bmxgurl25
New Member
What does everyone think of 16 year olds voting in australia?
I wanted to vote last year but i was only 17bmxgurl25 said:What does everyone think of 16 year olds voting in australia?
good. the last thing this country needs is more islamic voters.Omium said:I wanted to vote last year but i was only 17
lolbreaking said:good. the last thing this country needs is more islamic voters.
i lol'd (Im serz)breaking said:good. the last thing this country needs is more islamic voters.
Yes, that's why I included the "not reading past the back cover" part, substitutable with "reading the wikipedia article on it".Schroedinger said:Hey man Road to Serfdom is a fantastic analysis of the situations precluding nationalism and a Nazi-esque governmental situation.
The Communist Manifesto is a watered down version of Das Kapital (Das Kapital being a fine book).
Well, maybe our HSC advanced English courses will finally be worth something.Captain Gh3y said:You shouldn't be allowed to vote until you can analyse every current issue at a competent third-year uni student level, from both a Marxist and a Feminist perspective.
Join the club. There are so many young people in that situation who may have genuinely had an opinion and understood the issues, but were not allowed to vote. But think about all the other people in your year at school... do you really want to live in a world where THOSE people have an impact on the world around them?Omium said:I wanted to vote last year but i was only 17.
We can't trust 80% of adults to vote on those issues, but we still let them.Truthbynumbers said:Can we trust 16 year olds who don’t pay mortgages to make decisions on interest rates, or don’t have a job to decide on which IR policy they like best? When so many 16 year olds think "School is gay" and plan to leave at year 10, do we want them voting on education policy?
But at least most adults are at least educated about these issues to the extent where they can determine whether it affects their ability to buy booze and cigarettes.iamsickofyear12 said:We can't trust 80% of adults to vote on those issues, but we still let them.
Captain Gh3y said:if it helps reduce the power that ultra-conservative ultra-prudish old people have in Australia (really quite a lot, and thanks to modern medicine they won't die for a while yet) then i'd be for it
Older =/= more educated, worldly, intelligent etc.Truthbynumbers said:But at least most adults are at least educated about these issues to the extent where they can determine whether it affects their ability to buy booze and cigarettes.
i second that, i know plenty of people under 18 who have much more of an idea about politics than more than a few adultsspiny norman said:I think perhaps bringing in voluntary voting for people aged 16-18 is an idea, so that those who do have some opinion on politics are given the opportunity to vote if they so want.