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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#1 |
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 13,244
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I left the Downtown Boston area as fast as I could. It's crowded crowded crowded at the Common. Lots of reporters, lots of helicopters, huge police presence... I hope it goes peacefully.
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#2 |
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I am stumbling to trying to word my point, so I will give an example of local politics here in AZ.
Voters in AZ passed a law stating that identification must be given at polling locations to verify who you are prior to voting. I voted for it. It is reasonable. However, the governor (who is a democrat) and the attorney general (who is a democrat) have fought against this tooth and nail, mounting legal challenge after legal challenge. Their stated reasoning? That this law will intimidate minorities into not voting. What? I read that to mean that the democrats are afraid that those who are not US citizens may be afraid to try to vote. Why would being expected to present identification to show that you are who you say you are be intimidating? I would suspect (and perhaps I am naive) that it is because you aren't supposed to be voting in the first place. This leads me to believe that the democrat governor and attorney general want fraudulent voting. I can see no other reason to oppose it. Does this mean every democrat wants that? Absolutely not. But it is not secret that the hispanic voting block votes heavily democrat. Enough red flags there for me. I would not presume, however, that every democrat would want to see illegals voting. |
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#3 | |
I Floop the Pig
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And, for the record, I was not arguing as to whether or not the Deomcratic party encourages illegal voting practices. All I was pointing out was that the posted photo of a single flyer spoke far fewer than 1,000 words.
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#4 | |
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Can you give me a good reason why just showing proof of your identity would cause a problem? Racial intimidation? I would not suspect that would be the issue, as you can't hide your skin color when you get in line at the poll. I fail to see how intimidation would increase simply by showing that you are actually John Smith at 123 Oak St and should therefore be permitted to vote as that person. |
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#5 | |
I Floop the Pig
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I don't claim to know all of the factors involved. I do know that Georgia law was struck down in federal court on the grounds that it constituted an implicit poll tax. Namely, the cost of getting ID. And questions of economics in this country disproportionately affects minorities. That may or may not be the thinking of those in Arizona, but the reaction of the black congress members leads me to believe that, whether you can think of it or not, there are other reasons to oppose the requirement.
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#6 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
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Yeah, that was the basis on which the Democrats opposed the first bill. I'm just not clear on what the basis of opposition is now that the new bill includes giving a free "voter card" to anybody who can't afford a driver's license or state ID card (rather than persuing a court case to support the existing law which was not struck down but has an injunction during litigation they're just trying to pass a new law that would survive the injunction attempt).
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#7 | |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Feb 2005
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Georgia already required providing identification to vote and the attempt is to restrict it to government issued identification rather than also including things that can easily be made at home (such as a utility bill or student ID card).
The grounds for opposition were that poor people were more likely to be unable to afford state issued ID cards. So the bill was revised to include making free government ID cards available. They still oppose it. I don't know what the grounds for doing so now are. To me, proving who you are to vote doesn't sound so burdensome (and it shocked me when I moved to California and learned that you not only didn't have to do so but that my polling station posted a list of all voters registered for that station outside the venue and then updated it throughout the day to show who voted), even if you are poor. Georgia should be willing to accept a birth certificate though. |
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#9 |
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For full disclosure, I said that the Phoenix rally fell far short of expectations. Apparently there was more difficulty than expected with people actually getting there and the rally did not reach full strength until much later than expected, and most reports put it at over 100,000.
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#10 |
Yeah, that's about it-
Join Date: Jan 2005
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Is it possible that it is as simple as- If you make people present ID, and you give them voter cards to make it easier for them- it would then become harder to scream racism and disenfranchisement when the vote doesn't go your way?
That seems like a good reason for black members of congress to walk out- it would make it to hard to try to accuse people of things that weren't happening and try to throw doubt on the vote. Sorry- Way TOO many of the voter fraud allegations and convictions are against democrats, in democrat controlled districts with democrat's running the show. Democrats- the party of the dead, the felons and the illegals. No, not EVERY single individual in the party wants it that way- but it is what it is. |
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