Yeah, it doesn't extend to the entire Republican party... because I was just pointing out one specific example that I thought was especially damning. There's a bunch of other examples in that short article RD posted, and you can easily find shit-tons more online. And once again I don't care if it's Republicans or Democrats doing the intimidation, the point is there is a long history of it, along with many other voter-suppression tactics going all the way back to poll taxes and literacy tests.
I don't particularly care about "shit-tons" of examples online; you can find all kinds of inane, inaccurate, or outright fabricated **** online. Even RDs article is questionable by, in the example you cited, trying to expand the Louisiana example (a state notorious for all kinds of corruption) to the entire nation. Then again, there's the fact that this example is 30 years old is only marginally more relevant than poll taxes or literacy tests in the 1800s.
I know they aren't watched 24 hours a day. It's not like they're all in some central location where they can be easily locked up and monitored. There are so many thousands of polling places all over the country, you don't think a determined group could infiltrate a single one?[ /quote]
Most polling places are not dedicated polling places; they're things like schools, city halls, and community centers and wouldn't store them anyhow. They'd be stored at a board of elections or something, so on a county by county basis they are stored centrally ,and there's this nifty thing called a burglar alarm. They don't need to be watched 24 hours a day; they aren't nuclear weapons.
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...all that sounds pretty doable to me. A lot more reasonable than a scenario where democrats organize mass voter fraud among thousands of people that's completely undetectable and not a single person involved makes a peep about it. Sounds like conspiracy theory bullshit to me.
You are hilarious. Not only is that not "doable", aalmost any one of those elements, especially those surrounding creating the device, entail nearly insurmountable technical challenges, especially if you want the device to be undetectable. You are claiming its "doable" on nothing more than intuition and because its convenient to this hacker nonsense you seem to want to hang your hat on.
It would be far easier to simply recruit people to vote fraudulently. Most of them don't need to be in on the scheme, they just need to buy into going and voting a 2nd time or even taking money to go vote and some fast talker to get them to do it.
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Also, a lot of you guys are acting like you can just walk up to a polling station and say "Hi, I'm Bob Smith and I'm here to vote" and get handed a ballot. Are there any states that are actually like this? In my experience you must at least have voter registration card to vote. So if you wanted to vote multiple times, you'd have to get the info on other people are register for them to get their cards. And then hope they don't register themselves, in which case they'll probably notice something is up. Sounds like a lot of work to me.
You just go get a bunch of illegals to register. As for voter registration cards, ohio doesn't have them. You just say "I'm bob smith and I'm here to vote.". If bob smith or jose gonzalez or whoever is on there, they get to vote. This is why fraudulent registration is a concern, especially since any attempt to quality control the roles is met with shrieks of outrage. Its very easy to talk about "conspiracy theories" when you just pretend everyone involved has to know the whole story, or pretend technical challenges are "doable" with handwavium.
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I also don't think these ads in the original article should be illegal or anything. I just think it's bullshit that you guys are acting like the purpose of them is to educate people about voter fraud or some bullshit like that instead of discourage the people in those areas from voting.
The purpose is to remind people in those areas that taking that deal to go vote twice, or that its legal to vote (or even just not a big deal) if you're not a citizen, or let yourself get talked into something involving voting more than once is vote fraud. Poor minorities are also the least educated. These are the people that most need the message, because they are most likely to not know or not care.