US Congress is a cozy club of multimillionaire Boomers and Greatest Generation lawmakers WHO ARE UP FOR REELECTION EVERY 2 TO 4 YEARS IN A COUNTRY WITH 50% VOTER TURNOUT.
Fixed the title to reflect the reality that Americans don't want to hear. We don't like to be told that it is our role as citizens to keep these people in power, or vote them out of power. But that involves effort, and we instead love to turn to excuses like "oh, if only we had turn limits" or "but, but, but, gerrymandering". We essentially have term limits - they are called elections, and in even some of the most gerrymandered districts, we could vote politicians out of powerif we got off our fat asses and voted. But we don't, and we use whatever excuse we can come up with to defend that laziness.
Instead of "people are too lazy", can we acknowledge how unnecessarily difficult it is to vote?
You dismiss gerrymandering, but we can't exactly vote in a district we're not a part of, or rely on convincing the biggest supporters to flip their politics.
Meanwhile, mostly targeting minorities, voting is made overly complex with people waiting for hours after work to be told they need a document or didn't register correctly.
No wonder only retirees in affluent areas vote, they're the only ones not jumping through hoops to do it. We need voting to be handled federally, with universal registration and mail in voting. Election day should be a holiday, and the polls should be open for a week.
I love the method Arizona uses. Of course we elected a corrupt piece of shit, but there's no way we would have gone blue without mail in voting. It's not like we get election day off, which should be in the Constitution
We can do more than one thing. We should constantly be reassessing voting to make it easier and safer as new technologies and processes develop (seriously, why are we not doing mail-in everywhere?). It will be hard to implement effective changes without significant political capital. So in addition, we don't have a choice but to be shouting from the rooftops that it's partially our fault it got this bad, and it's our responsibility to fix it.
I talk a lot of politics (I'm very popular at parties /s), and easily the most common response is along the lines of "I don't vote, what's the point?" or just pure ignorance of anything beyond some headlines and a casual disregard for civic duty. We have majorly slipped, and people by and large have entirely taken society and it's framework for granted. I genuinely think people need a kick in the ass from fellow citizens to focus up and not pretend apathy isn't part of the problem. There's no chance we fix anything without motivating a huge block of the population that just doesn't prioritize these things for a multitude of reasons.
Obviously, this also means those of us that don't have a difficult time voting should be volunteering where possible and donating to like-minded causes when that's not an option. We should be having frank political discussions and not straying away from calling out absurdities. It's not fun, there's no glory therein, it just needs to be done. Nations don't endure on belief alone.
No, I'm not going to acknowledge that because for the vast, vast majority of people it isn't true.
It's never taken me more than 15 mins to vote in even the biggest election cycles and that's gonna be true for the vast majority of people. Sick of hearing some BS about It ToOk ToO lOnG usually from people who have never 3ven tried to vote and instead are just regurgitating some BS they heard online. Are there SOME districts which are far worse than others? Sure, I'll condeed that, but it's not the norm. Not by a long shot.
This is a near-useless critique. It's on the level of "If people stopped doing bad things and did good things, society would be perfect." Sure, individual responsibility is all well and good, but why do the young people in the United States have such a reliably low turnout? It's not just Gen Z, the other generations had similarly low turnout when they were in the same age range. Could this point to a systemic issue that causes young people to be less likely to vote? Ah no, it's just laziness. Also, to be clear, elections are not term limits. China, Russia, and North Korea all hold elections, and yet I would bet money none of those leaders are going to be leaving office anytime soon.
This is exactly the reality today. I'm old (50's). I voted in every election since I could vote. I made a point to educate myself and vote on candidates and issues that helped the working people (me and many more).
I'd ask the younger people I work with if they were going to vote and they told me it doesn't matter if they voted. And then they don't vote, and complain about laws and changes to social safety nets.
I am waiting for the young people to go vote these people out of power.
Every time I vote I see a sea of white haired people at the polls.
Online, while I can't see how old people who post are,I think it is safe to say most trend considerably younger. To this younger generation they think some wicked burn on Twitter or a meme posted on on Reddit or a snarky comment on Lemmy is the equivalent to voting. They think that's how politicals change works.
These reanimated corpses have been in power for way too goddamned long. They can barely carry the weight of their own clothes FFS. Just. Go away.. I bet they park their shit boxes on the sidewalks too. Bastards the lot of them.
As much as I (a 43 year old teacher) may shake my head at the tik-tok generation, we need their energy and idealism to renew our democratic institutions and approach society’s problems with fresh eyes and optimism. Term limits have never seemed more crucial to that renewal process than they do now. This much entrenched money and power just seems like fear of that change and renewal.
Don't judge a generation by the popular app of the time. I'm not much younger than you and remember being called the Facebook generation, and now it's swarmed with boomers. Plenty of 40 year olds use TikTok anyway.
You're right, we need their energy and idealism more than ever because they are sticking to their ideals and see the writing on the wall.
If voting didn't change things. They wouldn't be working so hard to take away the ability or right to vote from certain groups. Or negate their votes. Voting matters. But so does who's counting. It's an uphill battle. But there are almost no better battles to be fighting.
That must be why things are getting better. They’ll let you vote for culture war policy, but not economic policy. The battle in the streets is where real change happens. Protests. Strikes, organizing, unions. That’s what scare the capitalists. Hypothetically, if we overwhelmingly voted for Socialism, you think they would allow that?