• stebo
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    1714 hours ago

    not always, since for some stupid reason election day is on a Tuesday in America, some people simply are unable to vote

    • @idiomaddict
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      1214 hours ago

      Plus all of the other, more active forms of voter suppression, like banning felons from voting, surprise deregistrations, sending absentee ballots out late, and requiring people to wait multiple hours while forbidding people from giving them food or water.

      • stebo
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        8 hours ago

        Especially the deregistrations are wild to me. Where I live you don’t even have to register for elections. If they know you exist, you automatically get an invitation by mail and even if you didn’t get it/lost it, you can go to your town hall and ask for one (of course only in the town where you officially live).

    • DreamButt
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      614 hours ago

      systemic solutions for systemic problems

    • Nougat
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      -414 hours ago

      Every state allows time off work to vote. Most of them, it’s paid time off. Plenty of early voting and vote by mail opportunites around, too.

      • @MutilationWave
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        412 hours ago

        Yeah that’s what the law says. But there’s a big difference between the law and reality that those of us who have worked poverty jobs know well.

        • Nougat
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          28 hours ago

          Definitely don’t exercise your rights, especially when someone is infringing on them.

          • @MutilationWave
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            08 hours ago

            Sometimes food and shelter are more important than your rights. I wish I were nobler but that has been the fact before for me.

            Never missed an election though.

            • Nougat
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              28 hours ago

              You’re not wrong. I also suspect that most of the eligible voters who decided to stay home were not in a food or shelter crisis.