Winter
2003 - The Bush Administration
The Last Word
by Kate
Koch
Photos by Photographer
Aug. 30, 1999. Ninety-nine
percent of registered voters in East Timor voted to determine their independence
from Indonesia thousands of those voters and their children were
killed in post-vote violence.
East Timor had been a province of Indonesia for 33 years. According to
a Los Angeles Times report, since Indonesia claimed East Timor in 1975
as many as 200,000 Timorese have died as a result of warfare or starvation.
Although the region was under Indonesian rule, it was actually controlled
by Indonesian-military armed militias that roamed the region wielding
swords, spears and machetes.
In 1999, Indonesian President BJ Habibie granted the East Timorese the
right to vote for their independence. In the days leading up to the election,
East Timor was rocked by violence as pro-Indonesian militias killed at
least 1,000 pro-independence voters and intimidated countless others.
The violence drove as many as 80,000 people from their homes, according
to the United Nations.
But the militias couldnt control the will of the people. On election
day, 79 percent of East Timorese voted to be an independent nation and
the pro-Indonesian militias were outraged. They stormed though the countryside
killing thousands of Timorese and destroying about 85 percent of the countrys
infrastructure. Women were gang-raped and two-thirds of the population
fled to neighboring regions until the U.N. halted the violence.
"The right to vote is arguably one of the most important rights of
citizenship in a democratic country yet a substantial number of U.S. citizens
choose not to exercise this right," according to a U.S. Census Bureau
report on voting and registration in the November 2000 election.
According to statistics gathered from the U.S. National Archives and Records
Administration and the U.S. Census Bureau, about 25 percent of voting-age
Americans voted for George W. Bush, another 25 percent voted for Al Gore
and 2 percent voted for either Patrick Buchanan or Ralph Nader. This means
that only 52 percent of voting-age Americans voted and about a quarter
of them picked the leader of our country.
A look at the raw numbers 50,456,062 votes for Bush and 50,996,582
votes for Gore shows that the two candidates were separated by
less than half a million votes.
But, in the United States its the Electoral College votes that count.
Bush received 271 votes and Gore got 266.
Critics and commentators have all formed their own conspiracy theories
about how Gore could have won the popular vote and lost the election.
Many believe that Governor Jeb Bush had something to do with the way the
vote turned out in Florida. But, the fact is, the average American will
never know what actually happened during the months before the U.S. Supreme
Court chose our president and, I would argue, they dont really care.
According to the Census Bureau, 21 percent of registered voters who didnt
vote in 2000 said they were "too busy" on election day. Another
12 percent said they just werent interested in voting.
Harvard University professor Robert Putnam has written a number of articles
and a book "Bowling Alone: the collapse and revival of American
community" detailing the decline of civic engagement in the
United States. He reported that many elements of civic engagement in America
appear to be on the decline. Fewer people nationwide attend public meetings,
are members of community organizations, give to charity and vote today
than 30 years ago.
According to Washington states voter participation statistics, the
percentage of voting-age citizens that actually vote has declined by about
15 percent since 1952.
As a voting citizen, this worries me. If we stay on this same path, fewer
and fewer people will choose the leaders who make decisions in the name
of the United States. Some of these decisions are minor like what
color the dining room should be in the White House but most of
them are crucial.
Decisions like how our most cherished environmental laws the Clean
Water Act, the Clean Air Act, the Endangered Species Act are implemented
shouldnt be left to an individual who was chosen by a quarter of
voting-age citizens. In order to have a robust exchange of ideas in this
country, more people have to speak.
It is difficult to believe that in a country where, according to a survey
conducted by The Polling Company in 1999, 70 percent of registered voters
are concerned about the environment, we have one of the least environmentally
responsible presidents in history.
Its time for that 70 percent of concerned voters to get off their
rears and chug down to their polling station once every four years. Heck,
if they like it, they can vote in federal races every two years! And,
if they like voting every two years, they should try voting every year.
According to the census, 86 percent of registered voters actually voted
in 2000. If 70 percent of registered voters voted for the most environmentally
responsible candidate in 2000, the nations environmental profile
would probably be drastically different.
The environment would be an issue on par with homeland security or health
care. Perhaps the director of the Environmental Protection Agency would
be a cabinet-level position. Maybe the Oeser site in Bellingham would
receive the full benefit of the Superfund program or kayakers who use
Clearwater Creek wouldnt fear losing the best stretch of whitewater
in the county. In this perfect world, the Freedom of Information Act would
be a nearly hassle-free process for all citizens, the environmental education
community wouldnt beg for more funding and wealthy corporations
wouldnt be able to buy the ability to pollute.
Today, now-independent East Timor has begun to form a stable nation. Aug.
30, 2001, the nation elected 88 new assembly members to draft the countrys
first constitution. Ninety-one percent of registered voters turned out
to vote for candidates from 16 parties.
Granted, the East Timorese are still feeding on post-revolutionary fervor
but hopefully, next time a vote comes up more people will remember that
being a free nation wasnt always so easy.
Do your civic duty vote.
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