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The
following article is reprinted
from the October 2004 issue of Tri-State
Voice. It was also published online at Relevant
Magazine.
Wake Up from
Slumber: Civic Hypocrisy and Voter Dysfunction
"Elections
belong to the people. It is their decision. If they decide to turn their
back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit
on their blisters." - Abraham Lincoln
"And do this,
understanding the present time. The hour has come for you to wake up from
your slumber." - Romans 13:11
A brilliant, dedicated
emerging community leader confessed privately last month that he has never
voted in any of the eight elections since he became eligible. This was
one week after a similarly brilliant, dedicated emerging leader admitted
the same thing. Nor had they registered.
Both admissions came
shortly after they hosted a voter registration drive.
These are not street "thugs" or uneducated paupers, but rather
twenty-something professionals, well-educated advocates of public service
and civic engagement. Both are active leaders in their churches and have
been for years. Both are informed, impassioned champions of social justice,
personal responsibility, public safety, education reform, and a host of
issues that directly impact the public good.
Yet neither had ever exercised their most fundamental right as American
citizens to participate in the process of self government.
And they are not alone. Nationwide, voter turnout in the 2000 presidential
election - one of the closest races of all time, ultimately decided by
fewer than 600 votes - was a meager 54.7%, which is only marginally better
than the 1996 presidential election at 54.2%. Among Latinos and Asians,
the numbers for 2000 drop precipitously to 27.5% and 25.4%. In the 2002
midterm election, a paltry 39% voted nationwide. (Source: U.S. Census,
Current Population Reports.) Most alarming of all, only half of all Christians
are registered to vote, and only 25% actually vote.
Voter apathy is not new; since 1964, turnout for Presidential elections
has fallen from 69.3%. But historical dysfunction does not justify dysfunction.
Not voting in a nation where political power is premised on the exercise
of its citizens' right to vote is the height of civic hypocrisy, especially
when eligible nonvoters invoke the right of free speech to complain about
ineffective public policies and political corruption.
We live in a nation that has been a grand experiment since its inception.
Breaking from millennia of history where despotic individuals or a powerful
few ruled the many based on ambition, greed, nepotism, military might,
or other personal preferences, our founders crafted a system built of,
by, and for ordinary people. Marred though it was by slavery, gender and
class biases, and other shortcomings, they nevertheless provided ways
to grow and evolve into a more just and inclusive system.
And it has evolved, through hard fought social, legal, and military victories.
In roughly 100 years after the Civil War, four Constitutional amendments
extended the right to vote to Blacks (1870), women (1920), and all citizens
age 18 and older (1970), and further eliminated tax and other impediments
(1964). The Voting Rights Act of 1965 provided federal enforcement of
the new rules. Institutional barriers thus removed, we have no excuse
not to get out of our Lazy-Boy recliners and vote.
Whatever justifications we may offer - lousy candidates, feeling like
our vote doesn't make a difference, busyness, ignorance of the issues
- the fact remains that voting is our ticket to participate in the process.
When we fail to vote, we fail to earn the right to choose candidates,
debate issues, demand justice, or advocate with integrity.
Even worse, we trample the sacrifice of those who have given their lives
to secure us the privilege and inspired nations around the world to adopt
it as well.
The apostle Paul indicts Christians who neglect this duty when he writes
that our government is sanctioned by God, and that those who rebel against
its precepts by choosing not to vote invite judgment on themselves. "Everyone
must submit himself to the governing authorities, for there is no authority
except that which God has established. ... Consequently, he who rebels
against the authority is rebelling against what God has instituted, and
those who do so will bring judgment on themselves." (Romans 13:1-2)
That's not to say that there is one right way to vote as a Christian,
or that reasonable God-fearing people cannot disagree as to which candidates
or issues to support. (Can Christians agree on much of anything?) But
that's the genius and beauty of our system. Political disagreement and
debate are welcome.
One last thought, convicting as it might be: what finally compelled the
aforementioned young leaders to register to vote in what is arguably the
most important election of a generation? Was it a Romans 13 kind of message
by a contemporary preacher; the inflammatory rhetoric by a "profit"
of a different sort; or the rousing polemics of the respective political
conventions?
No.
What persuaded them was the well crafted voter awareness campaign by evangelicalism's
favorite cultural whipping post, MTV, and its annual Video Music Award
show. One after another, the prophets of pop culture - Jay-Z, Andre 3000,
even harebrained Jessica Simpson - made the case that it's our moral duty
to go to the polls on Election Day.
Regardless of which candidates you may support or what your reasons might
be, do yourself and your nation proud on November 2. Understand the times,
wake up from your slumber, and exercise your right to vote.
Or in the prescient words of P Diddy, paraphrasing the Apostle Paul: "Vote
or Die!"
- Jeremy R. Del Rio,
Esq., is the co-founder and executive director of Generation Xcel.
He defines his life mission as "empowering people to achieve their
dreams and transform their culture and communities." Read his bio
here.
______________________________________________________________
Additional articles
by Jeremy available online:
Why
I Support the Billy Graham Crusade (and Pray You Do Too) (March 2005)
Things
We Don't Talk About (February 2005)
X Factor: Redefining a Generation for Xmas
(December 2004)
An
Embarrassment of Riches: Economic Injustice and the Church (November
2004)
A Letter to My Son on Father's Day
(June 2004)
Fight of the Fatherless (May
2004)
Let's Talk about Sex (April 2004)
Beyond Passion: Living a Crucified Life
(March 2004)
Losing Races: A Dream Deferred (February
2004)
From
Irrelevant to Revolutionary: A 21st Century Continental Congress (November
2003)
A Crisis of Zeroes: Engaging NYC Public Schools (September 2003)
WWJD
(What Would Jay-Z Do): Engaging Youth Culture (August 2003)
The Joshua Paradox: Establishing
a Meaningful Mentorship Model (July 2003)
Young People are NOT the Future:
Embracing the YW8? (Why Wait?) Generation (June 2003)
Thanks to Heroes (September 2002)
A View from Ground Zero (September
2001)
By Any Means Necessary: Free Hot Dogs
and Youth Evangelism (July 2001)
Ground Zero Photos (Photography)
Visit HERE
for more Xcel Original Writings.
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