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Fun with Electronic Voting
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To
12/08/2018 16:04:55
John Ryan
Captain-Cooker Appreciation Society
Taumata Whakatangi ..., New Zealand
General information
Forum:
Technology
Category:
Security
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01661514
Message ID:
01661550
Views:
48
>>>What you wrote is not true. Registered to vote does not mean they voted. It means they have registered at some point in the past and never been removed from the voting lists if/when they died... this quote is from the extreme right-wing media:
>
>The extreme left MSM is all-in that skeletons should be allowed to vote for Democrats, so of course you're only going to see this mentioned in right-wing media.

Possibly, but that was not the point. I quoted extreme right-wing media to show you that not even them would make the claim that you did.

>If you discount automatically based on source, how about the Supreme Court's June 2018 judgment? Bottom line is that Democrat-voting skeletons are NOT disenfranchised by being removed from the rolls. Seems obvious that if Ohio allows absentee/mail-in voting and there are hundreds if not thousands of ineligible people on the voting rolls- then the Republic is at risk when electoral margins are as slim as they are...

How about disenfranchising citizens registered and able to vote in person? If you read closely the analysis of the Supreme Court decision process you'd see that the problem was not the purging of voter lists in itself, but the purging method, which was considered too aggressive and likely to result in a lot of false positives.

>
>As for the 72, you're right: the allegation of 72 skeletons voting isn't from this election, but from the 2016 election. This year all the skeletons behaved themselves and didn't vote illegally because they're good skeletons and the Supreme Court is at fault for allowing their removal from the rolls.

FYI: Before the Nov 2016 election, the 3 largest counties in Ohio already had removed at least 144,000 voters from their lists. As for the recent special election, I wonder what stopped the "170 people over 116 years old" (that, allegedly, are still on the voting lists) from voting, especially since it was a much closer race than the 2016 election? Stop reading the conspiracy theories.

Here is something more informational: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Voter_Registration_Act_of_1993
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-votingrights-ohio-insight/use-it-or-lose-it-occasional-ohio-voters-may-be-shut-out-in-november-idUSKCN0YO19D
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