When Was the Last Time Most Americans Agreed on Anything?

When was the last time the majority of Americans agreed on anything?

I’ll get to that in a moment. I have to start wading through some controversial territory to get there; I’ll try to lay it out in a neutral way so you can be better informed.

Whether you call them illegal immigrants or undocumented workers, the topic has been in the news quite a bit lately. Our nation was built on the backs of immigrants, certainly, but there’s a very large difference between the legal and illegal versions of migration into the United States. I don’t want to go too far down this rabbit hole; suffice it to say Democrats are widely in favor of encouraging vast numbers of undocumented workers into the country, and Republicans are widely opposed to it. What’s the rationale here?

Every 10 years, the U.S. performs a census. We want to see how many people live in our country, where they live, and as much demographic data about age, income, household size, ethnicity, etc. as we can easily collect. Ok cool, that sounds reasonable. One of the things the government does with that data is re-apportion congressional representation among the states according to population. Every state gets two senators regardless of how many people live in each state, but aside from that, the more people reside in a state, the more representatives they’ll have in Congress. For example, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Wyoming don’t have very many people living there, so they barely have any representation in the House of Representatives. Each of those states gets two electoral points for each senator, plus one point for a congressional representative, for a total of three Electoral College points each. California, Texas, and Florida, on the other hand, have very large populations. Accordingly, there are a lot of congressional districts, and a lot of Electoral College points, associated with those states. I’m sure you’ve watched as the Electoral College map gets filled in on presidential election nights. The states with the largest population are worth the most electoral votes.

California is the single most important state on the Electoral College map. It’s worth more points than any other state. A presidential candidate has to win 270 points in the Electoral College, and right now California accounts for 54 of them. That is, until the next census occurs.

Contrary to the best interest of the American electorate, it turns out congressional representation is not based on how many American citizens reside in a given state; it’s based instead on how many people, including non-citizens, live there. Due to its policies that result in a high cost of living, American citizens have been leaving California for years. They can leave California, but if additional people, citizen or otherwise, move in, it will mitigate the loss of electoral points. If your party normally wins California but people are leaving it in droves, what’s one possible solution to maintaining population levels? Facilitate the arrival of undocumented migrants in areas otherwise losing populations. Doing so tinkers with the census results, which subsequently affects the electoral math.

So what is it the majority of Americans are agreeing on?

It’s a slightly different, but still related topic. What’s your view on having to prove your identity and eligibility when you register to vote? Do you think you should be able to just show up and state your name and address, or should there be something a little more stringent where you have to prove you’re eligible to vote in an election?

According to a recent Pew poll, this is not a controversial topic at all. Overall, 83% of Americans (71% of Democrats and 95% of Republicans) are in favor of having a requirement for voter ID. The numbers are also high when broken down by race. Harry Enten of CNN has been quoted as saying “The bottom line is this: Voter ID is NOT controversial in this country. A photo ID to vote is NOT controversial in this country. It is not controversial by party and it is not controversial by race. The vast majority of Americans agree.”

Why, then, is there so much opposition to it by members of one of our two major political parties on Capitol Hill? Because it reduces opportunities to operate in the margins. When voter rolls are pretty slim, it’s fairly easy to ensure there isn’t any funny business going on regarding fraud in an election. When the voter rolls are swollen, it increases the opportunity for voting shenanigans. Election officials are just like any other job…there never seems to be enough hands to cover the basics. As long as everyone’s acting in good faith and playing by the rules, it’s wonderful to have high percentages of eligible voters participating in their civic rights. Not everyone plays by the rules, however, and fraud is more difficult to catch when it’s hidden among extensive numbers of registered voters in an understaffed voting location.

It may not be a 100% solution, but there’s a bill which has already passed the House, called the “Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act,” which aims to make it mandatory to be able to prove citizenship when registering to vote in elections. Again, only American citizens are eligible to vote in American elections. The various states are allowed to run their elections how they want, but they’re all supposed to have a process that ensures only American citizens can cast votes. Not all states have a stringent process. It might be a stretch to say there’s widespread fraud, but fraud does exist. The SAVE Act would establish minimum requirements for registering to vote (strict photo ID requirements and proof of citizenship). The downside is that even American citizens who are eligible to vote may not have easy access to the required proof (not everybody has a passport, for example, and there are plenty of people who wouldn’t be able to easily find their birth certificate). The requirements aren’t particularly onerous; you usually need to provide similar proof when starting a new job. While you don’t always need to have citizenship to get a photo ID, the SAVE Act would mean you must prove citizenship to register to vote. In theory, the combination of secure voter registration and legitimate photo ID should help minimize fraud at the polls.

This doesn’t quite cover everything related to election controversy these days (numerous states are looking at redrawing their congressional districts to manipulate which party wins the district), but hopefully it will help keep you informed as you hear about the SAVE Act in the coming days/weeks. Remember that it’s not the news media’s job to keep you informed on all sides of an issue; it’s the news media’s job to get high ratings and sell advertising space. Straightforward, honest reporting doesn’t draw an audience, but controversy and outrage do. Hopefully this will help you keep the facts straight as you keep an eye on the latest developments.

Let’s Go as Fast as We Can Down This Icy Death Chute

The Winter Olympics are coming to a close this weekend. I’ve always enjoyed the Winter Olympics more than the Summer games, maybe because even though Summer Olympic events represent the more classical competition, the Winter version has at least one of the following: snow/icy tracks/sharp blades/high speeds/people soaring through the air. Nobody gets broken bones in sprinting or swimming, but you can break a bunch all at the same time if you fall the wrong way in Super G or have a bad day on the luge track. Aside from javelin, there’s not a whole lot of danger in the Summer games. The winter exception is curling, where even middle-aged athletes can earn a medal. Somehow though, even though I don’t understand the scoring and it’s not fraught with danger, it’s still strangely entertaining to watch.

I’ve shared multiple times in the past about how, when I was in college, my roommate and I drove out to be spectators at the 2002 Winter games in Salt Lake City. It was a lot of fun, for sure, but these days I’m seeing the games through different eyes.

One thing that was lost on me 24 years ago was just how young everybody is! I look at today’s athletes and wonder if some of them are old enough to shave. It’s interesting to see that the “senior” participants, the ones who have been to three or four Olympics already and are the elder statesmen and mentors in their discipline, are only in their late 20s or early 30s. When you see the human interest pieces on them, you find out they competed in their first Olympics when they were 13 or 14. That’s insane to me! I’ve got kids older than that!

The people I watched back then (or even since then) are now commentators or interviewers for today’s events. Picabo Street (women’s downhill skiing), Bode Miller (men’s downhill skiing), Apollo Ohno (short track speed skating), and Shaun White (men’s snowboard halfpipe) all took or are taking a turn behind the microphone.

I can’t watch some events the same way I used to. I watch moguls and think “Ow! Ow!” over and over in my head until each skier crosses the finish line. Then I kick myself for sounding like an old man when I find myself thinking “this will probably be the only Olympics that set of knees competes in.”

The sports themselves evolve over time, too. Rules change, innovation occurs, and the stakes get raised. Norwegian cross-country skier Johannes Høsflot Klæbo employed a new tactic when skiing up hills, more or less running up the hill at full tilt while wearing skis instead of skiing in the classical style. Ilia Malinin, the American figure skater, pulled off not only a one-legged backflip (which hasn’t been allowed in previous competitions) but a quadruple axel…a stunning four and a half rotations in the air. Snowboarders routinely execute tricks that seemed impossible not long ago. The people that win are the ones who risk the most and manage to string together a series of tricks or a couple of runs that barely avoid catastrophe. Competing at the absolute edge of control, it’s at once awe-inspiring and death-defying.

I now find myself rooting for the “old people.” In Olympic terms, if 30 is old, 40 is ancient. Lindsey Vonn (41) sustained injuries that ended her downhill bid during a training run. A Canadian pairs figure skater (Deanna Stellato-Dudek, 42) made history as the oldest woman to make an Olympic debut in figure skating. She and her partner were crushing it, too, until a fall took off too many points to be competitive. While showing her back story, the piece detailed how intense her regimen is; training at 40+ is much different from training at 24.

The Winter Olympics will always hold a bit of a special place in my heart. While I recognize not everyone’s into watching the Olympics, it’s been nice to have a little bit of the usual anger and division take a back seat. We can just be Americans (or wherever you’re from) and enjoy the fruits of thousands of hours of each athlete’s practice. Hopefully you can enjoy a similar break from the normal noise that’s out there.

Reaching A New Audience

I’ve got some exciting news about DareGreatlyNow.com! A ministry partner has volunteered his services to make audio recordings of past blog entries, and the intent will be to make them available on the site for listening on the go!

I say “ministry partner,” but the truth is…he’s an ordinary guy who followed through on the Holy Spirit’s prompting to make use of his talents, time, and resources. He doesn’t represent a professional organization. He’s an example of what God can do with a willing heart. Thanks to his efforts, blog entries will start becoming available through a different medium, hopefully reaching a wider (or different) audience, spurring them on with the goal of encouraging others to step into the roles God made for them.

In all honesty, it’s probably going to be a long time before even a tenth of the blog’s past posts are available to listen to. Neither of us does this full time. We’re just guys who love God and said yes to different versions of a task He laid before us, and we do this on the side. The beauty of it, though, is that we’ve begun working a project that once didn’t exist, and years after it first started, there are hundreds of God-honoring posts that have collectively been read thousands of times across the globe.

Here’s where I’d love your input. In light of a limited capacity to produce audio files of past entries, I’d love to hear from you to help shape the prioritization going forward. Which past posts stand out in your mind as something that spurred you on, or as something you think others need to hear? Leave a comment or let me know at tim@daregreatlynow.com.

Big things that honor God and build His kingdom don’t usually start out big. They start with a single person being open to God’s leading. Later, other people bring reinforcements and additional depth to the project. What are you being led to do? What’s holding you back? Who will you be a ministry partner to?

It’s Still Under Development

I like stories with twist endings you don’t see coming. The director M. Night Shyamalan is famous for putting together some movies with great twists.

One of those movies, Unbreakable, has a lot of parallels to the Christian walk. Everyone who’s received the Holy Spirit has also received custom-designed talents and abilities from Him for the purpose of serving Him and His kingdom.

I’m not going to give away the movie ending, but it’s about an ordinary guy who finds out he’s got some special powers which enable him to be much more than an ordinary guy. Amazed but confused about how to use his gift and what to do next with it, he asks a mentor of his, “What am I supposed to do?” Knowing the nature of the gift involves interactions with people, the mentor gives it to him straight: “Go to where people are. You won’t have to look very long.”

Sure enough, he followed the advice and went to a public place, where his interactions further brought out his special abilities. That practice helped him improve his ability to harness his talents and use them productively.

If you want to serve the Lord by using your God-given abilities, you might have trouble getting started. It can be frustrating to know you’ve got something special but not know what to do with it. The most important thing? Start using those abilities. God’s not going to be mad at you for not getting it perfect the first time. Even if you’ve only got a faint notion of how they can be employed, give it a go…each experience will help you get a better sense of how to put them to good use. The practice and familiarity gains you proficiency and confidence, and that’s when things really start moving.

“Do you know what the scariest thing is? To not know your place in this world, to not know why you’re here.”