i remember beulah shepard who came to texas, the late beulah shepard, if there ever was a person wholked about voth, it was sister beulah shepard out of acres home. she used to recite a poem, just one vote. the gave a whole list of what one vote, one person could do she proudly talked about how the fact that she paid a poll tax to vote and she paid a poll tax, i think she said, for her husband and others who needed to vote. that wasn't too long in america's history and future, mr. speaker. what a shameful turn of events that now the late beulah shepard is no longer here and how she's be crying, turning over in her resting place to realize all the toiling she did to register people to vote, to empower those who had been disenfranchised, now could not vote. susan b. anthonys and sojourner truth, who could not vote because women weren't land owners who worked a and were ridiculed and now to find that some elderly woman who doesn't have a voter photo i.d., and i say, you cannot get a voter i.d. if you don't bring something like a birth certificate and this is where our senior, either can