…that leaves us still with very far to go in restoring
functional democracy.
With regard to Paul Louis
Metzger and Tom Krattenmaker and their joint post “The Voting
Rights Act and Post-Racialized American: Can We Vote on That?” (http://www.patheos.com/blogs/uncommongodcommongood/2013/10/the-voting-rights-act-and-post-racialized-america-can-we-vote-on-that/), I felt that two
additional perspectives may be helpful. Here’s the first of those:
Regarding the necessity of
documentation/verification of our participation in a mutual society:
Among our decisions to participate together in
democracy, several require significant inconvenience, among the least of which
are standards for documenting our participation in a society of mutual
responsibility. That some want to increase these standards so as to require prohibitively
expensive documentation should be addressed economically at the county level
(at least in our communities) where agencies that are self-funded through fees
and fines continue to wield a virtual stranglehold over most areas of life.
In contrast to this mutual participation, though, some
prefer to remain unnumbered and unencumbered by “the system.” Working among
some who seek to live “off the grid,” the few Anglos I know who choose not to
be documented (ironically including both peace-mongering hippies and gun-toting
constitutionalists) have no desire to participate in the political process.
Their version of society includes an aversion
to mutuality of responsibility. They view themselves as being outside and
beyond the petty concerns of those who provide the infrastructure of a broader
community than they see necessary. Others who choose not to be documented are
likewise disinterested in the political process, except where it
(hypocritically) seeks to impose penalties upon them for providing the essential
services for which businesses and individuals will not employ legal (i.e.,
expensively minimum-waged) residents. These view themselves as outside and
beneath the petty concerns of this or that candidate or ballot issue.
But for those of us who still choose to participate in
a mutually responsible society, there should be clear and accessible (i.e., free) means of authenticating our right
to participate. But even my possession of a valid driver’s license, current U.S. passport,
and documentation of my physical address recently proved to be insufficient to allowing
my participation in an important recent election.
I was recently disallowed my “right to vote” on a
local issue that directly affects my personal financial situation. I must
confess that what prevented me from receiving a ballot was not the lack of a
state- or federally-issued ID, but having failed to fill out a
change-of-address from our previous residence outside the immediate area
perceived to be affected by the ballot issue. It would have cost me only the
price of a first-class stamp in order to do so, but it would also have required
me to be better informed of the boundary restrictions on this particular
measure.
My point is that it is often an information deficit,
rather than an economic one, that prevents greater participation, even where
the issues are clearly motivating us to make mutual decisions through the
ballot box. And that leads to my second contribution to the discussion, which will appear tomorrow.
1 comment:
Looking forward to part 2!
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