constitutional muster
I’m not sure either. I think of people that are religiously opposed to vote. Forcing them to vote would be a first ammendment violation.
 
I don’t believe that any real difficulty exists in registering to vote in America, but even if it did, that would be good. Requiring effort to register would also select for responsible voters.
I disagree. I also think there’s no way to assure that there is an equal effort demand put on everyone. Being able to get to a voter registration location will put different demands on those with cars v those without, those with kids v those without, people with different work schedules, so on.
 
It sounds then like you really have more of a problem with participatory democracy than voter registration drives. Perhaps you should start a thread on that and explain exactly why you believe some people do not have a right to vote.
 
Voting is a right not a privilege. We have folk who died in the effort of making this a right for all our citizens.
The suffrage movement a the turn of the 20th Century to give woman the right to vote. The Civil rights movement in the 50’s, 60’s to give African Americans the right to vote. Doing away with Jim Crow laws of the south and The “Test” which was dramatically different depending on the color of your skin. To say we must somehow force folk to jump through hoops and jump hurdles to attain this right is just plain wrong.
 
So what is wrong with this? I think the headline should have left out “Black” And just stuck with Voter registration effort…
 
I also think that different folk have different meanings to the word “informed” As it applies to voting. (extremely subjective) I will just leave it at that… Should not be in the equation as to who get’s to vote. Or as to if you have the right to vote…
 
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Believe it or not, there is no right more heavily protected in the Constitution than voting.
Voting isn’t a right. The amendments you reference regulate voting and on what basis you can deny the vote. There remain plenty of legitimate grounds for denying the vote.
How about: voting is a civic duty, and anything that can help eligible citizens register so that they can participate in elections is a good thing. Period.
No. Participating in society is a civic duty. An individual might best participate in society by not voting because his opinion is so ill informed or he lacks basic intelligence.
 
Titles of legislation mean nothing. Does the PATRIOT Act mean we are all patriotic? Or does it mean that the spy state is super patriotic?

The franchise was denied to people for many reasons. Amendments can restrict those reasons. Laws can codify those reasons. But none of these make voting a right. People may think it should be a right, but it isn’t in our legal system.
 
No I would call it a right. You can lose that right though. But basically any US Citizen who reaches the age of 18 has that right. Now there are subtractions that can cause you to lose that right. Being “uninformed” (Extremely subjective), color of your skin, Gender, Education, or where you live are not any of those subtractions. Registering folk for the vote is always a good thing. Even if they may not vote like you.
 
Registering to vote is a goo thing, even if you don’t vote like you. I would it is a good thing even if you don’t vote. It is the first step. I would guess there are and have been many “uninformed”voters throughout our history.
 
Registering to vote is a goo[d] thing, even if you don’t vote like you. I would it is a good thing even if you don’t vote. It is the first step.
I agree. I understand for my local areas there had been people that avoided registering too because they were trying to avoid jury duty (something I can kind of understand since it can result in several days of loss compensation if you have a job that doesn’t pay you while at jury duty). The local counties decided to start using additional records for populating the jury pool which dissolved that demotivator for people to register.

I was looking at some other articles for the various records that Black Panther has broken. Of course if it is breaking records that means lots of foot traffic coming into the theaters. That makes the theaters an excellent area right now for having access to a large number of people coming through.
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ThinkingSapien:
The many laws with “Voting rights” in their titles and bodies disagree with this.
Titles of legislation mean nothing.
I said "titles and bodies."Additionally there have been many rulings based on these laws that also disagree with your perspective. It sounds like you may be operating from a different premise than most of the other people in this thread.
 
Voting isn’t a right.
You are incorrect. Voting is a right. It is the most basic, and important right in any representative government. I will charitably assume you live under an authoritarian regime and don’t understand. I’m sorry about that, I can pm you some information on seeking asylum in a nation that has a representative government.
 
Just came across something else on social media that is part of this campaign. It was black panther themed imagery with a message saying “TEXT WAKANDA TO 91990 To register to VOTE”. I went ahead and did so just to see what would happen. I received a welcome message and a prompt for my zip code. After I entered my zip it responded with a link for registering and information on key election dates and their registration deadlines.
 
Some day I will learn it include others’ quotes, but not today. Maybe I also misunderstand postings on whether voting is a right. Seems the Constitution is clear on that: “The US Constitution stated in Amendment XV, which was ratified by the states in 1870: "Section 1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude.” Yes, the state can also remove or suspend this in accordance with law.
 
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