Amanar wrote:
Okay, but don't you think that security issue is important too? It's far more troubling to me than the possibility of a few determined individuals double-voting. Why don't the Republicans care about e-voting machines if they are so concerned about voter fraud?
No, I don't. See below.
Quote:
None of this changes the fact that the Republican party did try to disenfranchise minority voters on many different occasions. I also wasn't trying to single out the Republican party here. I don't care who has been disenfranchising blacks, I'm just pointing out that there's a long history of it, often disguised as trying to prevent voter fraud. Why should I trust the Republican party now? In particular, the 1982 memo where the RNC wanted to “keep the black vote down” with their anti-fraud measures is pretty damning.
Ok, first of all 30 years ago is not terribly damning, and claiming that it was "the Republican party" is misleading. It was in one particular state, Louisiana. The RNC may have gotten yanked in for failure to exercise oversight, but this idea that the Republicans, as a whole, are racist and try to suppress minority voters because they got stuck with the leftover Wallacites is absurd. This idea is illustrative of exactly how the left has expanded the racism of the south in the 50's and 60's to somehow encompass all whites and all Republicans everywhere.
Coro wrote:
It very much is a flaw. You think no one is ever left alone with these voting machines? Can you go up to an ATM machine in the middle of the night and spend 15 minutes opening it up and soldering on an electronic device, and then have it spit out all it's money? I don't think so. There's no reason these machines shouldn't be locked down a lot better than they are.
Also, what the hell was wrong with paper ballots? Those seemed to be working fine and are much more secure than the current voting machines. At least the machines should leave a paper trail that can be referred to if fraud is suspected.
But no one gives a **** about this very real threat, where a handful of people could change the results of an election. Meanwhile, widespread voter fraud, which I'll remind you there is no evidence of, is your concern? You really think illegals care about voting in elections? You really think that when we can't even convince most of the population to go out and vote once, there are millions of people who would go through all the effort to vote multiple times? And then these same people are somehow able to hide their fraud from everyone?
And anyway, is there any evidence that voter fraud benefits one party more than the other anyway? It probably mostly evens out anyway.
Meanwhile, there's mountains of evidence for and a long history of voter intimidation and of course none of you guys give two shits about that. It's their fault for being intimidated, obviously! Just ridiculous...
First of all, what knowledge do you have of how well voting machines are secured?
Second, the idea that there's some "very real" threat that someone can just solder some device on a voting machine and alter the count is laughable.
1) The person must have such a device in the first place.
1a) Someone must be able to have access to the machine or technical information on it in order to make the device.
1b) The device must be fabricated. IT must be small enough to physically fit within available space inside the voting machine.
1c) The device must be tested to make sure it does not simply crash the machine, actually does alter the count, and does so in an undetectable matter. Therefore, one must have access to an actual voting machine and be able to test it.
2) The person must have access to the voting machines.
2a) The person must be able to get the devices and suitable equipment into the voting machine storage area undetected and remain undetected while installing the devices
2b) Note it's devices, since altering just one machine would mean that either not enough votes could be added or deleted to matter, or that the machine would have a tally well in exces or well below those around it.
2C) The person must have sufficient time to install the devices, and the estimate of 15 minutes per sounds like a total asspull to me.
2d) The installation of the device must not damage certification seals or other means of ensuring the device hasn't been tampered with.
As for illegals, most illegals probably don't care much about voting. Some, however do, especially VISA overstays and others that might have a chance at getting to stay under real or imaginary leniency. There's also the fact that illegals who don't care much about voting could be induced to do so pretty easily with a trivial sum of money. "
Que paso, chavo? Hey bro, I'll give you 50 bucks if you go register to vote. Make sure you vote on election day! There's another $50 in it for you then,
ese."
Finally, this "voter intimidation" crap is total nonsense. People are taking billboards and photo ID and pretending that's the same thing as guys with armbands and walkie-talkies and in some cases nightsticks. I think the real issue is that there's no evidence of fraud and the left wants to make sure it stays that way. I think most of the left is afraid of what might come to light if we made serious efforts to combat fraud.