Law in Contemporary Society

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PoliticalGraffiti 3 - 06 Jun 2012 - Main.RohanGrey
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 I'm in Livorno, Italy taking a break in a coffee shop. Yes, it's amazing! I've seen political graffiti all over the place today and thought I'd pose a question for discussion: Why is there so much more political graffiti in Europe than in the United States?

I know we have some. But at least in my experience growing up in downtown Sacramento (where we have plenty of graffiti), rarely did I see political graffiti. Here, most of the graffiti includes political messages.

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 Then think about your polling place. Do you know where it is, right now? I don't. How do I found out? I google it. I have a certain level of technical literacy that not everyone has. Not to mention mere access to a computer. Even if some people want to vote, they may have no idea where to go. That they needed to have registered. How about people with no address to provide on their registration?

I don't know if this is unique to the US, in fact I it is likely turn anywhere to a certain degree, but the structure of the system itself makes minority groups less likely to be heard. But that may not always be the case, white now account for under 50% of births in the US (http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/17/us/whites-account-for-under-half-of-births-in-us.html?pagewanted=all). The genetic makeup of America is starting to radically change

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-- YvetteFerrer - 25 May 2012

I'm not sure about the extent to which low minority turnout is unique to the US, but for what it's worth, Australia has a compulsory voting system that votes on weekends and has historically produced on average around 95 percent turnout for federal elections, although the numbers are significantly lower in the rural and indigenous-dominated Northern Territory (around 85 percent). Despite being compulsory, It's still possible to donkey vote or not vote at all (the penalty is a relatively nominal fine and you can be exempted for a range of reasons, including in my case an "all-day orchestra rehearsal"), so there is very little concern over governmental coercion even on the right. Quite the opposite, in fact - from my experience it's largely considered a civic responsibility akin to paying taxes and following speeding regulations. We also have an alternate vote system similar to what was recently proposed and rejected in the United Kingdom, which while not as directly representative as multi-member proportional systems, does provide more opportunity for third-party challenges without the Nader-esque problems of first-past-the-post (as seen with the significant upswing in Green votes in 2010).

-- RohanGrey - 25 May 2012


Revision 3r3 - 06 Jun 2012 - 04:28:16 - RohanGrey
Revision 2r2 - 05 Jun 2012 - 13:55:40 - YvetteFerrer
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