RangerDave wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
folks making the claim of how rare voter fraud is are conflating committing voter fraud with being caught for voter fraud. The statement reeks of disingenuousness.
There's no evidence of fraud of any significance. Studies and investigations have been done and found virtually nothing. It would be wildly irrational for individual voters to try to influence the outcome of an election by casting a fraudulent vote. It would be impractical and risky to the point of stupidity for conspirators to try to commit fraud in modern elections by having large numbers of ineligible voters cast ballots instead of just rigging the count. So sure, we can't prove a negative and say with 100% certainty that no voter fraud is occurring, but seriously, there's just no reason to suspect it's a problem.
Quote:
Billboards are common in high density, high traffic areas. Minorities are common in high density, high traffic areas. Correlation != causation.
Come on, Vind. You're reaching here.
Basically this.
I'm honestly sorry that my comment made you upset Vindi, but seriously dude you're over reacting. The phrase reading comprehension fail is pretty mild on the whole snark-o-meter. Especially in context of how completely and totally retarded this "issue" is.
The facts of the matter is there have been several studies done looking into voter fraud, and non that I've found (please show me otherwise) have shown any hints at significant amounts of voter fraud. If you look at one of the ones I linked in
this thread you'll see the following data.
2068 alleged cases of voter fraud since 2000 (12 years)
During that time there were 10 cases of voter impersonation (something that voter ID laws would address)
During that time there were 146 million registered voters
So that gives you a rate of 1 incident of voter impersonation in 14.6 million people over 12 years.
Since you seem all wrapped around the axle on comparing that rate of occurrence to lightning strikes let's look at the rates of other crimes so that we avoid the whole random semantic argument.
http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr/cr ... 0tbl01.xlsRates of Crime for 2010 (I've multiplied the source data by 146 so that the rates are per 14.6M inhabitants and we're looking at apples to apples)
Violent Crime: 58,925.6
- Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter: 700.8
- Forcible rape: 4,015.0
- Robbery: 17,388.6
Property Crime: 429,517.4
- Burglary: 102,141.6
- Larceny-theft: 292,511.0
- Motor vehicle theft: 34,864.8
It should be highlighted that these are just the rates for 1 year worth of crime (2010) and that these rates have fairly steadily been trending down. Further we're comparing ALLEGED cases of voter fraud to ACTUAL cases of other crimes here, so I'm being about as conservative with my comparison as you can get. So in just one year (the lowest rate year I might add) you are 700.8 times more likely to be murdered than be exposed to voter identification fraud. So over the 12 years of the voter fraud samples you would be 8,409.6 times more likely to be murdered or killed.
The facts of the matter are that the Republican political machine has concocted this liberal fraud boogeyman and somehow managed to get otherwise intelligent people to be scared of the dark.