Vote for the man who promises least-he`ll be the least disappointing.
- Bernard Baruch
Australia election: Fines, donkey votes and democracy sausages - BBC News
As another nation teeters into the abyss of dictatorship, there’s a glaring lesson for the dwindling number of democracies: mandatory voting is not just an option—it’s a necessity.
We must demand more from our citizens, especially the youth, and trust them with greater responsibilities. A democracy that coddles its people into apathy will not survive. The writing is on the wall: systemic overhaul is overdue.
Citizens, Not Cattle
A state that views its citizens solely as taxpayers and electoral fodder shouldn’t be surprised when voter turnout collapses, and skepticism toward democracy festers.
To counteract this, the disaffected must once again become the engaged. People need to feel, viscerally, that democracy isn’t just about rights—it’s about obligations.
A Year of Civic Duty
We need a mandatory “Citizen Year,” where every young person, without exception, dedicates twelve months to the service of society.
Be it in hospitals, care homes, refugee camps, or even in the fire department, police, or military, this year of service would be non-negotiable.
Alongside this, a civic education boot camp would equip these young adults with a solid understanding of our political system and institutions—something schools have utterly failed to provide.
The result? A generation that knows how voting works, understands the stakes, and is primed to participate.
After all, how can we expect 18-year-olds to care about elections when they don’t even know the difference between a first vote and a second vote in parliamentary systems?
This ignorance isn’t limited to the underprivileged; it’s rampant across all social classes.
"Winners Earn, Losers Vote"
A troubling apathy toward democracy is evident even among the so-called hopefuls of our time: start-up entrepreneurs.
Obsessed with wealth accumulation, they adopt a chillingly nihilistic mantra: "Winners earn, losers vote." When the disenfranchised decide elections, we end up with outcomes like Trump’s presidency or Brexit. The aftermath? A deluge of regret from those who stayed home: “If I had known, I would have voted.”
In both the United States and the EU, voter turnout has been sinking for years. And the biggest voting bloc in many elections? Non-voters.
This is why we must seriously consider introducing a legal obligation to vote. Nations with mandatory voting see participation rates soar by 10 to 15 percentage points. These are not just numbers—they represent a more representative democracy.
Make Voting a Civic Duty
Critics argue that we should simply make voting easier: election holidays, shorter queues, mail-in ballots, online voting. Sure, let’s do all of that. But let’s not stop there.
A responsibly exercised vote is the bedrock of democracy. It should not be optional. If you want the right to protest climate change denial, march for biodiversity, or demand social justice, you must first fulfill your duty to vote.
Democracy Deserves Better
If the majority chooses not to care about the existential threats of global warming or biodiversity collapse, so be it. A democracy reflects its people—apathetic or engaged. The real threat lies in the creeping normalization of disengagement.
Democracy isn’t a spectator sport. It requires participation, effort, and, yes, sometimes obligation. Mandatory voting isn’t an infringement on freedom; it’s the bare minimum standard for preserving it. If you can’t be bothered to vote, do you even deserve democracy?
Let the controversy rage.
Obama suggests Mandatory Voting
We Are Ready! Are You?
Sincerely,
Adaptation-Guide
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