Collin Beck | Make an informed vote - or die

In the effort to increase participation in elections, voter education is just as important as voter registration

· March 27, 2008, 5:00 am

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Remember when P. Diddy was screaming at everyone to Vote or Die? That's how Locust Walk feels now. People yell about how important it is for college students to vote in this historic election. (Has there ever been a non-historic election?)

But is it really that important for young people to vote? It's often cited that only 46.7 percent of those aged 18 to 24 voted in 2004, compared to 73.3 percent of adults aged 65 to 74.

While many may find those statistics discouraging, to me they seem about right. Don't get me wrong, voting is important, and I consider it my civic duty. However, not everyone our age agrees - evidently more than half don't. And that's just fine. If they're apathetic about voting or don't think they have the time, aren't we better off with them not doing it?

To me, it's like when a wife asks her husband which dress to wear, but he's too busy watching SportsCenter to look at either of them. So he just shouts, "The second one!" Do we really want to nag people into choosing a commander in chief?

Rather than simply telling people to vote, campus groups should give people a reason they should. It'd be great if you could walk down Locust Walk and find informational pamphlets on candidates and their platforms.

But sadly, the only person I've found doing this is the LaRouche guy. He may be crazy, but not only does he pass out his candidate's platform, he's also willing to wear it as a human sign.

In contrast, the mainstream parties simply hand out career fair-esque goodies. A booth sells Barack Obama T-shirts. What better way to choose a candidate than on how his name looks on a shirt? If only "Jesus is my Homeboy" had run in 2000, we might have avoided the Iraq War.

No less than three times I've been asked if I wanted an Obama sticker. Despite my desire to add to my ever increasing sticker collection (which I keep in my trapper keeper), I declined. While some may interpret wearing such memorabilia as showing support for their candidate, to me it seems more like organized peer pressure.

I wouldn't be surprised if next week they just started mobbing everyone on the walk shouting, "Vote Obama, man, everyone's doing it. How else are you going to be popular, you don't even drink?"

I apologize if it seems like I'm picking on Obama too much. It's nothing personal. You just don't get offered too many McCain stickers at Penn. They'd be a scarlet letter - like "zit stickers" from that game Girl Talk. "You got caught cheating on your Roman History exam. Take 3 McCain stickers!"

I'm not saying that people shouldn't vote, just that we should focus on raising the number of informed voters - not simply voters. And being an uninformed voter is something I'm guilty of myself.

In 2004 I left North Dakota (via horse and buggy) for Penn. Soon after, a clipboard volunteer convinced me to register in Pennsylvania. I was excited for my presidential vote to actually count, but when I filled out my ballot on Election Day, I realized living in Hill for two months didn't really make me a Pennsylvanian.

Sure, I knew my presidential vote, but I had no clue about local and state issues. I mean, two months earlier I thought Philadelphia was on the ocean. (It's really close if you look at a national map, OK?) If someone had run for state senate under the platform of saving Pennsylvania's coral reefs, there's a good chance I might have voted for him.

I hope everyone registers to vote in a place they identify with and take the time to research the issues through the internet and other media. As Stephanie Simon, president of Penn Leads the Vote, put it, "The tools are at your fingertips to get informed."

That way we can increase the number of votes based on information rather than votes based on stickers.

Collin Beck is a College senior from Minot, ND. His e-mail is beck@dailypennsylvanian.com. The Dakota Kid appears alternating Thursdays.

Comments (10)

Senior

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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The reason that you see the Obama people doing this is because the Democrat Party relies greatly on uninformed voters: illegal aliens, felons, and idealistic college students who don't pay taxes & haven't raised a family. Republicans aren't trying to attract people to their party -- once immature kids hit the age of reason, they'll join on their own.

Hey Colin

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Instead of whining like a typical DP columnist, why dont you get out there and "educate" the apparently stupid and uninformed Penn students yourself? After all, you do seem to think pretty highly of your own intelligence.

rod

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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[QUOTE id="157bbd2b-7e33-49c6-9c0f-42bc6edf5dd9"]The reason that you see the Obama people doing this is because the Democrat Party relies greatly on uninformed voters: illegal aliens, felons, and idealistic college students who don't pay taxes & haven't raised a family. Republicans aren't trying to attract people to their party -- once immature kids hit the age of reason, they'll join on their own.[/QUOTE] Yes, it's pathetic that the "Democrat" (sic) Party rely on states like CA, NY, IL, MA instead of the intellectual powerhouses of the GOP like Alabama, Utah, Mississippi, and other Confederate/Fly-Over states.

J

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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join or die

What's pathetic...

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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[QUOTE id="157bbd2b-7e33-49c6-9c0f-42bc6edf5dd9"] Yes, it's pathetic that the "Democrat" (sic) Party rely on states like CA, NY, IL, MA instead of the intellectual powerhouses of the GOP like Alabama, Utah, Mississippi, and other Confederate/Fly-Over states.[/QUOTE] ...is that you think it's an insult to simply say what state someone's from, and that you actually use the phrase "fly-over" in a non-ironic way. You're just reinforcing the stereotype that Democrats are ignorant, vapid, bourgeois cunts who drink lattes, spit on poor people while pretending to care about them, and are generally annoying hipster jerkoffs. Oh, and I am a Democrat, so don't think I'm calling you an idiot because you disagree with my political beliefs. It's 'cause I genuinely think you're an idiot. And please do learn what (sic) means. Calling it the Democrat Party isn't incorrect, though it is truncated for the purpose (many think) to jab.

Haha

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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[QUOTE id="702873a3-c02f-493c-85ca-36397c55bbf1"]Instead of whining like a typical DP columnist, why dont you get out there and "educate" the apparently stupid and uninformed Penn students yourself? After all, you do seem to think pretty highly of your own intelligence.[/QUOTE] Instead of insulting the author about irrelevant things, why don't you just read the column and try to understand the message?

re: Rod

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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[QUOTE id="157bbd2b-7e33-49c6-9c0f-42bc6edf5dd9"]The reason that you see the Obama people doing this is because the Democrat Party relies greatly on uninformed voters: illegal aliens, felons, and idealistic college students who don't pay taxes & haven't raised a family. Republicans aren't trying to attract people to their party -- once immature kids hit the age of reason, they'll join on their own.[/QUOTE] I'm from New York. Trust me -- there are plenty of morons. And plenty of bright, intellectual people who have terrible judgment. And it's the "Democrat" party because there's nothing democratic about it. Just look at the current "let's lose ASAP" attitude towards pro-democratic efforts in Iraq...

Puritanical Rightwing Nutjob

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Vote Obama, man, everyone's doing it. How else are you going to be popular, you don't even drink? Also, if you don't vote for Obama, you're a racist. Sounds perfectly reasonable and rational. Something the thinking man will vote for. I mean, it's not like Obama supporters are a bunch of penniless hippies and naive college kids. No, they're the captains of industry, Obama supporters are.

Your babies.

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Let me have them, Mr. Beck. Let me have your babies. Good column.

John

December 31, 1969, 7:00 pm

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Unfortunately the votes of the uninformed count just as much as the votes of the informed, and if you're trying to get some candidate elected, it's much easier to say, "here's a sticker, vote for Obama" to people that have no clue than to try to convince people who care about politics to vote for him. I really liked the column though.

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