Opportunity for Change
I vote because my parents took me to vote with them and I got to pull the lever that closed the curtain.
I vote because I took my children to pull the big lever so they would know it was important.
I vote because I was a member of a local school board in New Jersey and our budget passed by just one vote! Fortunately, my husband voted or else I would have been mad at him!
I vote because moving to Florida from the northeast was very disorienting since counties have most power and the state legislature keep taking power away from localities. I moved from a community that banned plastic bags and yet in Florida I found that the legislature would not let communities make that choice.
Denise McLaughlin
Let Your Voice Be Heard
Here’s what I think about voting!
There are many places in the world where citizens do not have a legitimate say in how they are governed. We are so lucky to live in a country where our vote counts. And many of us feel that that vote is being challenged, even in America! So voting is critical!
We should vote because we care about how our city, county, state and country are run. By not voting, citizens abdicate and will lose the right to complain….and you know how we love to complain! So do it!
I recently finished a wonderful book called “Leaving Coyes Hill”, the story of Lucy Stone, an early abolitionist and women’s right advocate (strongly recommend this book).. She worked tirelessly for these causes in a time when women and blacks had few, if any rights. Let’s not make her work, and the work of so many after her, go to waste but failing to participate! We might not like what happens to those rights if we don’t!
Stacy Vermylen
Strengthen Democracy
Voting is the cornerstone of our representative democracy. Voting is our voice, our power. It allows us to peacefully participate in our government. Before we vote, we re-examine who we are and who we strive to become. We think about American ideals such as liberty, equality, and opportunity; and core values such as empathy, respect, and honesty.
We elect representatives who share our vision of the American dream. Who we elect affects nearly all aspects of our lives – our communities, schools, healthcare, legal system, economy, technology, and much more. Our vote affects the air we breathe and the water we drink.
From history, we know that democracy is fragile. It can never be taken for granted; it is weakened by complacency and misinformation. We must protect democracy from those who place their own interests above the “common good.” Support democracy and vote in the November 8, 2022 General Election.
Libbie Bramson