Exit Polls: How did your politicing go?
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Will You Vote?
Will Your Vote Be The Difference?
As Americans, you get to vote every four years. As Canadians, you get to vote all of the time! (three times in the last four years!) Some of you think it makes a difference, some of you don't. Where do you sit on this question?
Who Are You Voting For? Before The Vote.
You Need To Make A Choice.
For one or the other or none at all. Ticking your ballot or not at all is making a choice. This is for how you are thinking before you vote.
Who did you vote for? After the Vote.
When the chads are all in- did you make a difference?
For one or the other or none at all. Ticking your ballot or not at all is making a choice.
Now that you have done the deed, who did you pick? Let us know here. Then check out the Change of Mind poll to one more poll question.
Change of Mind
Sometimes You Just Have To
You are at the ballot box. You have every intention of picking them, but for some reason you change your mind at the last second and go for the others. Or, maybe you stayed loyal to your decision. Gut or not, let us know how it worked out here.
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The Next President Will Be
The Future Is In Your Hands
Who will it be? What will the next President be? Let us know your prediction.

kingmedia predicts:
I Predict that Obama will win the election.

Olbaid predicts:
I believe Obama will win but doubt he finishes his term
Kels predicts:
I predict Obama as well....
Countdown to The Start of Four More Years
A New Politic
Something to Replace the Old One
Vote this list of books up or down to your liking. Add another to the list if you know of one that should be on here. Just like the election, only without the rhetoric and the empty promises! I mean, just like the election with good intentions and hopeful promises! Start clicking.
The War Within: A Secret White House History 2006-2008 by Bob Woodward
<p>As violence in Iraq reaches unnerving lev more...0 points
The Case Against Barack Obama: The Unlikely Rise and Unexamined Agenda of the Media's Favorite Candidate by David Freddoso
He's the media's darling, the fresh face of the De more...0 points
Exit Music (Inspector Rebus) by Ian Rankin
It's late in the fall in Edinburgh and late in the more...0 points
The Peaceful Pill Handbook New Revised International Edition by Philip Nitschke & Fiona Stewart
The Peaceful Pill Handbook draws on the latest res more...0 points
The Love Dare by Stephen Kendrick, Alex Kendrick
<b><i>New York Times</i> Best-Se more...0 points
New Duel

kingmedia says:
That Obama didn't need to spend that much money on advertising for his presidential campaign. He has spent as much money on his campaign as Canada's five political parties spent combined during their last election run.
Engaging Students Politically Goes Beyond the Voting Booth
Not just for students.
By Elizabeth Beaumont
The troubling pattern of generational declines in voting is a common justification for civic engagement programs such as Carnegie's Political Engagement Project. Recently, I was asked what would happen to programs like ours if voting among young adults soars in the upcoming election. Would our programs lose their justification and fade away?
These are legitimate questions, and thinking through this hypothetical sheds light on the long-term challenges involved in promoting political participation. Even if all young adults who've reported intentions to vote appear at polling booths, we should not announce "mission accomplished" and dismantle our programs. The fact that young Americans currently vote less than their elders did at the same age is only one piece of a powerful set of reasons for encouraging engaged citizenship. The need for continued engagement efforts will remain strong even if voting among 18-30 year olds shoots up in November.
For starters, one pleasing data point showing voting increases among the young wouldn't necessarily represent a stable shift towards greater participation. Nor would it indicate that the problem of disengagement is solved for all time. Instead, sustaining civic engagement efforts could increase the likelihood that a high rate in 2004 will not become a lonely outlier, but rather will mark the beginning of a long-term trend. Even if old and young vote more frequently, it is still likely that certain groups of Americans will continue to be underrepresented at the polls, particularly Latinos, Asians, African-Americans, and those with less education and less money. Rather than resting on our laurels, any upswing in voting among young adults should encourage further work, particularly outreach to youth from groups that tend to feel shut out of the political process.
Although voter participation is certainly important, there are other reasons to continue to look at and support civic and political engagement efforts. The reason we care about voting rates is that they hold particular social value: we consider them necessary for the legitimacy of democratic governance and for the strength of our pluralist democratic culture. In the excitement of a presidential campaign, however, we can forget that voting rates are only one key vital sign in the more complex picture of democratic health. Rather than focusing narrowly on whether young adults vote at lower or equally low rates as the rest of Americans, we need to also be concerned with the overall quality of participation.
Being concerned with the quality of participation means working to increase relevant political knowledge, skills, and motivations that can support engaged and effective citizenship. Even many faithful voters make political choices based on relatively little information or misinformation. Civic engagement efforts can help remedy this, as well as foster the kinds of civic values that can support political participation even when citizens know their actions are unlikely to achieve immediate success.
Even in the ideal scenario that voting rates among the young skyrocket in 2004, much important work on democratic citizenship lies ahead. If improving the overall quality of American democracy is understood as the definitive goal, we need to continue fostering voting and a variety of modes of participation that contribute to a vibrant democratic culture and citizen development. We also need to go beyond merely counting ("how many" or "how often") young adults' political acts and build our understanding of how and why they decide to exert political voice and influence.
And, if democracy means government by, of, and for all people, and not just a privileged few, we must be concerned about enhancing the inclusiveness of the voices and votes that exert influence in all political arenas. These tasks will remain for the Political Engagement Project and other civic engagement efforts even if we wake up November 3rd feeling jubilant by voter turnout among the young.
What do you think? Leave a comment on this topic in the guestbook at the bottom of this page.
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