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If everyone eligible to vote in the US voted, this country would basically never elect a republican again. In any case, we would be staunchly progressive. So cut your bullshit about how Hillary Clinton isn’t liberal enough and go vote for her if you want any semblance of liberalism in our government.

My father always told me that there were two things he did not expect to see in his lifetime: the Berlin Wall come down and a black president. His face when each event happened was... indescribable. He was starting to get sick around the election, and we lost him to lung cancer the next year. But he saw two damn

I’ve been thinking of my mother a lot today, too. When she went to university in the 1960's her school was still segregated by gender. The women’s school was called a college while the men’s was a university, conferring a higher amount of prestige on one school over the other even though the requirements were the

Palin was definitely my biggest concern with McCain. And honestly, Pence is one of my big concerns with Trump. Not that I think he’ll die or anything, but if he does, Pence is even scarier than Trump. Trump has no actual track record. He could end up doing anything. But I *know* how Pence feels, and it’s disgusting.

I want to cry. I knew today was going to be a lot, but so much of the convo has been dominated by white women talking about what this day means TO THEM. My grandmother was born in 1922 & she didn’t have the right to vote until her eldest daughter was 26.

I know it’s an emotional day but this brought tears to my eyes! I love that your grandmother was able to vote for a black president followed by a woman president.

I’m an immigrant, a WOC, and a rape survivor. I attended my first Planned Parenthood protest at age 10 (thanks mom!) at the State Capitol. When I went on road trips with my parents, we listened to a tape of HRC speaking at the University of Minnesota commencement in the mid-90s. I could never, ever fathom voting for

I am 64- This is my current Facebook status: I was the third person in my district to vote this morning. My hand shook and my heart pounded when I filled in the oval for the Clinton Kaine electors. My vote is for me, and it’s for my country. But even more than that, my vote is for my four granddaughters, and for my

My mother hates Hillary Clinton and my grandmother was going to vote for Trump because of abortions. But my grandmother always dreamed of going to college. Instead, she worked as a secretary in a college until she met my grandfather who dragged her out to a farm. There, my mother dreamed of going to college to study

My Grandma vividly remembers watching Klansman openly running for, and winning, local elections. The fact that she got to live to see Obama win is incredible.

My grandmother is an 89-year-old, black woman. She doesn’t leave the house much anymore because she’s sick a lot but she got up to vote for Obama and she’s up today to vote for Hillary. It’s a blessing to be able to watch her experience such progress.

I want to say this as a millennial: Voting for Hillary Rodham Clinton means the world to me.

Nothing to add, really, just gonna say that, as an 18-year-old Filipino male, such display of voting force gives me nothing but hope that there are more people who do The Right Thing and reap its rewards.

My mother is 78 and has NEVER voted for a Democrat (much to my chagrin). This morning she was in line long before 7 a.m. (with quite a few others, she texted) in DALLAS TEXAS to vote for Hillary Clinton. Her reason? “While only a child the last time a fascist demagogue almost destroyed the world and ran his country