To clarify, there are two logical consequences of that parent comment.
Suppose a 65yo person watches too much tv and still votes.
1. In order to be allowed to vote, they need to watch less tv.
2. They don't get to vote otherwise.
My point is: we have so much stigma against the elderly in this country that arguments like these even appear reasonable at first glance. I'm arguing that there are dark consequences of this line of thinking.
So, how is this not the same as another restrictive voting requirement, such as literacy tests or poll taxes?
That's not at all what I had in mind, but I still think it's an interesting (if extreme) line of reasoning.
Why do we ban 12-year-olds from voting? Seems we already have some concept of the capacity to vote built into our legal system here in the US. Wonder if that's true of all countries... Most states don't allow felons to vote either... It feels weird that you can vote by proxy even if you barely know your own name. I think I agree dementia patients should still be able to vote, but like... it feels weird, right?
It's not extreme to be an absolutist here like myself.
The best things about the U.S. system are simple. If you are born on her land, you are a citizen. If you are a citizen over 18* you can vote. You have the right to free speech and religion as long as it doesn't injure anyone else.
These decisions were made in part to reject the British monarch's divine right to rule and establish popular sovereignty. I am not a historian; this is not the full picture, but this is how I understand it.
To me, talk of disenfranchisement is categorically dangerous because it undermines the foundation of the government, and walks back the 250-year work of civil rights activists to establish what is today for most, a pretty good system.
So yeah, should we let kids vote? Maybe, why not.
Should we take that right away from anyone based on fuzzy criteria or a doctor's evaluation? No, and I refer you to the history of the post-reconstruction South as an example.
Suppose a 65yo person watches too much tv and still votes.
1. In order to be allowed to vote, they need to watch less tv.
2. They don't get to vote otherwise.
My point is: we have so much stigma against the elderly in this country that arguments like these even appear reasonable at first glance. I'm arguing that there are dark consequences of this line of thinking.
So, how is this not the same as another restrictive voting requirement, such as literacy tests or poll taxes?