In February 2020, my father officially became a citizen of the United States after taking his citizenship test.

During the exam, each applicant is asked up to 10 questions from a pool of 100 civics questions, and must correctly answer at least six to pass. For some, this might be an easy task, but for my non-English-speaking father, it posed a momentous challenge. So a year before his scheduled test, I began helping him prepare.

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(1) comment

Terence Y

Ms. Liu, hearty congratulations to your dad on becoming a US citizen. Nowadays, I have to wonder whether high school students would be able to pass a citizenship test. You speak of apathetic voters and a few reasons why these eligible voters haven’t voted. I’d add that perhaps voters don’t have any candidates they want to support. For instance, in much of the Bay Area, there are single party races on the slate, each candidate promising the moon and the stars, at least until they’re elected, and then they take the position their campaign donors want them to. When folks see that over and over and nothing gets better, except the amount of taxpayer money wasted, they become apathetic. That being said, do your homework and determine who has walked the walk. What have they done in the past other than talking? Who has done something to make your life better? If nobody fits the bill, vote for the lesser of two (or all) evils.

If you have the right to vote, exercise your right to vote. Your vote may not elect people who stand for the values and issues you believe in, but it’s a chance to vote for people who will not destroy the values and issues you believe in, at least not as quickly – and find someone new the next election cycle. As Ms.Liu says, “Our democracy is what we make of it.”

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