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wait, there's gold under the WTC?
Yes, it is difficult to prove that Bush masterminded 9/11, but that doesn't mean he didn't do it.
barfo
Perhaps 10,000,000 people smoke marijuana, breaking federal law. But your logic is that because they weren't convicted of breaking the federal law, they aren't smoking marijuana.
No... but if there are 10,000,000 people smoking marijuana, then you'd expect there to be at least a few federal convictions. And indeed, there are.
On vote fraud, there don't seem to be. There are a few rather pathetic local cases and individual bad ballots, but no giant vote farms to spray with paraquat. No huge underground economy growing votes. Nothing that would support your position that this is an important issue.
barfo
I just posted 7 CONVICTIONS in the past couple years where a number of ineligible ballots were cast.
The FAIL is you not getting how widespread it is. You seem willing to let it slide as long as it's in favor of your side, and as long as you can excuse it away because the district attorney hasn't gotten 8500 indictments where there are 8500 fraudulent votes.
It doesn't seem widespread at all... in fact those cases seem like a drop in the bucket compared to 300 million people in the US. I am glad they got caught... but it seems like some random wackos... lazy election people who didn't want to recount again.
Look, I'm all in favor of get out the vote groups doing their thing legally. When you have several who have numerous convictions and tens of thousands of registrations thrown out at a time, it's more than a few pathetic little cases. When it happens in 10+ states, it's widespread.
When there's a concerted effort to register dead people and others who obviously have no legitimate ability to vote, it's so someone can show up and vote illegally and make a fraud of the election.
There is a huge underground economy growing voters and thus votes. It's well documented.
Denial isn't a reasoned argument.
You also have to look at what they're trying to accomplish. In a few elections, it only takes a few hundred votes to change the outcome of the vote. In Minnesota, for example, Al Franken was named Senator after a contentious recount; he won by 312 votes. An 18 month study of the ballots and registrations found that at least 314 felons voted illegally.
I have a not-so-out there hypothesis: losers whine that the game was rigged.
Since the R's were losers last time out, they are making accusations of voter fraud.
Since the D's will be losers this time, expect a bunch of accusations of voter fraud from the D side over the next couple of years.
Most of these cases of "voter fraud" don't amount to much - either unsupported allegations (such as the fox news report) or minor, localized problems (like paying voter registration workers improperly). And I doubt the ones the Democrats will allege will amount to much either.
It's really just a tool to rally the base, and judging from the responses here, it works just fine.
barfo
No offense barfo, but you sound like those poster who for years belittled fans who said there was something wrong with NBA refs. You won't admit it until the proof is plunked down in front of youl.
I think voter fraud is a lot more common then you admit in this post.
It's weird how you can't come up with even a single case anywhere in the united states where someone was actually tried and convicted for voter fraud, isn't it? Seems like a "pattern".
barfo
How many Finance execs have been convicted for financial crimes after the financial system blew up in 2008?
Do crimes committed and convictions have any relationship to, well, anything?
Voter fraud is not persued. It is not in the interest of the two major parties to make a big scandal out of the situation. Whine and fight during elections, but sweep it under afterwards. The more the system itself is deemed to be untrustworthy, the less credibility both parties have with the population.
You have failed to show any evidence for the bolded part at all. And if it were actually true, there would be lots of convictions, because it would be a very simple matter to wait for the dead people to show up at the polling place and arrest them when they do. It's a rare criminal who announces what day and location they are going to commit a crime, and checks in when they get there.
But that never seems to happen. All you can find is registration fraud, not vote fraud. And the obvious reason for that is that one exists on a wide scale and the other doesn't.
Or it's a gigantic conspiracy that none of the law enforcement officers in the country are able to crack despite it being conducted in plain sight. Your choice.
barfo
In Chicago, where Kennedy won by more than 450,000 votes, local reporters uncovered so many stories of electoral shenanigans--including voting by the dead--that the Chicago Tribune concluded that "the election of November 8 was characterized by such gross and palpable fraud as to justify the conclusion that [Nixon] was deprived of victory."
A new biography, "American Pharaoh," quotes Mayor Daley defending his city by claiming that Democratic fraud in Chicago was no worse than Republican fraud in downstate Illinois:
"You look at some of those downstate counties," he said, "and it's just as fantastic as some of those precincts they're pointing at in Chicago."
Robert Kennedy, his brother's campaign manager, shrugged off the whole controversy: "A tempest in a teapot."
A Republican National Committee member filed suit to challenge the Chicago results. The case was assigned to Circuit Court Judge Thomas Kluczynski, a Daley machine loyalist.
On Dec. 13, Kluczynski dismissed the Republican suit. Less than a year later, on Mayor Daley's recommendation, Kennedy appointed Kluczynski to the federal bench.
Ultimately, a special prosecutor, Morris Wexler, was appointed to investigate the Chicago fraud allegations. Wexler brought charges against 650 election officials but a Democratic judge's pro-defense rulings crippled Wexler's case and the charges were dropped.
Finally, in 1962, after an election judge confessed to witnessing vote tampering in Chicago's 28th ward, three precinct workers pled guilty and served short jail terms.
It's not being done in plain sight of the authorities. If you have 30,000 illegal votes cast out of 6M, it's like finding the needle in a haystack. That's part of why people do it and get away with it and why it's unreported.
Uh, no. You follow up on the illegal voter registrations that you've received and that you claim lead to illegal votes. If you have the fake name they'll be voting under and their precinct, why can't you show up on voting day and arrest them? Seems pretty simple to me, and not at all like finding needles in haystacks.
barfo
They're not catching all the illegal registrations, those are just the tip of the iceberg.
Even if they did try to set some sort of trap, how does that play out without it being intimidation of the legit voters?
barfo: "Hi, I'm barfo, I'm here to vote. Here's my electric bill, where's my ballot?"
poll worker: "Please wait while I compare your information against this list of 30,000 known illegal registrations."
That is what the "story" is. It is not so. Massive fraud occured at many levels of the mortgage market, for example. Lies were built upon lies which were stacked on top of more lies. They even openly called certain types of loans in the mortgage market LIAR loans. Those were packaged up by Wall Street, sold as "Prime", and given top grade ratings by the ratings agencies. Lie on top of lie on top of lie. If we had the rule of law, thousands would be prosecuted for fraud. That isn't "legal, stupid, stuff." It is unprosecuted fraud.Beats me. Were crimes even committed? Seems to me the primary cause was legal, if stupid, stuff.
Also, anyone adjudicated incompetent, whether or not under guardianship, is ineligible to vote. MNST sec. 201.014 subd. 2(c).
This is Minnesota state law. Pretty cut and dry voter fraud. Any and all who participated in this illegal activity should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and the poll worker who allegedly cast another person's vote should be imprisoned if found guilty.
One of the most basic rights free citizens of the United States have is their vote. To have a legal ballot canceled out by an illegal ballot is an outrage.
Also, anyone adjudicated incompetent, whether or not under guardianship, is ineligible to vote. MNST sec. 201.014 subd. 2(c).
This is Minnesota state law. Pretty cut and dry voter fraud. Any and all who participated in this illegal activity should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, and the poll worker who allegedly cast another person's vote should be imprisoned if found guilty.
One of the most basic rights free citizens of the United States have is their vote. To have a legal ballot canceled out by an illegal ballot is an outrage.
