by Roger L. Simon
One thing we don’t often get in our campaigns—presidential or otherwise—is a fresh idea worth thinking about. Mostly, campaigns consist of boilerplate laced with invective toward opponents in endless mind-numbing ads.
When such ideas do turn up, they’re frequently ignored, especially by our ultra-conformist mainstream media that abhors originality as much as nature abhors a vacuum.
Donald Trump has one of these fresh ideas this time around with his proposal to build new cities on federal land with their own industries that could act as self-sufficient refuges from our inflationary economy and reduce dependence on China.
Nobody’s discussing it and, needless to say, it wasn’t mentioned in CNN’s May 10 Townhall with its “moderator” more focused on “gotcha” questions.
Now presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy has stepped forward with an idea that deserves equal, if not more, consideration because it speaks to many of the problems confronting our country, particularly among the younger generation.
Ramaswamy wants to enact a constitutional amendment that would repeal the 26th that set the voting age at 18 and only allow those between 18 and 25 to vote if they fulfilled one of two requirements.
Either they do 6 months of direct service in the U.S. military or first response service (police, fire, and so forth…. I have a further suggestion on this I will get to later).
Or….
They pass a test in U. S. civics identical to the one immigrants are required to pass in order to be naturalized citizens of this country.
If they do neither, they get to vote anyway at 25, the same age, Ramaswamy points out in a May 11 press release, “by which young male adults are required under current U.S. law to complete Selective Service registration.”
That civics test required of aspiring immigrants includes such things as a basic understanding of the roles of the three branches of government, something a young person really should know in order to vote. Fifty years ago, they probably did. Now? Not likely.
The left, which doesn’t even think someone needs identification to vote, is going to howl about this test requirement, a reaction that meshes with their general condescending attitude toward minorities. They assume they can’t do what everyone else does when they absolutely can and have. There’s no other way to look at that than as morally repellent racism.
Actually, in a country whose educational system has been worsening for years, with even the average IQ declining, Ramaswamy’s idea may encourage a long-neglected study discipline among our young that appears to be absent in many of our schools given the results. Young people will have to work to pass the test, although, in the final analysis, it is not all that difficult.
But allow me to look back at the first requirement in the proposal. Ramaswamy says in the same press release: “Our military currently suffers a 25% recruitment deficit, and only 16 percent of Gen Z say they’re proud to be American. The absence of national pride is a serious threat to the future of our country.”
Indeed. And this could do something to improve that recruitment deficit and maybe diminish some of the wokeness in the military in the process. A good thing all around.
But the alternate part of that requirement—participation in “first response services”—piques my interest even more. And it could generate just as much national pride.
Another candidate currently competing for his party’s presidential nomination, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., had an uncle who on March 1, 1961—not even two months after his inauguration—signed an executive order establishing the Peace Corps.
I am old enough to remember when that happened and to recall how it inspired so many of us young people at that time, regardless of political party. It made us proud to be Americans, a feeling sorely lacking today, as Vivek points out.
What Ramaswamy is suggesting harkens back to that—and more power to him. I would love to see RFK Jr., another candidate with fresh ideas, respond. And maybe add ideas of his own for a new version of the corps that makes sense for our complex times.
We live in a polarized world where creative communication between people of opposite parties almost never happens.
But some kind of renewed public service for the young is something leaders on both sides should be able to get behind.
With summer coming, Antifa and Black Lives Matter will be out in the streets, acting out in their familiar destructive and pointless ways. Sometimes I think this, at least in part, is a product of boredom, even though, of course, a lot of other bad things contribute.
Still, these are young people with nothing to do. We should give them something, something constructive. It’s obvious they will resist, but we should still try.
That is why I am heartened by the candidacies of both Vivek Ramaswamy and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. They are forward-thinking. They have ideas.
This should also remind us in this campaign season that there is more to be gleaned, if we pay attention, than who is up in today’s polls and who ultimately wins and loses.
That five-letter word—ideas—exists.
Further, with Trump lapping the field at this moment (Biden is more questionable), it’s still worth paying attention to the other candidates for those ideas and for the possibility that they will fulfill other roles in our government, even if they don’t reach the presidency this time.
This is a tumultuous era. We should be open to everything and everybody…. Well, almost.
First published in the Epoch Times.
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3 Responses
I don’t like the idea of government shaping our culture. Much better, the government should confine itself to where it is proscribed by the constitution, and let the citizens cavort in the culture they create.
“With summer coming, Antifa and Black Lives Matter will be out in the streets, acting out in their familiar destructive and pointless ways. Sometimes I think this, at least in part, is a product of boredom, even though, of course, a lot of other bad things contribute.”
Good point, Roger except 2024 the Democrats will let all the dogs loose.
Are we able to put first things first re voting revisions. In 2021 we had 592, 979 active duty armed forces personnel in the age range of 25 years old and younger, out of a total active duty force of about 1,400,000. Thus, those 593,000 were most ready to risk their lives for the rest of us, in battle. The vast majority of neuroscientists agree that the human brain is not ‘fully’ developed structurally until the age of ~ 25 years !
[WARNING, 4-letter word ending in ‘k’ coming up in 3 words hence] — What the heck makes us believe, much less care, that those youngsters below 25 are capable of “informed consent” despite their volunteering?
What say we mandate that all active duty personnel be allotted 5 votes each, and if battlefield-wounded, 10 votes. If KIA, 20 votes for their surviving spouse/immediate family?
Next, no government employee may vote on any military matter (declaration of war, police action, troop deployment, supplies, consulting with allies or enemies … ) unless Fithey have an immediate family member in an active on-site battlefield position. Skin in the game reduces vampiring other folk’s children.
Oh yes, I recollect that the Youth group are the lowest per capital voting group. Those over 25 should be castigated in their majoritarian vote for the current crappyness and disgracefulmess of their judgement.
And lastly, we have FOUR branches of government, the fourth and foulest most diseased, requiring severe pruning, is the FIFTH column equivalent, the Bureaucracy!