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Subject:RE: [YouthGAS_Exchange] "Why young Australians have given up on voting"
Date:Saturday, September 4, 2004  18:59:59 (+1000)
From:Richard Hoskins <rehoskin @...........au>
In reply to:Message 43 (written by ralph mckay)

Hello all,
 
Lets be honest here, maybe we need a big youth movement within Australia to make a difference and get the services we need for young people. It appears they have forgotten that when we need services for young people many of them are 18+ and able to vote!! I would be interested if anyone knew what the percentage of the Australian population comprises that 18+ Young People group who are able to vote.
 
A few years ago MTV in the USA had a get out and vote campaign, which targeted their "young" viewers. Amazing how quick some shift occurred from politicians at the various levels of government.
 
I will say this, I have seen party politics when it comes to the youth here in Australia and it is so so disgusting, that the youth loose and rarely gain. Look around you and ask what have you done for a young person lately?
 
Cheers,
 
Richard
-----Original Message-----
From: ralph mckay [mailto:ralph@bigpulse.com]
Sent: Saturday, September 04, 2004 6:37 PM
To: youthgas@elistas.com
Subject: Re: [YouthGAS_Exchange] "Why young Australians have given up on voting"

"Young people have become less interested in party politics and have less trust in politicians," said Ian McAllister, who has researched voting habits in Australia, Europe and the US. Reported in the Age September 3, 2004 http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2004/09/02/1093939069258.html 
 
The problem is not the party system but the one party one voice system. Let the parties have their party policies but demand that all elected officials have equal opportunity to speak out and represent us. 
 
Here’s a strategy for young people to change politics for ever. Vote for candidates who commit to vote in the Dome of Conscience.  
 
The Dome of Conscience is a transparent online conscience voting chamber just for elected officials. Until October 9th all federal candidates can join the vote. It operates through the website www.domevote.com. 
 
Former magistrate Brian Deegan, father of Bali bombing victim Josh, and candidate for the seat of Mayo is the first candidate to make a public commitment to vote in the Dome. On September 2 Brian Deegan said,  "The Dome of Conscience represents exactly what I am standing for, transparency and honesty in government." 
 
"I am delighted to be the first to commit to a regular vote in the Dome. If all candidates did this, the parliament would be transformed overnight. Why would any candidate, asking for trust, not commit to a regular transparent conscience vote? It only takes a minute to vote in the Dome," said Brian Deegan. 
 
"If parliamentarians commit to a regular online conscience vote our democracy will be much stronger, people will have more trust in the process of government and feel more connected to the parliament. Ultimately a stronger democracy can only mean greater security, wealth and wellbeing for all," said Brian Deegan. 
 
The Dome of Conscience is an online scoreboard of opinions and ideas in the minds of lawmakers.  There are no questions, surveys, pollsters or party whips. Any federal candidate can float a new opinion in the virtual voting chamber any time. Opinions are expressed as concise single line statements called "placards". All opinion placards compete continuously for votes from parliamentarians and candidates and are ranked live in a leaderboard for all to see. Repeat voting is encouraged and never causes vote stacking as the system counts the last vote only for each candidate. 
 
But do we know if this "opinion market" voting idea really works? Yes, primary school students have set an example at www.studentparliament.com. 
 
If politicians and candidates vote in the Dome we will see the collective voice of all candidates, the parliament as a whole, the Senate and House of Representatives separately, as well the vote count of each party and importantly, the voice of each candidate. 
 
There are hundreds of big issues. They all compete for attention and money.  Even young people cannot expect to get exactly want they want all the time. But everyone can expect that all issues get a fair hearing. This will not happen unless our politicians all have equal opportunity to express their opinions. In the Dome all politicians are equal and all have equal opportunity to represent their constituents. 
 
However dome-ocracy will not happen unless we ask for it. 
 
Make it clear you will vote for candidates who can demonstrate a real commitment to be honest and transparent with their opinions when elected. Vote for candidates who can demonstrate a commitment to free speech. Vote for candidates who will make it easy for all to know exactly where they stand on the issues of the day, not just today but every day. Vote for independent thinkers and a parliament alive with many voices. Vote for candidates who put loyalty to constituents above all else. These values need not be inconsistent with the party system. 
 
What better way for a candidate to demonstrate these values than to make a commitment to a regular online vote in the Dome of Conscience at www.domevote.com?  And we can expect to see sincere candidates in the Dome now. 
 
Apparently about 50 per cent of young people still have some interest in politics. That's enough to fix the system! 
 
Ralph McKay 
BigPulse.com 
Tel  02 9953 3958 




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