Only land-owning citizens should be allowed to vote.
What a terrible and snobbish idea.
Only land-owning citizens should be allowed to vote.
Allowing anyone to vote is a foolish idea, and there is nothing snobbish about requiring land-ownership as a prerequisite for voting.What a terrible and snobbish idea.
Here is the wisdom and how it applies to us. Here in Selma, the last statistic I heard was that 61% of the residents are renters. That means that only 39% of the potential voters directly feel the bite of property taxes for the town and county. Why should someone who does actually pay taxes in this town be able to vote for someone who is going to determine the level of taxes the minority of us property owners pay? Is that fair? I say not, since they do not have a reasonable self-interest in how residents are taxed.
I also feel the same way about income taxes. Should anyone who does not actually pay income taxes be able to elect those who will set the income tax rates and determine how tax dollars are spent?
People who receive public tax money for their livelihood are dependent upon the entity from which they receive their stipend. Therefore, if these same people are eligible to vote, they will elect those who will most likely continue to support them financially. This is the insidious plan that has been in place since the 1960's. Enslave people financially and they will vote against the interest of the masses for their own benefit. A suckling pig will not voluntarily diminish its food source.
The term disfranchisement was used even in 1787. The term was not invented in 2000 when some falsely accused George W. Bush of "stealing an election". The term was then used in regards to placing qualifications on the right to vote. The term of "taxation without representation" was a long used battle cry in the young nation and part of the reason for the revolution. Just as bad, however, is "representation without taxation".
That last concept was not lost on some of the states in the 1700's. There were indeed such restrictions or qualifications for people to be able to cast a ballot. Their reason was much the same as mine; that people who pay taxes actually have an interest in how the government that extracts such taxation uses said monies.
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Allowing anyone to vote is a foolish idea, and there is nothing snobbish about requiring land-ownership as a prerequisite for voting.
And only the men.Only land-owning citizens should be allowed to vote.
And only the men.
Are you serious?
Allowing anyone to vote is a foolish idea, and there is nothing snobbish about requiring land-ownership as a prerequisite for voting.
Yeah, there is. To say that renters don't feel property taxes is asinine, for one thing, considering it's factored into the rent they pay. To say that a fellow who lives in a condo knows less or is less qualified to vote than white trash who happens to own their property is equally inane. Land ownership proves or disproves nothing in terms of a voter's legitimacy--this requirement would, however, establish a not-so-neat-and-tidy aristocracy that would bastardize any pretense of a free and equal republic.
To oppose free and equal voting regardless of persons is nothing more than arrogant, sneering, venal snobbery run amok.
That wasn't racist or unneeded to make a point.
The TheologyOnline.com TOPIC OF THE DAY for October 5th, 2012 08:40 AM
toldailytopic: Do you favor voter ID laws? Why or why not?
Why would you think that?And only the men.
Why do you think owning land is so important to voting or that it makes one qualified to vote?
This has nothing to do with whether the property owner knows less than a renter.To say that a fellow who lives in a condo knows less or is less qualified to vote than white trash who happens to own their property is equally inane.
The TheologyOnline.com TOPIC OF THE DAY for October 5th, 2012 08:40 AM
toldailytopic: Do you favor voter ID laws? Why or why not?
As long as were going backWhy would you think that?
This has nothing to do with whether the property owner knows less than a renter.
A renter does not have the kind of vested interest in the community that a property owner has.
This has nothing to do with whether the property owner knows less than a renter.
A renter does not have the kind of vested interest in the community that a property owner has.
A renter does not have the kind of vested interest in the community that a property owner has.