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Electronic Voting
BBC News reports more than 140,000 ballots were rejected in May.
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Something is rotten in Scotland. |
I'm blue-in-the-face (no pun intended) describing, in pain-staking detail, how outisde database contractors systematically cooked the books, based on the specific instructions given them, in the ... can you guess what comes next? ... in the Florida "election" circa 2000. After the "success" of this endeavor, many have been eager to jump on the "electronic voting" bandwagon.
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There's a way to hijack any election. How about dead people voting? How about one county with an unusually high discard rate? I don't think electronic voting is anymore dangerous than paper ballots. On the contrary, they're both systems that need constant oversight.
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Who needs dead people? Philadelphia apparently allows up to some silly number (100?) of homeless people to register to vote at any address in the city ... so for the price of a few bottles of cheap vodka you can swing a ward ... and, you don't even have to have the homeless people you registered be the ones who show up to vote.
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Hardcopy backups at the time of voting so every vote DOES have a reference, maybe. Honestly, I don't care either way, there will always be ways to defraud the vote, and they will always be used. It would just be nice to not waste all that paper.
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Dude, staking hurts.
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Problem is both...
Electronic voting machines and the illegal alien/dead person voting are both problems. Whatever you may think of each, the reality is that a large and growing number of Americans have less or no confidence in the outcome of elections because of perceived problems in these areas. Lack of confidence in the outcome of elections is bad for democracy. There's legislation pending on part of the problem, but it seems to me that a constitutional amendment might be a good idea--one that deals with both issues. Any thoughts?
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A constitutional amendment to do what, exactly? Make voting mandatory?
Or to forbid voting after you're dead? |
Welcome to the Cellar Sigwrite:D
What legislation are you talking about? |
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Easy Voting Fraud Machines and Letting the Voter Count As orthodoc notes, what good is bombing when you don't have a target; when you don't even know who the enemy is. That bombing is the Constitutional Amendment solution. The legislation was passed many years ago. Dead people voting? It is a popular myth. Even Federal prosecuters were fired because these dead people voting could not be found. But the myth continues. These electronic voting machines are the hurricane threat to elections. Dead people voting - a sun shower. |
I hate the idea of e-voting. I like going to the ballot box and placing my cross on the paper. I think it gives it more of a sense of occassion. I really hate the way the 'theatre' of elections has been watered down. I don't mean the lying (sorry acting) of politicians...that's alive and well:P But the whole business of balloons and badges and people with loudspeakers driving round towns playing music and generating excitement. We're in danger of over sanitizing elections in my country, I think. There's room for excitment and tradition.
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We have had E-voting in Georgia for a number of elections now. There were few problems. It seemed to work. I think they are going to begin to mandate a paper back up now but I can't remember if it passed or not.
All this conspiracy bull shit about purposefully fixed voting machines in the US I believe is crap. Errors? sure, quite possible. Some kind of grand conspiracy to defraud the US public, unlikely. |
Sure, nothing like that has ever happened before.
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I am just looking for someone to present concrete evidence of some grand conspiracy. So far no one has been able to do so.
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Wouldn't it just be business as usual; but with newer, better tools?
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I have no idea if this answers your specific question Merc because I haven't read it but this may help you.
Fixing Elections: The Failure of America's Winner Take All Politics - Steven Hill http://www.amazon.com/Fixing-Electio.../dp/0415931940 |
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Flyers have been sent out to misdirect voters on dates and polling places. Official-looking people have been stationed at polling places to intimidiate voters with demands. In Philadelphia, it's been taken a step further with physical violence. |
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It made a big difference in Florida, in 2000.
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Not in Florida. Jigger the ballots one way or another way, the shift totaled maybe fifty ballots. Even with the Democrats making the decisions, each and every reexamination had Bush winning by a greater or lesser margin. And eventually the Supreme Court told the Dem Party it was time to quit their stalling.
Considering that there was no prospect whatsoever of the Democratic candidate competently facing 9-11 -- that is, attempting to win the ensuing war, which in some eyes is George Bush's unforgivable sin (I just can't see it with those eyes) -- I say the Republic was fortunate to have no further continuation of the Clinton legacy. |
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