In 2015, just 43% of 18-24s went to the polls, compared with 78% of people aged 65 or over.
And now only 44% of 18-24s say they are certain to vote in this election.
First time voters, go vote tomorrow! Your vote matters!
You did it! 18-25s voter turnout of
72%!!!
This made a massive difference in places like Canterbury, which is now Labour again for the first time in 99 years due to 18-25s showing up to vote!Â
May called an election as she wanted to extend her majority and now, due to the youth vote, she has lost the majority!
It’s not over though: she can still form a government.
How?!?!?
NOW LISTEN UP HERE, THIS IS REALLY IMPORANT!!!
She can still form an agreement with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). They have already said they would support her and they have 10 seats in Parliament.
So, who are the DUP? (Please check the links! My bullet points do not paint the whole picture!!)
Short rundown on the DUP:
–
biggest Unionist (ie pro-UK) party in Northern Ireland
– climate change deniers
– pro-hard brexit
–
anti-abortion
– anti-LGBT
– anti-immigrant
PREPARE TO PROTEST THE FUCK OUT OF MAY WORKING WITH THEM!!! MAKE IT IMPOSSIBLE FOR HER TO BE INDEBTED TO AND RELIANT ON THE DUP OR ELSE RISK ALL THE ABOVE POINTS SUDDENLY BEING VERY HIGH UP ON MAY’S AGENDA!!!
This is VITAL! Start talking about this NOW! The fight isn’t over!
Even if you aren’t in the UK, please REBLOG!!! We don’t have a government yet because the Conservatives did not get the majority of the vote – so they can ONLY govern by working with the DUP*.
*or if some of the other parties that swore they woulnd’t team up with her do.
President Donald Trump and his allies may have ordered the removal of Native American demonstrators from their protest camp at Standing Rock in February, but it was far from a knockout blow.
On Friday, hundreds of indigenous protesters and their supporters rallied in cities across the United States to oppose Trump’s policies on Native lands, and to demand he stop prioritizing corporate interests over their own. Read more (3/10/17 3:14 PM)
Let the record show that I did not consent to this.
Let
it show that I did not vote for this man, that he did/does not represent
me, that I do not believe he was deserving of being here, that I
grieved his ascension.
Let
History record my objection to him, to the ways he humiliated women and
vilified Muslims and threatened protestors and disregarded people of
color.
Let
it record my repulsion at his tremendous cruelty, his lack of
compassion, his contempt for dissension, his absence of simple decency.
Let
witnesses mark down my disgust at the way he boasted of infidelity, at
how he ridiculed a disabled reporter, at the way he attacked female
opponents for their appearance, at the way he marginalized immigrants.
Let
it be remembered that I did not look the other way when women accused
him of assault, when the reality of his Russian alliances came to light,
when he refused to share his tax records—though large portions of the
American media and its people chose to. Â
Let
it be remembered that I did not buy into the fear that he perpetuated
of those with brown skin or hijabs or foreign birthplaces.
Let the
record show that I looked on with disbelief as he spent countless early
morning and middle-of-the-night hours following the election on social
media, broadcasting a steady stream of petulant, insecure, incoherent
messages instead of preparing to do a job he was ill-equipped for and
seemingly not all that interested in.
Let
the record show that I watched him assemble a Cabinet of billionaires
and bigots, of people woefully unqualified to steward our children, our
safety, our healthcare, our financial stability—and that I was horrified
by it all.
Let
it be remembered that my faith would not allow me to fall in line
behind this man while so many professed religious people did; that I saw
nothing resembling Jesus in him, and that to declare him Christian would have been to toss aside everything I grew up believing faith in Christ manifested in a life. Â
Let
History record my grieving at the racism and bigotry and homophobia
that characterized his campaign, marked his supporters, and is evident
in his assembling Administration.
Let
it be known that I was one of the more than 65 million people who voted
for Hillary Clinton; who understood that though flawed, she was an
intelligent, experienced, passionate public servant with the
temperament, commitment, and qualifications to lead and lead well.
Let
the record show that I greatly lamented the day of his inauguration,
and that I promised to join together with other good people to loudly
resist and oppose every unscrupulous, dangerous, unjust and dishonest
act this new Administration engages in.
History has been littered with horrible people who did terrible things with power, because too many good people remained silent. And
since my fear is that we are surely entering one of those periods in
our story, I wanted to make sure that I was recorded for posterity:
I do not believe this man is normal.
I do not believe he is emotionally stable.
I do not believe he cares about the full, beautiful diversity of America.
I do not believe he respects women.
I do not believe he is pro-life other than his own.
I do not believe the sick and the poor and the hurting matter to him in the slightest.
I do not believe he is a man of faith or integrity or nobility.
I do not believe his concern is for anything outside his reflection in the mirror.
I believe he is a danger to our children.
I believe he is a threat to our safety.
I believe he is careless with our people.
I believe he is reckless with his power.
I believe America will be less secure, less diverse, less compassionate, and less decent under his leadership.
And if I prove to be wrong, it will be one of the most joyful errors of my life. I
will own these words and if necessary, willingly and gladly admit my
misjudgment because it will mean that America is a better and stronger
nation, and the world a more peaceful place.
But right now I don’t see that happening.
Right
now I am worried for my country, concerned for our planet, scared for
the future of my children, and greatly saddened that 62 million
Americans seem okay with all of this.
Let the record show that I was and am not okay with it.
@dollyp shared a story on twitter about refugees after the news of trump’s new ban (which has, thankfully, for the moment been stayed by a federal judge)
Fast radio bursts, powerful pulses of radio energy of unknown cosmic origin, are a source of endless fascination to astronomers and alien conspiracy theory fodder to everybody else. But while most FRBs discovered to date are one-off events—a single chirp in the interstellar void, if you will—these phenomena got more interesting last year when astronomers discovered the very first FRB signal that repeats. Now, they’ve pinpointed its location.
FRB 121102, the only repeating fast radio burst know to science, is located over three billion light years away, in a dwarf galaxy a thousand times dimmer than the Milky Way, according to new research published today in Nature. Not only does the new analysis confirm that mysterious radio bursts emanate from a source far beyond our galaxy, zeroing in on their location means we can start unraveling what exactly that source is.
All we know at this point is that FRBs are coming from something powerful. “These radio flashes must have enormous amounts of energy to be visible from over 3 billion light-years away,” Cornell astronomer and lead study author Shami Chatterjee said in a statement.
“I think this is a really big deal, and I’m really excited about the result,” Peter Williams, an astronomer at Harvard’s Center for Astrophysics who was not involved with the study, told Gizmodo.