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         Voting United States:     more books (100)
  1. Direct Legislation: Voting on Ballot Propositions in the United States by David Magleby, 2001-11-28
  2. HEARINGS BEFORE THEUNITED STATES COMMISSION ON CIVIIL RIGHTSVOL 1:VOTING by UNITED STATES COMMISION ON CIVIL RIGHTS, 1965
  3. Voting Practices in the United Nations 2003 by United States Department of State, 2004
  4. Voting irregularities in Florida during the 2000 presidential election by United States Commission on Civil Rights, 2001
  5. Shareholder Voting Rights and Practices in Europe and the United States (Studies in Comparative Corporate and Financial Law, 5) by E. Wymeersch, 1999-12-13
  6. Defiéndase votando. (el voto de los latinos en los Estados Unidos)(TT: Defend yourself by voting) (TA: Latino vote in the United States)(Editorial): An article from: Semana
  7. Political Participation (A Study of the Participation by Negroes in the Electoral and Political Process in 10 Southern States since passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965)
  8. Party, constituency, and congressional voting;: A study of legislative behavior in the United States House of Representatives (Louisiana State University studies) by W. Wayne Shannon, 1968
  9. Voting behaviour in the United States (Harold Laski Institute of Political Science. Publications) by Frederic D Ogden, 1958
  10. Changing Patterns of Voting in the Northern United States: Electoral R by Robert W. Speel, 1998
  11. Reprint series - Bureau of Government Research, University of Massachusetts by Sheldon Goldman, 1968
  12. Voting behavior in the United States, 1952-1972 by G. R Boynton, 1974
  13. Changing Patterns of Voting in the Northern United States: Electoral Realignment 1952-1996 by Robert W. Speel, 1998
  14. Of wasted votes and no influence: An essay on voting systems in the United States by Paul L McKaskle, 1998

41. Corporate Governance
hold more than 50% of all listed corporate stock in the united states (about 60 Departmentof Labor (DOL) set forth the opinion that, since proxy voting can add
http://www.corpgov.net/
Since 1995 the Corporate Governance site at CorpGov.net has facilitated the ability of institutional and individual shareowners to better govern corporations, enhancing both corporate accountability and the creation of wealth. News links commentary , and advocacy geared to the active investor. Browse our small reference library , join our NETwork , subscribe to the publications of our stakeholders. CorpGov.net is supported by your purchases through Amazon.com , as well as the editor's speaking engagements and consulting contracts. Knowledge has surpassed machines and the stored value of money itself, as the driving force behind the world economy. In the recent past, companies learned they could create better products more efficiently with the full mental participation of their employees. Today, investors are learning that participation by shareowners also adds value. Venture capitalists who are willing to invest ideas, as well as money, are outperforming the market. " Corporate Governance and Equity Prices " by Paul Gompers of Harvard and Andrew Metrick of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School have found that "firms with stronger shareholder rights had higher firm value, higher profits, higher sales growth, lower capital expenditures, and fewer corporate acquisitions." Investors who bought firms with the strongest democratic rights and sold those with the weakest rights "would have earned abnormal returns of 8.5 percent per year during the sample period." (see also "

42. POTUSpoll - President Of The United States Poll - Your Opinion Counts!
A NEW voting SYSTEM INSTANT RUNOFF voting (IRV) One Vote, One Ballot WouldGuarantee a Majority Winner ending costly runoff elections and eliminating
http://www.potuspoll.com/
A public service demonstration of Instant Runoff Voting (IRV) ... a new voting system that uses a round-by-round sequential elimination to yield a majority winner in a multi-candidate field with one vote, one ballot.
Enter your email address to register for poll:
Your privacy is totally guaranteed. Your email address stays confidential.
We need your email address to contact you for each poll.
Your ballot will never be revealed.
Why preference ranking?
A NEW VOTING SYSTEM - INSTANT RUNOFF VOTING (IRV) One Vote, One Ballot Would Guarantee a Majority Winner...ending costly runoff elections and eliminating spoiler candidates. In the event that no candidate wins a majority in the first round, the "instant runoff," a series of elimination vote tallies ... based upon the preference rankings ... reveals the candidate approved by the majority of voters for candidates still in the running. For Instant Runoff Voting (IRV) information, see and NYSIRV
(c) 2003 POTUSpoll - Who is POTUSpoll?

43. United States Congressional Roll Call Voting Records, 1789-1996
FILES ICPSR URL http//ssdc.ucsd.edu/ssdc/icp0004.html. TITLE united states RollCall voting Records, 17891996 STUDYNO = 00004 (Latest ICPSR Edition, 1997);
http://ssdc.ucsd.edu/ssdc/icp00004.html
Help Browse SSDC Titles Contact SSDC SSDC Home Social Sciences Data Collection United States Congressional Roll Call Voting Records, 1789-1996 URL: http://ssdc.ucsd.edu/ssdc/icp0004.html TITLE: United States Roll Call Voting Records, 1789-1996
  • STUDYNO = 00004 (Latest ICPSR Edition, 1997) INVESTIGATOR = Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and Congressional Quarterly, Inc. (CQ) DATE-ADDED = June 29, 1984 DATE-UPDATED = January 27, 2000 CURRENT UPDATES - The following websites update these ICPSR/CQ data: The Senate Bill Clerk maintains current Senate Roll Call Votes.
    The Office of the Clerk of the House maintains current House Roll Call Votes
    Thomas Legislative Information on the Internet provides access to the above websites and a wealth of information about Senate Votes and House Votes
    Project Vote Smart
    provides access to ALL Congressional votes and maintains a collection of major votes
STUDY DESCRIPTION: Roll call voting records for both chambers of the United States Congress through the second session of the 104th Congress are presented in this data collection. Each data file in the collection contains information for one chamber of a single Congress. The units of analysis in each part are the individual members of Congress. Each record contains a member's voting action on every roll call vote taken during that Congress, along with variables that identify the member (e.g., name, party, state, district, uniform ICPSR member number, and most recent means of attaining office). In addition, the codebook provides descriptive information for each roll call, including the date of the vote, outcome in terms of nays and yeas, name of initiator, the relevant bill or resolution number, and a synopsis of the issue.

44. United States Congressional Roll Call Voting Records, 1789-1990: Reformatted Dat
STUDY DESCRIPTION Roll call voting records for the united states House of Representativesand Senate through the 100th Congress are presented in this data
http://ssdc.ucsd.edu/ssdc/icp09822.html
Help Browse SSDC Titles Contact SSDC SSDC Home Social Sciences Data Collection United States Congressional Roll Call Voting Records, 1789-1990: Reformatted Data URL: http://ssdc.ucsd.edu/ssdc/icp09822.html TITLE: United States Congressional Roll Call Voting Records, 1789-1990: Reformatted Data STUDY DESCRIPTION: Roll call voting records for the United States House of Representatives and Senate through the 100th Congress are presented in this data collection. Each data file in the collection contains information for one chamber of a single Congress. The units of analysis are the individual members of the House of Representatives and Senate. Each record contains a member's voting action on every roll call vote taken during that Congress, along with variables that identify the member (e.g., name, party, state, and uniform ICPSR member number). In addition, the codebook provides descriptive information for each roll call, including the date of the vote, outcome in terms of yeas and nays, name of initiator, the relevant bill or resolution number, and a synopsis of the issue.

45. The Green Party Of The United States
In jurisdictions where touch screen electronic voting machines are already inuse, the Green Party of the united states resolves to support the growing
http://www.commondreams.org/news2004/0521-04.htm
Home Newswire About Us Donate ... E-Mail This Article FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MAY 21, 2004
2:16 PM
CONTACT: The Green Party of the United States
Nancy Allen, 207-326-4576
Scott McLarty, 202-518-5624
Greens Demand Paper Trail for Electronic Voting Machines WASHINGTON - May 21 - As Greens lead efforts in many states to defend democracy as the November election approaches, the central committee of the Green Party of the United States issued a resolution demanding voter-verified paper ballot audit trails for every electronic voting machine used in U.S. elections. The resolution, appended below, cites the vulnerability of voting machines to error, equipment malfunction, and tampering. "The stakes in this election are very high," said Linda Schade, lead plaintiff in Schade v. Maryland Board of Elections. Ms. Schade, a Maryland Green, is an organizer of the Campaign for Verifiable Voting in Maryland. "People of all political persuasions are coming out of the woodwork on this issue. No one wants another Florida and, in this cross partisan atmosphere, Greens are in a unique position because we can keep the focus on the issue and off partisan divisiveness." Ms. Schade is leading a cross-partisan group of registered Maryland voters in a lawsuit against the state Board of Elections charging that Maryland's new Diebold AccuVote-TS electronic voting machines fail to comply with state and federal law. Hundreds of voters who were critical of the Diebold machines and asked for paper ballots on Maryland's primary election day (March 2) later learned that their paper ballots were discarded without being counted. A hearing before the State Election Board was held May 19.

46. US Explanation For CTBT Resolution Vote
Explanation of Vote. The US delegation has again voted no on draft resolution L.52because, as we have made clear before, the united states does not support
http://www.reachingcriticalwill.org/political/1com/1com03/voting/L52USexp.htm
HOME ABOUT US FACT SHEETS TREATIES ... CONTACT US ASPECTS OF DISARMAMENT
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Explanation of Vote Draft Resolution L.52 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty US Delegation Mr. Chairman, The US delegation has again voted "no" on draft resolution L.52 because, as we have made clear before, the United States does not support the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty and will not become a party to that treaty. The United States also intends, however, to maintain its moratorium on nuclear testing, in effect since 1992, and urges all states to maintain existing moratoria on nuclear testing. Thank you, Mr. Chairman

47. US Explanation For L49 Vote
Explanation of Vote. The united states will again join consensus on that resolution,because we support an FMCT that advances US security interests.
http://www.reachingcriticalwill.org/political/1com/1com03/voting/L49USexp.htm
HOME ABOUT US FACT SHEETS TREATIES ... CONTACT US ASPECTS OF DISARMAMENT
Legal
Political Social Technical ... About Us Search:
Explanation of Vote Draft Resolution L.49 Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty US Delegation Mr. Chairman, The Committee will take action today on draft resolution L.49, which urges the Conference on Disarmament to agree on a program of work that includes immediate commencement of negotiations on a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty. The United States will again join consensus on that resolution, because we support an FMCT that advances US security interests. I wish to point out, however, that the United States is reviewing specific elements of our policy regarding an FMCT, and our joining consensus on this resolution is without prejudice to the outcome of that review. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

48. A Fair Voting System For The United States
A FAIR voting SYSTEM FOR THE united states. Making the Case for ProportionalRepresentation. Douglas Amy. American legislatures should
http://www.fairvote.org/reports/1993/amy.html
A FAIR VOTING SYSTEM FOR THE UNITED STATES
Making the Case for Proportional Representation
Douglas Amy
"[American legislatures] should be an exact portrait, in miniature, of the people
at large, as it should think, feel, reason, and act like them." -
John Adams
Flaws in Winner-Take-All Voting
The winner-take-all, single-member district election system has been on the wane worldwide because it often produces unfair and undemocratic results. Among other things, it routinely denies representation to large portions of the electorate, artificially restricts the party choices offered to voters and forms a barrier to the election of women and minorities to office.
The source of these faults can be traced to a fundamental flaw in the single-member district system: it is designed to ensure representation only for the majority of voters in a particular geographic area. Only those who vote for the winning candidate in a district get representation in this system. Everyone else who may make up 49% of the electorate in the district are considered losers not meriting representation. All in the minority in a single-member district are thus effectively disenfranchised; their vote is worthless because it cannot help elect anyone to represent them.
We are all familiar with this problem. If you are a Democrat in a Republican district, a minor party supporter in any district, an African-American in a white district or a white in a Hispanic district, then you can be shut out of electing a candidate of choice by our current election system and have no one to speak for you in the legislature. Under single-member district rules, you have the right to vote, but not the right to be represented through casting an effective vote. This electoral injustice is an inevitable part of our present system.

49. United States Political System
Atlas of united states Presidential Elections 19321996 This online volume (available Itclearly conveys geographical trends in presidential voting over the
http://www.usembassy.be/usa/usapolitical.htm

Text-menu
UNITED STATES POLITICAL SYSTEM
General The Judicial Branch The Executive Branch The Legislative Branch United States Political System
Frequently Asked Questions: Government
General
  • Who's who in the Bush administration Outline of American Government : Explains the constitution, the Federalist Papers, the executive branch, the legislative congress, the judicial branch, federalism and the democratic process (published by the United States Information Agency, 1989). U.S. Government Manual : As the official handbook of the Federal Government, The United States Government Manual provides comprehensive information on the agencies of the legislative, judicial, and executive branches. The Manual also includes information on quasi-official agencies; international organizations in which the United States participates; and boards, commissions, and committees. A typical agency description includes a list of principal officials, a summary statement of the agency's purpose and role in the Federal Government, a brief history of the agency, including its legislative or executive authority, a description of its programs and activities, and a ``Sources of Information'' section (courtesy of U.S. GPO). This Nation: The American Government and Politics Portal: The

50. U.S. Foreign Aid And United Nations Voting Records
The top ten countries voting against the united states more than half the time arescheduled to receive some $230 million in foreign aid in FY 1998 (see Table 3
http://www.heritage.org/Research/TradeandForeignAid/BG1186.cfm
site map help contact us The Heritage Foundation ... Trade and Foreign Aid U.S. Foreign Aid and United Nations Voting Records Policy Archive:
view by date
Policy Archive:
view by issue
... Return Home U.S. Foreign Aid and United Nations Voting Records by Bryan T. Johnson
Backgrounder #1186
Congress has begun work on the fiscal year (FY) 1999 appropriations for the U.S. foreign assistance program. Each year, foreign aid proponents take great pains to assure Congress that the money the United States spends on foreign aid directly supports U.S. foreign policy goals abroad. Indeed, J. Brian Atwood, the administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, told Congress in March 1998, In many respects, [the foreign aid budget] is a bare-boned and balanced approach to development and humanitarian programs that will significantly contribute to achieving the administration's foreign policy objectives. There are, of course, aspects of the U.S. foreign aid program that do support U.S. foreign policy goals; among them are military and security assistance programs. But these programs, which are restricted mainly to the closest U.S. allies abroad, comprise less than 22 percent of the foreign aid budget. The largest portion of the U.S. foreign aid budget, economic development assistance, goes to many countries that seldom support U.S. foreign policy initiatives. One way to measure the U.S. foreign aid program's influence around the world is to examine the voting records of U.S. aid recipients in the United Nations (U.N.). Despite the many problems plaguing the U.N., it remains an international forum in which the United States seeks the cooperation of other countries in a variety of foreign policy matters.

51. UNITED STATES: Mexican American Voting Bloc
Back to Index. united states Mexican American voting bloc. PresidentBush gave what we might politely be called a rousing speech
http://wais.stanford.edu/USA/us_mexicanamericanvotingbloc82001.html
Back to Index
UNITED STATES: Mexican American voting bloc
President Bush gave what we might politely be called a rousing speech in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to a gathering organized by the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce. He stressed the priority he gives to Mexico in the foreign relations of "this great country". He praised the Chamber's support for education and, with a huge pair of scissors, cut the ribbon to a new educational facility. He praised the Mexican Americans running small businesses, saying small business in the backbone of the US economy. Most controversially, he stressed the importance of opening all the US highway systems to Mexican trucks. It is unlikely the Teamsters Union will invite him to address them. Ronald Hilton - 8/20/01
Webmaster

52. UNITED STATES: Mexican American Voting Bloc
Back to Index. united states Mexican American voting bloc. Paul Simon agreeswith Cathie Adams on the abuse of major US highways and adds the following
http://wais.stanford.edu/USA/us_mexamericanvotingbloc82701.html
Back to Index
UNITED STATES: Mexican American voting bloc
Paul Simon agrees with Cathie Adams on the abuse of major US highways and adds the following: "Truckers get a largely free ride (truck taxes are infinitesimal compared with the costs of building and maintaining interstates) as do barges which get perks galore from the Army Corps of Engineers. Railroads on the other hand are privately owned, run and taxed on their rights of way. Damned hard to get any type of traffic off the roads with that kind of subsidy scheme. Knowing full well that any truck company will deny this, I still assert that rail (low friction steel on steel) is a more efficient way to ship goods over distances and a safer way to ship hazardous materials" My comment: This makes sense. Here in California many freeways are jammed with trucks. Fox talks about highway plans, but I have not seen a word about railroads. Trains could bring Mexican goods directly to their U.S. destinations and vice-versa. Do they? If not, why not? Any information would be appreciated. Ronald Hilton - 8/27/01
Webmaster

53. Federal Election Reform Network / Voting Technologies In The United States: Over
Report March 21, 2001 voting Technologies in the united states Overviewand Issues for Congress. ABSTRACT. The Presidential election
http://www.reformelections.org/data/background/CRS-032101.php
Report: March 21, 2001
Voting Technologies in the United States: Overview and Issues for Congress ABSTRACT
The Presidential election of the year 2000 has raised several issues about the voting technologies used in the United States. This report provides an overview of the technologies used and the issues raised, including a brief history and characteristics of the different methods, the design of ballots, kinds and sources of voter error, vote counting, and standards. It discusses whether changes may be needed, what those changes might be, what is the federal role, and legislative initiatives in the 106th and 107th Congresses. please download the pdf file to read the full report
Back to Top
The Miller Center and The Century Foundation

54. Elections And Electoral Systems In The United States
The Keele Guide to Elections and Electoral Systems in the united states. InstantRunoff.com;Washington Citizens for PR; Proposed voting System Alternative; Center
http://www.keele.ac.uk/depts/por/usbase.elections.htm
The Keele Guide to Elections and Electoral Systems in the United States
from the
Keele University
[Electoral College] [Electoral System] [Campaign Finance]
[Elections and Campaigning]
... [State Elections]
Latest update 3 June 2004
The Electoral College
The Electoral System
Electoral and Political Finance

55. Open Source Politics: United States: Simulating Dodgy Voting Machines
And without an alternate, mechanical method of recording and tallying the votes,there s no way to know short of a court Open Source Politics united states.
http://www.ospolitics.org/usa/archives/2003/12/08/simulating.php
@import url(/blog/osp.css);
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December 08, 2003
Simulating Dodgy Voting Machines
By John Williams This November I had an opportunity to try out one of the new electronic voting machines. Let me be frank: I don't like them. I don't get a receipt. I don't know how my vote is being tallied. In fact, I have no way of knowing if my vote has been cast at all. Which isn't, I used to think, that different from the old physical punch-card or pull-handle machines. But then this blog entry by Bubba made me reconsider. It'd be really easy to write a program that made you think you were voting for someone when you were actually voting for someone else. How easy? It took me about four hours. That's to write the whole thing. To write the bit that skews the results only took about ten minutes.
Computers don't lie. They don't tell the truth, either. They do what they are told to do. In fact, it's actually much easier to game an electronic voting device than it is a mechanical one. For one thing, mechanical machines that cheat have to cheat through mechanical processes. Gears have to have missing teeth, or there have to be extra gears and doohickies and other bits and pieces to tamper with voting results as they come in. That alone makes mechanical tampering difficult, because those modifications are very obvious to inspectors.

56. EGovernment Resource Centre: United States - Electronic Democracy And Voting
united states Electronic Democracy and voting. Additional informationon E-democracy and E-voting outside the united states.
http://www.egov.vic.gov.au/International/TheAmericas/UnitedStates/EdemocracyVoti
Search term/s: Advanced Search Search scope: www.egov.vic.gov.au Vic Gov Sites Australian Gov Sites All Australian Sites Home About This Site Contact Site Index Current Location
Home
International The Americas United States Other Options
Electronic Democracy - UK
eDemocracy eVoting
United States - Electronic Democracy and Voting
Additional information on E-democracy and E-voting outside the United States
e-Campaigning
Campaigning in Cyberspace - Democratic presidential candidates take questions in online forum , Rita Chang, Medill News Service. PC World, October 28, 2003. WASHINGTON "Next week, Americans will have an opportunity to question the Democratic presidential hopefuls online on issues ranging from Iraq rebuilding to the environmentor anything else on their minds..." Can the Web Get You Elected? By Adam Guild, President, Interep Interactive. Media Daily News, Monday, October 6, 2003. "While the rest of the country may look on California's recall election with some amusement, given the number and dubious credentials of many of the candidates to replace Gov. Gray Davis, there is something important going on here -the emergence of the Internet as a powerful campaign tool..." Grassroots growing fast in cyberspace - Web adds pressure on U.S. lawmakers

57. NOW With Bill Moyers. Politics & Economy. Election 2004 — America Votes Overvie
It is interesting to note that Australia, a nation that is often compared in frontierspirit to the united states, has had compulsory voting since 1924.
http://www.pbs.org/now/politics/votestats.html
Election 2004 More on This Story: Select One Voter Resource Map Democracy Tools Election 2004 American Votes Overview
During the last midterm election in 1998, only 36.4 percent of the voting age population made it to the polls....

read about them below
. The U.S. Federal Elections Commission anticipates that 15 percent of all votes cast this election cycle will be cast early. From an international perspective, the United States ranks 139th out of 172 countries in voter turnout. That figure, and those in the table below, are drawn from cumulative results of all elections held from 1945 through 1998. Figures are presented as voter turnout as percentage of voting age population.
Who Votes Worldwide?
Italy (turnout as percentage of voting age population): New Zealand: Uzbekistan: Netherlands: Australia: Portugal: Germany: Spain: United Kingdom: Turkey: Venezuela: India: Syria: Russia: United States: Thailand: Zambia: Sources: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance Federal Elections Commission Turnout Strategies and Voting Experiments
  • Compulsory Voting: Is voting a right or a responsibility? There are democracies who swing both ways. Requiring citizens to vote is not a new idea, although it has never been put into practice in the United States. The first country to insist that its citizens vote was Belgium, introducing mandatory voting laws in 1892. It is interesting to note that Australia, a nation that is often compared in frontier spirit to the United States, has had compulsory voting since 1924.
  • 58. ICANN At Large :: Polling And Voting
    Robin (EuropeFrance) http//www.isoc.org/members/vote/2003election/profiles ourlegitimacy Daniel Tobias (North America-united states) http//icannatlarge
    http://www.icannatlarge.org/voting.htm
    May 2003 Executive Panel Election:
    Final List of Nominees, as of May 17th 2003: 78 Nominees who have accepted (27):

    Asaad Alnajjar (Asia/Pacific-United States)
    Thierry Amoussougbo (Africa-Benin) : http://execlub.org/thierry-amoussougbo.htm
    Hugh Blair (North America-United States) : http://execlub.org/hugh-blair.htm
    Let's make sure the Internet is available for everyone
    Daniel Chirita (Europe-France) : http://www.maddanny.com/atlarge/
    let we the users be the core of our future e-worlds
    Bob Crawford (North America-United States) : http://execlub.org/bob-crawford.htm
    Let truth, driven from any other place, find refuge here.
    Kristen Doyle (North America-United States) : http://execlub.org/kristen-doyle.htm David Goldstein (Asia/Pacific-Australia) : http://www.alfa-redi.org/journalist/goldstein.asp James Graham (Europe-Mexico) : http://www.fldm.edu.mx/jgraham Catherine Hughes (North America-United States) : http://hometown.aol.com/iantha10/myhomepage/index.html William Jones (North America-United States) : http://www.aawc.com/home1.html

    59. Lower The Voting Age In The United States Petition
    Lower The voting Age in the united states Sign and create online petitions for human rights, the environment and much more. May 15, 2004,
    http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/105437561
    June 12, 2004 We the undersigned, endorse the following petition:
    Lower The Voting Age in the United States
    Target:
    Sponsor: Children's PressLine
    SIGNATURES

    GOAL: 500
    DEADLINE: Ongoing ...
    Nations around the world are lowering the voting age, or considering lower the voting age. Several U.S. states are looking into the issue as well. Now is the time to tell U.S. officials that we want the voting age lowered! ..... See full petition below
    STEP 1. Enter your name:
    Display in public list as "Anonymous"
    MOST RECENT 25 of SIGNATURES E-mail this petition to your friends. Number Date Name Age What age should the voting age be lowered to? 8:47 am PDT, May 27 hoobadoobadoobadoobado hooooooooooooooob 8:43 am PDT, May 27 hoobadoobadoobado hooooooooooooooob 16. People start working at this age and can be affected by the government's decisions 9:59 am PDT, May 26 GUMBO YAYA A MILLION!! XD XD XD XD 7:39 am PDT, May 26 Anonymous It should not be lowered. All of the people here that are saying that it should be lowered to the early teenage years are complete fools. Next time, learn how to use spell check because you are only proving how immature 14 and 15 year olds are. 7:00 pm PDT, May 23

    60. Zeal.com - United States - New - Library - Government & Politics - Campaigns & E
    A great resource for united states New - Library - Government Politics- Campaigns Elections - Electoral Reform - Electronic voting Machines.
    http://zeal.com/category/preview.jhtml?cid=10142779

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