Tuesday, October 14, 2008

One Vote, Your Vote!

A month ago, Mary did a post that I thought was incredibly well written and spoke to the need for women to get out and vote. Three weeks from today, we will cast our vote for the next President and Vice President of the United States--be sure that your vote, no matter which candidate you're for--is an INFORMED vote.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ONE VOTE – YOUR VOTE
by Mary


November 2006 was an election year in our county. One office up for election was District 5 County Commissioner. This gentleman also happened to be the Chairman. The challenger in this election won the seat by only ONE VOTE. It was quite an upset in our small town in South Georgia. My husband and I have a routine where he will go vote, then come home to stay with our two toddlers so that I can go vote. I usually make it about five minutes before the polls close at 7 pm. If I had not voted on that November day, the election would have been tied. If another tired mother of small children didn’t take the time to vote, the incumbent would have had another two years in office. As I reflect on this past county election, the thought that my vote made a difference has had a profound effect on me.

Now, I realize that a county election in a small South Georgia town does not compare to the magnitude of the Presidential Election, but the concept is the same. The next President of the United States in determined by the number of
electoral votes that he receives on November 4, 2008. The number of electoral votes awarded to each candidate is determined by which ticket receives the most votes statewide. So, it is very important that each citizen eligible to vote goes out on November 4, 2008 to cast their vote for the President and Vice President of the United States.

Today, I received an email from a friend entitled Why Women Should Vote. I have verified on
snopes.com that this email is true and correct. You can also read more on the suffrage movement on the internet. HBO Films produced Iron Jawed Angels in 2004 which portrayed the American woman’s suffrage movement during the early 1900s.

Alice Paul formed the National Woman’s Party (NWP) in 1916.

Lucy Burns was also instrumental in the NWP. During the 1916 election, Alice Paul, Lucy Burns and the NWP campaigned against the refusal of President Woodrow Wilson and other incumbent Democrats to support the Suffrage Amendment actively. From 1916 to 1920, the NWP used tactics such as demonstrations, parades, mass meetings, picketing, suffrage watch, fires, and hunger strikes. In January 1917, the NWP staged its first political protest to picket the White House holding banners demanding the right to vote. In July 1917, Alice Paul, Lucy Burns and 31 other members of the NWP were arrested for “obstructing traffic,” and were imprisoned and tortured


at that Occoquan Workhouse in Virginia. President Wilson was under much pressure from the demonstrations of the NWP and the attendant press coverage of the imprisonment of the 33 women at the Occoquan Workhouse. In 1918, under the pretext that the women’s suffrage was needed as a “war measure” he strongly urged Congress to pass the legislation. In 1920, after coming down to ONE VOTE in the state of Tennessee, the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution secured the vote for women.

ONE VOTE gave women the right to vote!
Do you plan to vote in this 2008 Election? I do. Not only will I vote, but I will pray that the right candidates win this election. If you are not registered to vote, there is a link on the right side of this page. Take advantage of this resource and register. Mark your calendars for three weeks from today--November 4, 2008--and commit to going to the polls to cast your vote. Your ONE VOTE will make a difference.

4 comments:

Virginia Harris said...

Can you even imagine being a woman and not being able to vote?

Thanks to the suffragettes, America has women voters and women candidates, and we are a better country for it!

Women have voices and choices! Just like men.

But few people know ALL of the suffering that our suffragettes had to go through to get the vote for women, and what life was REALLY like for women before they did.

Now you can subscribe FREE to an exciting e-mail series that goes behind the scenes in the lives of eight of the world's most famous women to reveal the shocking and sometimes heartbreaking truth of HOW women won the vote.

Discover how the cross-currents created by two beautiful and powerful suffragettes, a First Lady, a First Daughter, author Edith Wharton, dancer Isadora Duncan and two presidential mistresses set the stage for women to FINALLY win the vote.

Thrilling, dramatic, sequential short story e-mail episodes have readers from all over the world raving about the original historical series, "The Privilege of Voting."

Read this FREE e-mail series on your coffeebreaks and fall in love with these amazing women!

Subscribe free at

www.CoffeebreakReaders.com/subscribe.html

Anonymous said...

They were a bunch of liberal feminazis!!

Just Kidding. Nice post.

Anonymous said...

wildlifer5,
You are too funny!
I needed a little humor today! Thanks!
In Him,
~Christina

sweetsong32 said...

Good job Mary! A great post. :-)Tonya