Jimmy Come Lately
Registered Loser
I can only think back to when I was 16. I knew **** all about politics or about life and nor did my friends. 16 years olds are still kids, except they are kids that think they are adults. Of course they shouldn't be able to vote on important issues.
Or perhaps if you and your friends had been given the chance to vote, you would have taken more of an interest in politics.
I like the idea of teenagers getting their first opportunity to vote while they're still at school, and can be given guidance in things like: how the democratic process works; how to read a party manifesto; what key marginals, floating voters and tactical voting are. Ideally they should be learning all of this stuff anyway but it's much more visceral when it applies to how you cast your own vote. The lucky ones will get to experience a general election but it should work for local or Euro elections to a lesser extent.
Get them in the habit of voting somehow. The spiral of voter apathy needs to be broken, and if the Scottish referendum has achieved nothing else it has shown that this can be done as long as the result matters and people believe that their vote counts.