Posted in Current Events

SAVE Act: Administrative Filter–Voter Suppression

Voting should be easier for everyone, not harder.

Voting in a healthy republic should become easier as citizenship becomes clearer, broader, and more secure. Instead, America appears to be drifting toward a system in which voting increasingly depends not on citizenship itself but on the continuity and perfection of one’s paper trail.

We’ve all seen the ads. You need an ID for travel and even for dinner; so obviously you should need one to vote, right?. But what now counts as an ID is changing in subtle yet substantial ways. Supporters of the SAVE Act present it as a measure to ensure election integrity. Yet its structure and likely impact suggest something larger and more complicated.

Nearly 170 million valid U.S. passports are in circulation, meaning roughly half the country does not hold one.[1] More than 21 million voting-age citizens reportedly lack ready access to citizenship documents.[2] Millions of married women have legal names that may not match their birth certificates.[3] Millions of adoptees navigate sealed or amended records.[4] Rural Americans may live far from the offices that maintain vital records, while many urban residents have built entire lives without ever needing a driver’s license.[5]

None of these people are “illegal voters.” They are citizens living ordinary American lives, and lives can be complicated.

That observation shifts the frame. Traditional election-security efforts should isolate fraud as narrowly as possible while minimizing burdens on lawful voters. The SAVE Act appears to move in the opposite direction, creating a broader administrative filter that disproportionately affects citizens whose lives are complex: marriage, divorce, adoption, relocation, poverty, aging, rural isolation, inconsistent records, or bureaucratic gaps.

The burden does not fall evenly because American life is not evenly documented. The burdens differ, but the results are the same: voter disenfranchisement and suppression.

Every political tribe eventually succumbs to the temptation of selective friction. Not necessarily banning votes outright, but making participation slower, harder, more uncertain, and more exhausting for populations deemed politically unreliable. One missing document. One mismatch. One courthouse trip. One workday lost. One bureaucratic loop too many.

History suggests that rights are rarely removed in a single dramatic moment. More often, they are narrowed through layers of procedure that seem reasonable individually but restrictive collectively. And don’t put it past any current or future administration to find ways to justify removing your right to have the ‘approved’ form of ID. There are currently many ways to revoke a passport which would impede your ability to travel and now vote.

Once citizenship rights become contingent on continuous bureaucratic verification, the government gradually shifts from presuming citizenship to administering verification. It becomes: “Citizen, show me your papers.”

The irony is hard to ignore. A political movement deeply skeptical of federal power now seems comfortable building one of the largest federal identity-verification frameworks in modern voting history.

A republic confident in its citizens removes unnecessary barriers. A republic uncertain of its citizens builds walls.  NeverFearTheDream   simplebender.com

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Posted in Current Events

Systematic Suppression and Decimation of the LGBTQ Community

Systematic suppression is the intentional and structured ways in which specific marginalized communities are denied rights, opportunities, and resources, leading to their disenfranchisement and inequality with the intent of rendering them non-existent. We have a front-row seat to watch many acts of suppression, from voting rights, immigration, women’s rights, and self-determination. Unconscionable as it might be, we watch acts of suppression accelerate daily. But what is even more concerning is America’s silent crisis—the systematic marginalization and decimation of our LGBTQ community, a pressing issue that demands our immediate and unwavering attention.

You don’t have to engage in direct violence to cause harm to a community. The deliberate restriction of social, legal, and support structures can inflict pain, suffering, and even death to suppress a group. Like enabling discriminatory organizations, you don’t have to be directly involved. Quietly supporting or endorsing legislative intolerance and withholding services can be just as damaging. This community only wants to live with the same protections and rights that all of us should have and expect.

Throughout history, various institutions and organizations have used a cornucopia of justifications to discriminate against minority groups. We are witness to similar patterns in the treatment of the LGBTQ community, where personal beliefs are being used to justify discrimination and denial of fundamental rights.

You may not agree with or approve of the LGBTQ community’s identity or lifestyle. It might even be repulsive, and it’s your right to have those perspectives. But that doesn’t give anyone the authority or right to work toward their marginalization, neglect, and exclusion. There are many more pressing issues to deal with. But, we are easily distracted and misdirected, so we target minorities and create issues where they aren’t. Unfortunately, we are all a part of some minority which might be the next target. You can try to soften it, call it something else, or close your eyes, but there is a fine line between decimation and genocide. This is America’s silent crisis, our silent genocide. It is the systematic suppression of a community within our community, and people are suffering because of it. People’s social structures, personal rights, and medical options are being destroyed and restricted only because some have taken it upon themselves to impose their personal views on others. While currently, the acts of physical violence may be isolated they still exist and are horrible. In addition, people are still being harmed through isolation, discrimination, and denial of fundamental rights. The youth within this community is 4.3 times more likely to attempt suicide than there straight friends. A quarter of this community has tried to kill themselves as compared to 6% of heterosexuals. This group is not just part of our community; they are individuals with hopes, dreams, and rights. These are people and they are being pushed to the brink. These are your neighbors, and amongst many things they are parents, clergy, first responders, care-givers, spiritual leader, legislators, educators, business owners, engineers, artists, authors, farmers, students, industry leaders, and on and on. This group isn’t the enemy. It is an integral thread of our lives tapestry and a critical part of our future. This community should not be silenced or erased, and efforts to do so should not be tolerated or excused. Let people live their lives; maybe everyone will let you live yours with the same dignity and respect.

#NeverFearTheDream simplebender.com @simplebender.bsky.social

This was first published in the Bend Bulletin 3/5/25