Arnie Arnesen, a failed political hack from the Granite State, New Hampshire, (see: Wikipedia Entry) was just on talk radio here in Boston this morning ... and she said that, if students in New Hampshire weren't on their winter break, Ron Paul would do much better in tomorrow's Republican primary. I found this a curious statement, so I went to Google and only found Colby-Sawyer to be a New Hampshire college that might still be on winter break. There could be a few others, but the scheduling information on many of the other New Hampshire colleges is a little sparse on the Internet.
But this brings me back to that old bone I like to chew on ... why do students, who don't really live where they go to college, get to cast their ballots there (see: Representation without Taxation)? They don't pay taxes there ... even the colleges they attend do not pay taxes there. (And, besides I strongly suspect that many of them also absentee-vote in their home-town elections.) Doesn't this liberal push-through rule amount to representation without taxation? I truly believe that it does. If these students actually live year-round in or around their college town and pay taxes there, then I have no problem with their also voting there. But, if not, then they should only be allowed to cast absentee ballots in their real home towns. Or maybe we should hold national elections in mid-summer?
I realize that I am a hard-hearted martinet ... but big-D democracy does require a little big-D discipline.
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