SNIP Too many eligible people choose to not vote. Then they complain about the results.
Well, here it goes again. From a couple different angles.
This paragraph is for constitutionalists. When the constitution was ratified (1789), over half the population could not vote. Women didn't get the vote until the 1920's--that's about half the population right there. All states had a property requirement. Some states also had a certain minimum amount of money requirement. The last clause of the First Amendment guarantees the right to petition government for redress of grievances. What's a grievance? A complaint. No where does the Bill of Rights require one to have voted in order to exercise the rights. And, a person, voter or not, cannot possibly have the right to complain to government without first having the right to complain period.
The right to complain is the right to object. It is a fundamental human right. People have a right not to be over-taxed, over-regulated, or over-criminalized, and the whole litany of other government abuses--corruption, pandering, sold-out to special interests, etc., etc., etc. regardless of whether they voted. Moreover, they have a right to be concerned and object when these things are inflicted on their fellow human beings--friends, family, countrymen, even other peoples on other continents.
For myself, there is no human being on earth I hate so much that I would actually
vote to afflict him with government.