Disenfranchisement is something the government does to you. It's not something you do to yourself. If you can't figure out how to fill in the ovals or punch the chads—and some minority of voters will always botch it—that doesn't mean your right to vote was rescinded. It means that you didn't take your right to vote seriously enough to pay attention to the instructions.


The Corner, National Review, Oct. 22, 2004


Disenfranchisement is something the government does to you. It's not something you do to yourself. If you can't figure out how to fill in the ovals...

Disenfranchisement is something the government does to you. It's not something you do to yourself. If you can't figure out how to fill in the ovals...

Disenfranchisement is something the government does to you. It's not something you do to yourself. If you can't figure out how to fill in the ovals...

Disenfranchisement is something the government does to you. It's not something you do to yourself. If you can't figure out how to fill in the ovals...