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Greens and Libertarians Team Up to Demand Recount

cyberformer writes "The Ohio election rules state that any losing candidate can demand a manual recount. Today, David Cobb and Michael Badnarik, the predidential candidates for the Green and Libertarian parties, announced that they are joining forces to do just that. A manual recount is important because it will include every ballot cast, whereas the first count only includes ballots that can be read by machine. It could even tip the state (and thus the election) from Bush to Kerry."

359 comments

  1. Filing fee by dtfinch · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Funny, I didn't think the first count was done yet.

    They want $110,000 in donations to pay the required fees. Looks like $10 per precinct.

    1. Re:Filing fee by FleaPlus · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you would prefer to donate the money via the Badnarik campaign instead, here's the link.

    2. Re:Filing fee by Aix · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link - I just donated $25.

    3. Re:Filing fee by Tyndmyr · · Score: 1
      Consider twenty donated...I'd do more, but I'm poor as hell 'till payday. Its the least I can do.

      Still kinda pissed that someone donated fifty in my name to the repubs this year.

      --
      Support more choices in goverment-Vote 3rd party.
    4. Re:Filing fee by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Sue for fraud/ID theft!

      Now you're never going to stop hearing from those scumbags every 2 years, begging for money.

    5. Re:Filing fee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Ohio Recount is Going Forward!

      Here's a link to the announcement: http://www.votecobb.org/ [Cobb/LaMarche] (i.e. the Green Party)

  2. What if Kerry won? by Vokbain · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What would happen if it turned out Kerry won? Would Bush be forced to concede the election to Kerry?

    1. Re:What if Kerry won? by phoenix.bam! · · Score: 4, Informative

      No one is ever forced to concede. the only reason a person makes a speech is for show. the speech itself has no legal force. If kerry does indeed win Ohio then Bush would lose those electoral votes, lose the election and be on his way back to texas in Jan '05. Even with the recount though, Kerry winning is a longshot, no need to get the hopes up.

    2. Re:What if Kerry won? by whoda · · Score: 5, Informative

      The electoral college doesn't meet to vote until December 13th this year.
      It's not officially over until they have voted. The results of that vote aren't unsealed and counted until January 6th.

      Conceding elections is just a nice way of saying, I won't personally oppose you any more.

      If the outcome changes thru some other process and the electoral college votes Kerry into the Presidency, that's it, Bush wouldn't have to concede anything.

    3. Re:What if Kerry won? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bush hasn't won yet. The Electoral College hasn't voted. Theoretically, if some electors didn't vote the way they were asked to, then Kerry could win.

      Kerry felt that it was not worth for him pursuing his victory (because of the odds), so he conceded. That doesn't prevent him winning through others' efforts.

    4. Re:What if Kerry won? by stinerman · · Score: 2, Informative

      IIRC, congress can refuse to accept the electors if they so choose. If you saw "Fahrenheit 9/11" you may note the part of the film when a dozen or so house members challenged the election. Of course they were missing an endorsement from a senator, so the challenge was void.

      Anyone else have any more info on this?

    5. Re:What if Kerry won? by sabNetwork · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm not sure, but I think they'll find a senator this year ;)

      --

    6. Re:What if Kerry won? by stinerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not so sure. Lieberman didn't stand up and challenge the election, and he was on the ticket with Gore.

    7. Re:What if Kerry won? by Quikah · · Score: 3, Informative

      No, congress cannot refuse the electors votes. The votes are collected in each state, sealed and sent to the President of the Senate. The Pres of the Senate opens them and counts them before both houses of congress.

      --
      Q.
    8. Re:What if Kerry won? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      They can refuse the votes if there's two sets of electors. At which point they follow various rules to figure out which one is correct, and throw the other set out.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    9. Re:What if Kerry won? by MindStalker · · Score: 1, Funny

      That's the problem with Kerry, he never can follow through on anything, always changing his mind.

      **in alternate universe*

      That's the problem with Kerry, never willing to accept the will of the people, the election doesn't need toour be dragged through the cts. :) its funny laugh.

    10. Re:What if Kerry won? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it was in teh F9/11 film-flam by that lier moore! He probly used CGI to make it look that way or something.

    11. Re:What if Kerry won? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The electoral college doesn't meet to vote until December 13th this year.

      It's not officially over until they have voted. The results of that vote aren't unsealed and counted until January 6th.

      OK, I'm with you so far ... but as a UKian, and thus not familiar with your electoral proceedure, what would happen in the following hypothetical.

      After the election, a presidential candidate is overwhelmed by the responsibilities he's about to take on and after sober reflection he decides he's *really* not the man for the job.

      Does the future presidency then devolve to the vice-presidential candidate (as would happen with a sworn-in president), would the other party then be deeemed to be the winners by virtue of their 'ticket' being the runners up in the election or is the election declared null and void?

    12. Re:What if Kerry won? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bush can kill himself.

      and seeing as how he hasnt(according to him) made a single mistake these past 4 years, i dont think hes about to start owning up now.

  3. Re: by nmec · · Score: 5, Funny
    It could even tip the state (and thus the election) from Bush to Kerry."
    It could but I'll eat my tinfoil hat if it does
  4. What they oughtta do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is team up and stop running for president, and help the Democratic campaign.

    1. Re:What they oughtta do by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      stop running for president, and help the Democratic campaign.

      Why? I would never have voted for Kerry. I might have voted for Badnarik (too young to be eligible). The Democratic philosophy is as different from the Libertarian one as it is from the Republican -- so much so that I find myself more or less half-libertarian and half-Republican, but nowhere near Democratic.

      You may as well say they should help the Republican campaign; the two seem to me ideologically closer, Bush himself notwithstanding.

    2. Re:What they oughtta do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, this may be the way you feel, but most libertarian and green voters lean closer to the dems.

    3. Re:What they oughtta do by pilot1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Greens might, but the Libertarians don't.
      Democrats and Libertarians are very very different when it comes to economic policy.

    4. Re:What they oughtta do by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      most libertarian and green voters lean closer to the dems

      That's why there are separate parties: so D-like libertarians like a lot of Slashdot and R-like libertarians like myself can have a party that's a lot closer to our common beliefs instead of being shuffled off into the Democratic and Republican parties. The libertarian philosophy is not part of the linear left/right spectrum (that incidentally dates from the French Revolution, where there were about 3 major ideological factions, and the third was centrist).

      Besides, I didn't consider Kerry that good a candidate, even if I did agree with the Democratic platform. Given the choice between Kerry and Badnarik, I would've undoubtedly chosen Badnarik. There's enough difference in philosophy that allows me to agree with the latter but not the former. I don't think it's fair for them to endorse Kerry.

      On the other hand, I do agree that the third parties should concentrate first on local elections, where parties matter less and it's easier to find an independent (or barely partisan) candidate who fits the third-party ideology better; yet they should keep running some presidential candidate to keep their representation up.

    5. Re:What they oughtta do by bruthasj · · Score: 1

      Don't group libertarian, green, and dems. Only a slashdot drone or an "anyone-but-Bush" bigot would do that. I suggest you spend more time understanding the party line of each of these. Start with the issue of Gun Control. You'll be amazed at the differences.

    6. Re:What they oughtta do by FooAtWFU · · Score: 2, Informative
      Libertarians are all about liberty, and about getting the government out of everything. To that end, they are somewhat interested in Republican goals (theoretically, smaller government, tax cuts, less regulation stuff) but are also interested in some Democratic ones as well (positions on matters such as gay marriage).

      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: Libertarianism is a political philosophy which advocates individual rights and a limited government. Libertarians believe that individuals should be free to do anything they want, so long as they do not infringe upon what they believe to be the equal rights of others. In this respect they agree with many other modern political ideologies. The difference arises from the definition of "rights". For libertarians, there are no material "positive rights" (such as to food, shelter, or health care), only "negative rights" (such as to not be assaulted, abused or robbed). Libertarians further believe that the only legitimate use of force, whether public or private, is to protect these rights.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    7. Re:What they oughtta do by Blakflag · · Score: 1

      I've stopped thinking along a single axis with regards to political thought. Here's a paper http://www.umich.edu/~umisl/articles/parties.htm that mentions the two axis system I feel is more desriptive. I like to think about social policy on one axis and economic policy on the other. free social policy (legalizing drugs, abortion, guns etc) and free economic policy (low tax, less laws restricting trade) would describe libertarian. restrictive social policy + free economic policy would describe some conservatives. Free social policy and restrictive economic policy might describe democrats. Someone like old Ross Perot might be restrictive socially and economically. Yes its veering from the topic. But what a dead horse. :)

      --
      *** DRINK MORE COFFEE ***
    8. Re:What they oughtta do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      That definition of libertarianism is pretty much useless. Negative rights could be deduced to necessitate inverse positive rights, making such a distinction useless. Any political ideology could be sketched in such a way as to say to uphold only negative rights and not positive ones. You can even read this on the very dicsussion of that Wikipedia article. That's why that article is locked: it's such a mess.

      Even if that definition was true, I've never met a person who calls themself a libertarian who agrees. Bring up the subject of children and then they'll say they want some positive rights too. That parents mustn't just not assault their children, but must also feed them and shelter them.

      They are not about getting government out of everything: that's the anarchists. They want the government to save them from some things, but not others.

    9. Re:What they oughtta do by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 4, Interesting
      [...]most libertarian and green voters lean closer to the dems.

      Greens, yes. Libertarians, no. Libertarians until recently always seemed to lean mildly "Republican" (if you must compare them with "The Two Parties"). Being for less government influence, political authority being devolved down towards State (and smaller) levels from the Federal level, non-interference in free commerce, and so on.

      The only reason they may seem more Democrat this time around is that Bush, quite frankly, seems to be pushing the aspects of Republicanism that Libertarians disagree with (speech-restricting "Campaign Finance Reform", "Foreign Entanglements", attempts to amend the constitution for things like allowing congress to criminalize "desecration of the flag" and "banning gay marriage", restricting civil liberties (e.g. the "PATRIOT" act) in the name of "security" and "patriotism"...) while slacking badly on most of the issues Libertarians tend to agree with (reducing the size and power of the Federal government, fiscally responsible government policies, etc.).

      Typically, on social freedoms, Libertarians lean slightly "Democrat" - except that Democrats are more likely to want to use government force to "require" social freedoms (i.e. through legislation -as an example, perhaps a hypothetical federal law requiring all states to recognize any other state's legal marriage contracts, including "gay" ones if the state where it was issued allows it), where Libertarians tend to prefer non-coercive approaches (i.e. it's none of the Federal government's business at all WHAT kind of social arrangement adults give informed consent to enter into...). . Any power not explicitly granted to the Federal government by the Constitution belongs to the states or the people...

      Or at least that's my (simplistically-stated) understanding of the political philosophy, anyway.

    10. Re:What they oughtta do by slamb · · Score: 1
      The Democratic philosophy is as different from the Libertarian one as it is from the Republican -- so much so that I find myself more or less half-libertarian and half-Republican, but nowhere near Democratic. You may as well say they should help the Republican campaign; the two seem to me ideologically closer, Bush himself notwithstanding.

      Have you seen the political compass? It's great - they plot ideologies on two dimensions rather than one. If you've ever been confused about what's a left vs. right point, it's probably because compressing everything into one dimension makes no sense. This site uses two dimensions, which is better. (Still imperfect, but a third dimension would probably be more confusing than beneficial.) The horizontal axis is economic; the vertical is social.

      Going back to what you were saying, Democrats are left of Republicans, as always. But both Democrats and Republicans are in the upper right quadrant. Libertarians are in the lower right; the Green Party is in the lower left. They have Democrats and Republicans roughly equidistant from the Libertarians. But I think the social axis (libertarian vs. authoritarian) is more central to the Libertarian's beliefs (thus the name), so I'd consider Democrats closer than Republicans.

    11. Re:What they oughtta do by GryMor · · Score: 1

      As a libertarien, I can more easily accept the federal government disallowing a state from infringing upon individual liberties by means of discrimination than I can accept the federal government discriminating itself.

      I am uncertain that the state has the right to do anything based on marriage, but I am certain that if the state does have that right, it does not have the right to descriminate based on the form of a particular marriage.

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    12. Re:What they oughtta do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Republicans (in practice):
      Fiscally Liberal
      Socially Conservative

      Libertarians:
      Fiscally Conservative
      Socially Liberal

      Why would someone with 'libertarian' values support the republican party? Libertarians believe that government should reduce spending and stop limiting freedom. Recent republicans have been spending at record rates and stomping freedoms at every opportunity. I am a libertarian and I voted for Kerry... Not because I like his politics, but because we are in the midst of a presidential emergency.

    13. Re:What they oughtta do by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Informative

      Real libertarians want the government to get out of the institute of marriage.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    14. Re:What they oughtta do by DavidTC · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Well, there are a lot of complete morons out there who rant and rave about tax-and-spend liberals and vote Republican because of that, completely missing the point that the Republicans have become borrow-and-spend.

      (Please note I didn't call all Republican voters idiots, just ones who voted for them because they promised to (and did) lower taxes. Lowering taxes and raising spending is worse than raising taxes and raising spending.)

      You are correct, the Republican party has managed to get as far away as possible from the Libertarian party, very very recently. Which is, of course, why the LP is asking for a recount of Ohio...they disagree with Kerry on 50% of his platform, but they disagree nearly completely with Bush.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    15. Re:What they oughtta do by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Get with the program?" People like you are why there are minor parties and independents to begin with.

    16. Re:What they oughtta do by mpost4 · · Score: 1

      I would say that that test is not very accurate, it did not ask enouph questions, yes I know that all political tests fail at some point. But the problem with this test, is it put me very close to the center.
      Economic 2.79
      Social .97
      But I know on the Social area I should be stronger an higher in the number and closer to the right. And I did not know I was that high in the economic, but that is assuming that that number is also correct.

    17. Re:What they oughtta do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They weren't planning to fight two wars when they cut the taxes. The GOP that won Congress in 94 really did try to cut government spending, but felt a huge backlash when people realized they were serious.

    18. Re:What they oughtta do by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Heh, no, they were only planning on fighting one. ;)

      And, you know, the American people would have been okay with raised taxes after 9/11. Instead, they got lowered civil liberties and no tax change. Oh, wait, I forgot...they lowered taxes again, didn't they.

      As for the GOP in congress in 94, I feel for them, I really do, except the 'slash government spending' crowd basically existed because of them. It was their issue, they created it, and created a bunch of cheerleaders for it, and then rode it into power.

      And then people came to their senses and said 'Why, you want to cut [insert favorite program here]? You can't cut that, we need that!'. The entire situtation was basically the GOP's fault. It's what happens when you hype something that people wouldn't actually want to happen, and get people cheering for it...you'll be completely and utterly screwed if you ever get into a positition to do it. You don't do it, you'll anger those supporters, and look like a liar, you do it, and you'll anger everyone. The GOP took as good an exit as the middle ground allowed.

      I think the Libertarian Party existed before that, to get back on topic, but that craziness managed to get a lot of Republicans believing that slashing government spending as much as possible was the way to go, so when the GOP left that platform behind, those people were left standing, confused, inside the Libertarian Party headquarters, where they were quickly handed a pamplet.

      Luckily, the GOP now picks better things to get people riled up about, ones it can't do anything about, like those gays getting married, wimmin have abortions, and those athiests banning prayer in schools.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    19. Re:What they oughtta do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On your last points, regarding gays and abortion, I think Justice Scalia is right. These are issues best left to states to decide for themselves, and not for the courts, because the Constitution makes no mention of either issue. If people want gay marriage, they can pass laws, and if they wanted abortion, they should've passed. There is no right to privacy, and the longer people build law around it, the more harm it does.

    20. Re:What they oughtta do by slamb · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I think it misplaced me, too. (I expected to be in the center, and ended up basically around the Green Party.) I'm more impressed with their scale and their placement of world leaders than their test of where you stand.

    21. Re:What they oughtta do by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      I'm both fiscally and socially conservative. Since it seems easier to go fiscally conservative than socially liberal, I wouldn't mind a Libertarian in office.

    22. Re:What they oughtta do by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      I think you're right about abortion. Roe vs. Wade is idiotic. If it hadn't passed, we'd have abortion legal almost everywhere. Instead, the religious right gets to whine and whine and whine about it, and never actually do anything. The politics of outrage require you get outraged against something you can't change, and the GOP knows that now. Get outraged about things you can change is a recipe for actually being expected to do stupid things, which is a losing preposition no matter what you do.

      As for gay marriage, the constitution does say that you have to respect contracts in other states...but, hey, if they want to ignore each other's marriages, they are happy to do so. They did it with interracial marriages.

      Interesting that everyone seems to forget that. There's plenty of precedent that it's legal to consider marriages made in other states not really marriages. Of course, it's rather obvious why the religious right hasn't brought this up as a solution, because it would draw attention to the fact that, yet again, they're calling bigotry 'moral issues'. Before, it was black men having sex with our wimmin, this time it's women having sex with our wimmin.

      However, I think with the progess being made on banning gay marriage, or at least pretending to ban it, the GOP is finding itself having to do stupid things. Pretty soon some religions are going to go 'Hey, who put these guys in charge of marriage, anyway?'.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  5. Makes no difference by mind21_98 · · Score: 0, Troll

    In everyone's mind, Bush won. And since Ohio uses electronic voting, there's no way to do a recount since there's no paper trail in the first place. Even if there was a paper trail I seriously doubt they could overcome the 100,000 vote margin needed to win. Just my two cents.

    1. Re:Makes no difference by The+Briguy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ohio doesn't use electronic voting. Over 70% of the state [including Cleveland, where I live and voted] still use the old "hanging chad" ballots.

      The only regions that use the electronic voting machines are the wealthy republican suburban areas. Therefore any recount will help Kerry. Whether it will help enough is anyone's guess.

    2. Re:Makes no difference by fbjon · · Score: 1

      Why would a recount automatically help Kerry?

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    3. Re:Makes no difference by The+Briguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      because like I said before the ballots that have the highest fault rate are in highly democratic areas. The repulbican areas have ballots with lower margins of error / no paper trails and therefore recounts there would have less of an impact. PS - Great Grandparent post is just wrong - Ohio uses punch card ballots for the most part. Whomever modded it "informative" needs to check thier facts first next time.

    4. Re:Makes no difference by BeyondHope · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Areas with E-Voting count all the votes.

      Areas that still vote with the old machines lose something around two percent of the votes to the machine not understanding "hanging chads" and other problems. A manual recount generally counts many of the machine rejected votes.

      So, assuming the e-voting districts were bush districts, and the machine voting districts are Kerry districts, Kerry has more to gain from a recount.

    5. Re:Makes no difference by The+Briguy · · Score: 1

      exactly. Thanks for putting it succiently.

    6. Re:Makes no difference by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 1

      The only regions that use the electronic voting machines are the wealthy republican suburban areas.

      We used electronic voting in Columbus (democratic - franklin county). The real travesty for us was that it took 2-3 hours of standing in line to vote, and there's no way to recount that.

      All the while standing in line, I kept wondering if there was some way a person could just bring a prefilled out ballot and simply drop it off instead of spending two minutes in one of three booths with a line of 200 people behind you stuck in a cramped crowded hot hallway occupied by an additional 200 people whose precinct's voting location just happened to be in the same room. Then again, at least we could wait inside. I heard others were stuck outside in the rain while standing in line.

    7. Re:Makes no difference by Quarters · · Score: 3, Interesting
      In everyone's mind, Bush won.

      Yeah, and let's all be good little Neo-Con ditto-heads and only believe what they tell us instead of using our Constitutionally granted rights to question everything the Government does.

      "Mandate My Ass" will be a great rally-cry for the next four years. The 'Pubs are already hot to inform everyone, ad nasuem, that Bush had the largest number of ballots cast for him in any Presidential election. But, you know who the person with the second largest number of ballots cast for him is? Kerry. That means that Bush had the largest number of votes cast *against* him in any presidential election in US history.

      His margin of victory is the smallest in a US Presidential election since Wilson beat Taft in 1913.

      "Mandate My Ass" and who gives a flying $#@! about who thinks who won. We need the recount just because we can do it.

    8. Re:Makes no difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "His margin of victory is the smallest in a US Presidential election since Wilson beat Taft in 1913."

      are you talking about electoral votes or popular vote? because he actually LOST the popular vote, and still won the presidency. so it's not the smallest margin of victory via popular vote. electoral votes he won 272-268 in 2000, so it's not the smallest margin of victory there either. please inform me how it is the smallest margin of victory since 1913 - are you completely forgetting the 2000 election?

    9. Re:Makes no difference by Caseyscrib · · Score: 1

      You can view a county-by-county breakdown of the kind of voting equipment used in each state here.

    10. Re:Makes no difference by Kris_J · · Score: 1
      In everyone's mind, Bush won.
      Who knew that God posted with a username of mind21_98?
    11. Re:Makes no difference by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      Correction: Areas with e-voting may or may not count all votes, we do not know.

      However, we're certainly unlikely to get more votes off them in a recount.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    12. Re:Makes no difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he meant smallest margin of victory for an incumbent President since Wilson in 1916.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_W._Bush#Pres id ential_campaigns

    13. Re:Makes no difference by mwlewis · · Score: 5, Informative
      But, you know who the person with the second largest number of ballots cast for him is? Kerry. That means that Bush had the largest number of votes cast *against* him in any presidential election in US history.
      Ummm, no, that's wrong. First, since Bush had more votes than Kerry, Kerry had more votes cast against him than were cast against Bush. But let's assume that you meant to say that Bush had the most votes cast against him and still won the election. You'd still be wrong. In 1992, there were almost 60 million votes against Bill Clinton, compared to almost 57 million against Bush in 2004.
      --
      JOIN US FOR PONG!
    14. Re:Makes no difference by UdoKeir · · Score: 1

      His margin of victory is the smallest in a US Presidential election since Wilson beat Taft in 1913.

      Surely you mean when Gore beat Bush in 2000?

    15. Re:Makes no difference by daveo0331 · · Score: 1

      This looks like it's from Michael Moore's "17 reasons not to slit your wrists" that he sent out a day or two after the election. The actual quote is:

      2. Bush's victory was the NARROWEST win for a sitting president since Woodrow Wilson in 1916.

      It's only sitting presidents, and it doesn't count the incumbents that lost (Bush 41, Carter, etc). In other words, the following Presidents won reelection by a wider margin than Bush did:

      Clinton (1996)
      Reagan (1984)
      Nixon (1972)
      Johnson (1964)
      Eisenhower (1956)
      Truman (1948)
      FDR (1944)
      FDR (1940)
      FDR (1936)
      Coolidge (1924)

      --
      Remember the days when Republicans were the party of fiscal responsibility?
    16. Re:Makes no difference by avaric3 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Correction Bush had more people vote against him than any other sitting President. Clinton was not a sitting President in 1992.

  6. Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limit! by stevew · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've been listening to Air America lately - and mostly what I hear is disgruntled people not wanting to believe that Bush won. The conspiracy theories out there are amazing!

    So what happens if the FIRST recount doesn't make Mr. Kerry President? Do we ask for ANOTHER recount ala 2000? 100K votes ain't that close folks!

    --
    Have you compiled your kernel today??
  7. WHERE CAN I DONATE?? by Drunken_Jackass · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I heard this story on NPR - it was just on All Things Considered tonight, so npr.org doesn't have the link up yet. At the end, they commented that the Libertarian and Green party is currently raising the ~$130,000 needed for the recount.

    Where can i donate?

    Kerry got ~45,000 vites on our Slashdot poll. If i can PayPal $5 or do a $5 credit card donation, how many other people would?

    --
    There are 01 types of people in this world. Those that understand binary, and me.
    1. Re:WHERE CAN I DONATE?? by Strike · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ahahahahahaha, I know you're not trying to do anything in the "real world" with slashdot poll results, are you?

      Drunken Jackass indeed.

    2. Re:WHERE CAN I DONATE?? by Drunken_Jackass · · Score: 1

      hee hee hee...if i had moderator rights, i'd mod you up. That was funny.

      Or it could be the Guinness talking.

      --
      There are 01 types of people in this world. Those that understand binary, and me.
  8. Re:A quest to expose elections fraud? by bizpile · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think it's just a PR stunt, something the Libertarians have always been good at.

    Apparently they aren't very good at PR or maybe they'd have a better showing in the elections.

  9. Nader is also asking for a recount by Caseyscrib · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Independent Ralph Nader is also asking for a recount in Ohio, Florida, New Hampshire, and North Carolina. Kerry won NH, Bush won the rest. Polls had Kerry ahead by 10%, but he won only by 1%. I'd like to see a recount too, because we use those optical scan ballots that have been in controversy lately.

    1. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by jemfinch · · Score: 4, Informative

      Funny, since Nader wasn't even on the ballot in Ohio because the signatures he (or rather, his paid "volunteers") collected for his petition to be placed on the ballot didn't hold under scrutiny, and were rejected by the Ohio Supreme Court.

      Jeremy

    2. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

      But how much accuracy can you ascribe to exit polls? I've heard alot from all sides about them not being accurate enough for close races with error margins as high as 5% (enough that 1% and 10% are pretty much the same result).
      I've also heard exit poll people even admit the polls are only 'accurate' after being reconcilled with actual count.
      Plus the fact that exit polls only measure the claims of voters who are willing to take the polls, wich may or may not be a representative subset of all voters.

      Mycroft

      --
      https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
    3. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Independent Ralph Nader is also asking for a recount"

      What, he can't believe Badnarik almost topped him? :)

    4. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Noksagt · · Score: 1

      Well, we will find out at Nader's (well the supporters who donate money to him) cost.

      If they results and polls differ by 10%, I would assert the networks should stop paying for them! I would also suggest that perhaps they shouldn't report to the precision that they do and that networks should be much more reluctant to call a state.

      Anecdotally: in the past, polls have often had less than a 1% difference. I've very rarely seen a spread greater than 3%. In 2000, the biggest difference was Alaska--by 2.6% (even counting FL).

      It would be embarrasing if the error had now increased--they changed the polling because of the closeness of the 2000 election. Polling is now done by Edison Media Research and Mitofsky International. I don't know if both took polls in all locations. If so, I'm really surprised no one has produced a comparison of those two polls! If one or both companies did screwup & have results with less accuracy, they could be out of work in 2 years!

    5. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Because of that, there's a good possibility that Nader lacks legal standing to request a recount in Ohio, since technically he didn't "lose" the election in that state.

    6. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Skjellifetti · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Kerry was never 10 pts up in the NH polls except for early last spring. Same for Ohio and Florida. The exit polls had Kerry up, but the state-by-state pre-election polls were remarkably accurate across the US. This suggests that the exit polls were badly flawed.

      BTW, I voted for Kerry.

    7. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by tubbtubb · · Score: 1

      Where are you seeing 10% ??
      Poll averages had Kerry only up by 1% in NH. I don't see anything even close to 10% there. And Bush was even up by one point in one poll.
      Poll averages also had Bush up in FL, OH, WI, IA . .

      And I'm tired of saying this, but here goes again: midday exit polling is NOT scientific. So it is notoriously unreliable.

      I guess I wouldn't mind a recount, maybe it will put these silly conspiracy theories to rest finally.

    8. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

      I know you said annectedotaly, but at what point in the process did thier divergence from actual drop down near one percent? Was it early in the voting process (say after less than 25% of the votes were counted) or later when the count was nearly done or even after all the counting was done?
      I also just recalled that many pollsters were saying things such as early voting unusually high turnout were likely to reduce accuracy durring because it changed in part the demographics of who voted when.

      --
      https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
    9. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by Noksagt · · Score: 1

      It was the final poll numbers compared with the actual results. I thought that some polling agencies actually reported the estimated deviation as soon as the polls had closed. This was usually a few percent. I think you're right that early voting could skewthe results.

    10. Re:Nader is also asking for a recount by erko · · Score: 1

      Since Nader has so little to gain in Ohio, maybe he actually cares about the people and whether their votes are counted fairly.
      And since you believe 9,000+ out of 14,000+ Ohio signatures were invalid, you may at least want to read the other side of the story.

  10. Nationwide Recount by adelayde · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Personally, and interfering as one who isn't a US citizen and so has no right interfering in another country's affairs - ah but perhaps the current (sadly for another 4 years) US administration might like to respect that as well -, anyway. I reckon because a) this is so very important for the World and the American people and b) Bush and his cronies are basically a bunch of crooks, and now war criminals, that it should be essential to do a proper, manual recount of all votes cast and to have an investigation of all discrepencies (whoops we missed of a whole bunch of poor black people, never mind) before officially declaring a winner. At least that way the United States can demonstrate to the rest of the World that it is prepared to affirm it's democracy that it so willingly seems to be prepared to tout about and impose on others, heck if India can do it, so can the US.

    1. Re:Nationwide Recount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The winner hasn't been officially declared yet. That doesn't happen for another month.

      But you're right: you have no right to interfere in our business, so kindly STFU, then FOAD.

    2. Re:Nationwide Recount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess the US has the right to fuck around with other countries affairs, though, right? Like Iraq? If I recall, very nearly the entire international community objected there. Some Americans really don't seem to get it.

    3. Re:Nationwide Recount by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

      You are unfairly IMHO being moderated both flamebait and troll. The attack continues.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    4. Re:Nationwide Recount by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but I think calling the President a war criminal does count as flamebait in my book.

    5. Re:Nationwide Recount by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Yeah, why let those pesky 'truth' or 'ethics' things get in the way.

  11. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by captnitro · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Agreed. Moreover, I've been hearing too many theories about how voters were forced, deceived or generally brainwashed into voting for Bush. I've heard similar gripes about 'stupid' vs. 'smart', and of course seen the standard IQ by state chart.

    Guess what, kids: sometimes in a democracy, other people win. This is what most of the American voters wanted, and that's the way it works.

    Disclaimer: Kerry voter.

  12. Kerry? pshaw! by BortQ · · Score: 5, Funny
    Screw Kerry, I am hoping that this tips the election in favor of Badnarik!

    Don't give up hope yet. Go Libertarians!!

    --

    A Multiplayer Strategy Game for Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux
    1. Re:Kerry? pshaw! by Otter · · Score: 1
      Is this $110,000 filing fee supposed to cover the entire cost of the recount? (I can't imagine how it would.)

      If not, I really can't see where a Libertarian party that would waste Ohio taxpayers' money on this silliness has any value at all.

    2. Re:Kerry? pshaw! by EnronHaliburton2004 · · Score: 1

      If not, I really can't see where a Libertarian party that would waste Ohio taxpayers' money on this silliness has any value at all.

      Having a fair and accurat vote count is worth quite a bit.

    3. Re:Kerry? pshaw! by mpost4 · · Score: 1

      Peroutka got alot of votes for being in an unknone third party he got 129,255
      Badnarik being a well known 3rd party got 396,000

      I would say not bad for being almost unheard of. that is about 1/3 of the libertirians.

    4. Re:Kerry? pshaw! by zCyl · · Score: 1

      If not, I really can't see where a Libertarian party that would waste Ohio taxpayers' money on this silliness has any value at all.

      "Waste money" on ensuring a fair democratic election??? That's the very foundation of our government. There's nothing more important for us to do.

    5. Re:Kerry? pshaw! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless there is a real reason to consider the outcome suspect, it's a waste of money.

      What? You object to dumping the entire US budget on recounting? You must not value fair elections.

  13. WHERE YOU CAN DONATE by cgenman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here. And please do, it's worth every penny, even if just to confirm the ability / inability of the machines.

  14. Mod Parent up: New Hampshire Recount by Noksagt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The New Hampshire recount will really be the most interesting one. They used the Diebold machines, there was a large difference in the exit polls & the actual votes, and Kerry already won it (so right-wingers won't object to it on partisan grounds). Moderates and all concerned about evoting should watch that state closely. Partisans should also watch it, as it could be the first domino for the states where the outcome may actually change things. If anyone contests the New Hampshire recount, quietly chuckle that they don't care about voting & just care about their man. Kerry fans might protest because he did win & Bush fans might object in anticipation of those other states.

    1. Re:Mod Parent up: New Hampshire Recount by roseblood · · Score: 1

      "so right-wingers won't object to it on partisan grounds"

      but, all the moderates will object to it as a waste of our (taxpayer) money!

      --
      There are lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    2. Re:Mod Parent up: New Hampshire Recount by Noksagt · · Score: 1

      Absolutely not: Because Nader got so few votew, he will have to pay for reelection. Furthermore, even if he had gotten enough votes, it would be the state who would pay for it. Go back to liking it for ethical reasons!

    3. Re:Mod Parent up: New Hampshire Recount by Noksagt · · Score: 1
      Absolutely not: Because Nader got so few votew, he will have to pay for reelection
      Of course I meant the recount. And yes, tax payers would ultimately pay for it if he had significantly more votes...but only NH tax payers.

      Sorry for the hasty typing!
    4. Re:Mod Parent up: New Hampshire Recount by Carnildo · · Score: 1

      The New Hampshire recount will really be the most interesting one. They used the Diebold machines

      Isn't the major objection to the Diebold machines that you can't do a real recount? That the only thing you can do is run the stored ballot totals through the master counting machine?

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    5. Re:Mod Parent up: New Hampshire Recount by Noksagt · · Score: 1

      Paperless is a major concern, but not the only one. The largest target for fraud are the tally-machines, rather than individual booths. Hopefully, the limited ability to audit individual machines will also come to light.

  15. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by fnord123 · · Score: 1
    I can understand the Greens doing this (being socialists, they like Kerry more than Bush) but this is an incredibly stupid thing for the LP to do. The LP is just marginalizing themselves by donning tin hats. Even liberal rags like Slate have admitted that Bush won, fair and square.

    I am saddened to see the LP making fools of themselves, because I agree with a lot of libertarian ideas and vote Libertarian sometimes.

  16. Re: by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Face it, BUSH WON.
    And I am thankful.

    You may not like it
    but I do.

    changing ohio STILL won't win it for Kerry.
    Good.

    I however would like to know that the votes were counted right. I like Bush being in office, but fair voting is more important than which politician holds the office.

    It's not just rabid Kerryists that want the recounts, and acting like a rabid Bushist doesn't help your argument any. The point here is not who won, but how fairly.

  17. Good reason for a recount by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Should the votes be recounted because the Libertarians or Greens think they may win? No.

    Should the votes be recounted because Kerry may have won, and not Bush? Er, I doubt it, but maybe.

    Should the votes be recounted as a check on how well the new computerized systems tallied the votes? Definitely.

    1. Re:Good reason for a recount by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Parent post writes:

      Should the votes be recounted because the Libertarians or Greens think they may win? No.

      Should the votes be recounted because Kerry may have won, and not Bush? Er, I doubt it, but maybe.

      Should the votes be recounted as a check on how well the new computerized systems tallied the votes? Definitely.

      Damned straight!

    2. Re:Good reason for a recount by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

      At first when I read the /. story I thought "Give it up, already. Can't we get past this?". But then I read:

      • Should the votes be recounted as a check on how well the new computerized systems tallied the votes? Definitely.

      Someone noted (I think in a comment about the blackboxvoting.org story) that since the election is settled it's a good time to examine the process, to improve it for the future.

      I just wish there wasn't so much grandstanding about fraud when any irregularity shows up..

      --
      sigs, as if you care.
    3. Re:Good reason for a recount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Exactly.

      The Ohio election rules state that any losing candidate can demand a manual recount.

      They can demand it all they want, it's an impossibility. There is no physical record of the votes in many places, they are just a number in a database somewhere. Good luck trying to determine whether the number is correct or not.

      No doubt this will be lampooned by the media as them being sore losers or something. I think that it's important to highlight the fact that the election is unverifiable.

    4. Re:Good reason for a recount by FleaPlus · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here's what Michael Badnarik himself posted in response to some comments in his blog:

      I find the percentage of negative comments here somewhat surprising given the number of "please ask for a recount" messages that I've alread gotten. However, I'd like to clear up a serious misconception that many of you apparently have.

      This demand for a recount is not expected to change the outcome. I may be "Quixotic", but I'm not crazy. David Cobb and I have no expectation that the results of the election will be changed in the slightest. What we ARE hoping to do is to find out just how corrupt the system really is. Why bother voting for anyone if the electronic machines are going to report a pre-determined outcome.

      I saw a bumper sticker that expressed the idea very well. It said: DIEBOLD - MAKING MACHINES THAT VOTE SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO.

      Comment by Michael Badnarik -- 11/11/2004 @ 6:23 pm

    5. Re:Good reason for a recount by Danse · · Score: 1

      I just wish there wasn't so much grandstanding about fraud when any irregularity shows up..

      Well there has been quite a bit of fraud, but we don't yet know if the machines were compromised as well. Knowing what I do about the machines and such systems in general, and the numbers I've seen comparing exit polls and actual results, there is certainly ample reason to suspect that many of them malfunctioned or were manipulated. I'd like to see a serious investigation done before the next election.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    6. Re:Good reason for a recount by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

      >Well there has been quite a bit of fraud...
      >the numbers I've seen comparing exit polls and actual results...

      Ugh. That's just what I was talking about.

      Don't go saying it's 'fraud' when it easily could be either underhanded political trickery or bumbling bureaucratic idiocy.

      And exit polls? Come on. Which is more likely, that the exit polls weren't right (by intent or not) or that there was a massive, nationwide conspiracy on the part of election officials and voting machine manufacturers?

      --
      sigs, as if you care.
    7. Re:Good reason for a recount by Danse · · Score: 1

      Don't go saying it's 'fraud' when it easily could be either underhanded political trickery or bumbling bureaucratic idiocy.

      I don't think you understood my post. The things that are talked about in the article I linked to are almost certainly some form of fraud. As for the machines and discrepancies between the exit polls (which are historically significantly more accurate than they were during this election), I merely said that it bears investigating. This is both due to the degree of error and the fact that from what we've seen of the machines so far, they are FAR from being reliable enough to be trusted with an election.

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    8. Re:Good reason for a recount by rhakka · · Score: 1

      I don't know, but how often are exit polls that far off?

    9. Re:Good reason for a recount by siriuskase · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ohio didn't use computerized voting systems. They decided to use whatever they used last time because their nice new computerized systems didn't have a paper trail.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    10. Re:Good reason for a recount by jemfinch · · Score: 1
      Should the votes be recounted as a check on how well the new computerized systems tallied the votes? Definitely.

      What is there to tally? "Yup, Marge, the flash cards still say the same number!"

      Jeremy
    11. Re:Good reason for a recount by EvilJoker · · Score: 1

      Ohio actually can get most of a recount- it's still about 80% punch cards, even though Diebold is based there.

    12. Re:Good reason for a recount by gartogg · · Score: 1

      You are certainly right. The greens and libertarians are being sore losers, and want a recount. Who knows, they might have won.

      Of course, if the law provides for a recount, and it is un-do-able for some technical design reason, this ends up going to the courts. Again. And we have a second consecutive court-appointed president. Impressive.

      --
      I'm a concientious .sig objector.
    13. Re:Good reason for a recount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      but how often are exit polls that far off?

      Far off? They're done right there at the door. That's why they're called Exit polls, Duh!

    14. Re:Good reason for a recount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should the votes be recounted as a check on how well the new computerized systems tallied the votes? Definitely. This is slashdot... I believe you meant "definately."

  18. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I really don't think that the point is to change the out come of the election. I mean, sure, that may be one of their hopes, but they must realize that it probally won't happen.
    They are just most likely making sure that every vote counts. That was one of the things that the democrats were pushing, that every vote counts, so why not accualy count them? We have a while until 13 Dec.

  19. Re: by cicatrix1 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Um, changing Ohio WOULD be enough electoral votes for Kerry to win it over Bush. You sound like a Bush supporter, so it's no wonder you have no understanding of Politics or fancy numbers.

    --

    I know more than you drink.
  20. Power of a third party! by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    Guess they are helping the democrats out on this one.

  21. Linear Independence? by div_B · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, this may be the way you feel, but most libertarian and green voters lean closer to the dems.

    I watched an interview of a British MP the other night, whose was a 'left-libertarian'. This was considered to be somewhat of a contradiction apparently. However, the world's smallest political quiz puts libertarianism diametrically opposite statism, on a different axis from conservatism-liberalism.

    I always thought that libertarianism was about individual freedoms, and not so much economic policy? Couldn't a libertarian quite legitimately have left- OR right- leanings in terms of economic policy, without compromising their libertarianism? (Note that I'm talking about what they believe in, not who would be more prudent to vote for given both those beliefs and present circumstance)

    1. Re:Linear Independence? by jtev · · Score: 1

      But one of the most important ways that the govt. can get the fuck out of the lives of the citizens is economicaly, so libertarinanism isn't very compatable with liberalism.

      --
      That which is done from love exists beyond good and evil
    2. Re:Linear Independence? by YOU+LIKEWISE+FAIL+IT · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Those individual freedoms are generally considered to extend to business practice, and hence, Libertarianism in principle endorses free market capitalism, enterprise bargaining, etc etc. There are however, "compassionate libertarians", "social libertarians" or a variety of other banners ( "Liberalatarians" is my favourite ) who espouse the Libertarian view of personal freedom, while still maintaining some leftist economic and social ideas.

      I myself am in this group, and I'm the first to admit it entails some contradictions and arbitary choices. Inflexibility is the hobgoblin of small minds. My view is that while government programs, minimum wage, etc are all good things, the government should not intercede in the life of Citizen N unless asked to do so explicitly by Citizen N.

      YLFI
      --
      One god, one market, one truth, one consumer.
    3. Re:Linear Independence? by dpilot · · Score: 1

      Right.

      As long as they keep away from your money, you won't mind if they:
      * Monitor the books you buy at the store or check out at the library.
      * Declare US citizens "enemy combatants" and cart them off to Guantanamo Bay for indefinite detention without the right of judicial review. (You could be next, some night.)
      * Make sure you don't buy any of that evil "sex parahpenalia" for use with your wife in your own home. (Yes, this has happened.)
      * Limit your right to restitution from negligent business practices by corporations. (What's the acceptable death rate from this product - higher when there's a lawsuit cap, that's for sure.)

      Yep, making and keeping money is much more important than any of those other things. (And that's just a few-minute list, I'm sure others could add.) Sometimes I think the line is blurred between true conservatism and pious greed. (OK, I know you may not be guilty of this last one, but IMHO plenty of others are.)

      My brother used to say that out West they used to be so conservative that they looked liberal. Back 20 years ago, people used to mind their own business, and expected you to mind yours. They didn't want you to legislate their private lives, and expected the same from you. Those days are gone.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    4. Re:Linear Independence? by CTachyon · · Score: 1

      I consider myself little-l libertarian on social issues (even moreso than the usual lefty issues, e.g. I'm in favor of responsible gun ownership and slightly in favor of concealed carry), but center-left on economics (favor antitrust law and progressive taxes).

      --
      Range Voting: preference intensity matters
    5. Re:Linear Independence? by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      My view is that while government programs, minimum wage, etc are all good things [...]

      Why do you think minimum wage is a good thing? (Seriously; I'm also a libertarian but not much of a Libertarian because they're all of bunch of draft-dodging tax cheats, as Dave Barry said, but actually in my experience working with the Advocates for Self Government in Florida, they're all a bunch of slackers who dream big but lack the marijuana sobriety to follow through.)

      If the minimum wage is a good idea, why not set it at $50/hr?

      Really: if my efforts can save/earn a company $1 an hour, why would they ever economically decide to pay me $5.75? It would lose them $4.75 an hour! It's obvious why jobs are going overseas; the minimum wage is (pretty much) solely responsible for our job losses.

      I apologize if I sound aggressive, I just feel very strongly about this since my brother just lost his job to outsourcing.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    6. Re:Linear Independence? by YOU+LIKEWISE+FAIL+IT · · Score: 1

      My argument for a minimum wage is largely a moral one, because it rewards work and workers, thus making them less likely to require a handout from the state and hence more self reliant. Arguably, below a certain earning threshold, the money has to come from somewhere, or those workers will starve or live in poverty ( which as a secular humanist I oppose ) - but I'd rather see it come out of the corporation which has a relationship with them than the government. I think I mentioned some of my political beliefs are a little arbitary. ;-)

      I apologize if I sound aggressive, I just feel very strongly about this since my brother just lost his job to outsourcing.

      No need to apologise - the point you raise is quite valid: minimum wage laws could be rigged in such a way as to make employing people a losing proposition. However, in such a situation, I personally would encourage the employer to shed the employee ( yup, sucks to be the employee too ), and replace them with someone with a better potential to make them some money. My condolences to your brother - I hope he's able to find rewarding work again soon.

      YLFI
      --
      One god, one market, one truth, one consumer.
    7. Re:Linear Independence? by jtev · · Score: 1

      Money is power, without money they wouldn't have that power. Monitoring people costs money, enforcing bans on sexual aides costs money. Now as to your second and fourth points, the second has to do with a threat to the safety and security of our freedoms, and the fourth is a reaction to the civil court system being out of control. Does that excuse them, no, however there are larger issues that need to be addressed to remove the need for those particulars.

      --
      That which is done from love exists beyond good and evil
    8. Re:Linear Independence? by falsified · · Score: 1
      It would lose them $4.75 an hour! It's obvious why jobs are going overseas; the minimum wage is (pretty much) solely responsible for our job losses.

      For what it's worth, the adjusted minimum wage is the lowest it has been in decades. Labor costs in the USA are higher, but I'd say that's a good thing. By the way, outsourcing is structural unemployment, which is a good thing - or, it would be if we had a support system for laid off workers that gave financial incentives to quickly finding jobs (i.e. wage insurance in addition to unemployment checks) or entering training for a new field.

      --
      HI, MY NAME IS ISAAC.
    9. Re:Linear Independence? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "I always thought that libertarianism was about individual freedoms, and not so much economic policy?"

      Libertarian fiscal philosophy stems from their desire to have freedom from taxes. Sometimes the US Libertarian Party goes too far IMO (like Badnarik talking about doing away with the Federal Reserve and returning to a gold standard), but the general idea is to cut spending in order to avoid excuses for collecting and raising taxes.

    10. Re:Linear Independence? by photon317 · · Score: 1


      Obviously different people call fall all over that two-dimensional map, and thus there are such things as left-libertarian and right-libertarian -ish people. In counterpoint to the lefty above, I'm a republican-leaning libertarian. This is really more my gaming the system than anything though. I feel that if the democrats succeed, the ways in which they deviate from libertarianism (primarly thinking about social programs and medical care issues) will increasingly become solidified in US law, whereas I feel the major way the republicans lean away from libertarianism is their moral/religious laws, which I feel are inevitably going out the window in the near future no matter what due to the shifting of society away from hardcore religion.

      --
      11*43+456^2
    11. Re:Linear Independence? by Pentagram · · Score: 1

      That quiz is quite heavily biased in questions. A much better quiz (IMO) is the Political Compass. I've yet to find anyone who disagrees with its verdict.

    12. Re:Linear Independence? by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      My argument for a minimum wage is largely a moral one, because it rewards work and workers, thus making them less likely to require a handout from the state [...]

      My argument is that a minimum wage is a handout from the state.

      And for those people whose skills are valuable, but are currently worth less than the minimum wage, they cannot be employed and will end up on welfare or other government programs, which again is a handout from the state.

      So we create two social programs: inflate wages and pay people not to work. I don't see that these are both necessary. If we paid people what they were worth, it would likely not affect IT industry salaries (or salaries/wages of most people), but it would open our economy up to millions of jobs which it is currently not economically viable to employ. I think that would be a good thing.

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    13. Re:Linear Independence? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, the world's smallest political quiz puts libertarianism diametrically opposite statism, on a different axis from conservatism-liberalism.

      I just took that test. It rates me as libertarian, when I'm definately a libertarian socialist.

    14. Re:Linear Independence? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      My brother used to say that out West they used to be so conservative that they looked liberal. Back 20 years ago, people used to mind their own business, and expected you to mind yours. They didn't want you to legislate their private lives, and expected the same from you. Those days are gone.

      Looking at the county by county maps of California, Oregon, and Washington, about 200 miles in from the coast you get those kind of people still.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    15. Re:Linear Independence? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Ideally, in a free market, that would cause inflation to the point that the $5.75=$1 before minimum wage; with the country's currency devalued in the world market.

      I say if you're going to have a minimum wage, couple it with a maximum wage- and let the free market decide what your money is worth in compairison to everybody else.

      If you really wanted to do something about outsourcing at this point, peg $1=$1 Lira, Italian. Devalue the currency until our workers can compete again.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    16. Re:Linear Independence? by Peaceful_Patriot · · Score: 1

      If we paid people what they were worth, it would likely not affect IT industry salaries (or salaries/wages of most people), but it would open our economy up to millions of jobs which it is currently not economically viable to employ. I think that would be a good thing.

      This is the problem, employees are not paid by their worth, but usually by the minimum amount the employer can get by with. The minimum wage debate is all well and philosophical until you or your kids wind up having to live on it.

      The truth is that most of the new jobs being created by in Bush's 'economic recovery' are part time, minimum wage, no-insurance jobs at Wal-Mart and The Gap. Obviously you have never had to live on, or worse, raise a family, on those wages.

      --
      There is nothing so powerful as an idea whose time has come.
    17. Re:Linear Independence? by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      Well, I delivered pizzas for a few months last year, but of course anecdotal evidence shouldn't sway one's argument.

      And the wage was exactly minimum, plus tips. If they could have paid less, they would have, and I wouldn't have had a problem with that (apart from urging me to step up my job search, which I did, and am now back in the software sector).

      As to employees being paid what the employer can get away with, that's absolutely correct. And employees embellish their resumes to get the wages that they can get away with. I see nothing wrong with that. Well, the lying is a bit over-the-top, but two parties should be able to negotiate a rate without the government stepping in and saying, "No, that's too low a rate, this person is barred from providing you with their services." That just forces low-skilled jobs overseas. It's no wonder the higher-skilled jobs are following; as far as I can tell, it's completely the government's fault that we are losing jobs these days. (It may also be completely the government's fault that we had so much prosperity throughout the 19xx's, also, but that doesn't make it right, just as I could rob a bank and provide a great education for my family but it wouldn't be right; the government had to block many import/export companies via tariffs and other taxes in order to prop up the minimum wage.)

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    18. Re:Linear Independence? by Golias · · Score: 1

      That reminds me of a great line I once heard.

      Back in my college days, I voted LP a lot more than I do now that age and corruption has set in.

      When I mentioned to my loony-left Poli-Sci prof (who was one of my favorite teachers, in spite of my disagreeing with her on almost every issue) that I was a Libertarian, she replied by saying:

      "Ah yes. The Libertarians. The party which went so far to the right that they came back around to the left again."

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  22. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Karma+Farmer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well, if you think libertarians like Bush, then you're beyond all reason.

    Regardless, neither party is doing this to help Kerry. They're doing it because many of us don't have a lot of faith in the election "system" in the United States. If this helps improve the process, it's worth a thousand times what they're spending to do it.

  23. my question by rubee · · Score: 1

    is why is Badnarik and Cobb the only two making noise? Kerry and the democratic party leadership should be demanding a recount more than anyone.

    1. Re:my question by Ster · · Score: 0, Redundant

      If the DNC was asking for a re-count, everyone would immediately think "sour grapes" and make comparisons to Florida, etc. The fact that it's people who have no earthly chance of winning, and they're *still* asking for a recount, makes it look more like they're concerned about the process of elections than the outcome of this particular election. Which just happens to be the case here. :-)

      That said, I wouldn't be terribly surprised if a fair number of people who voted for Kerry donated to Badnarik and/or Cobb for this one issue.

      -Ster

    2. Re:my question by Crash+Culligan · · Score: 1
      my question...is why is Badnarik and Cobb the only two making noise?

      Here's a very good reason for them to make noise: the numbers of votes that third parties get in an election sometimes play a profound role in getting on the ballot for the next election and/or getting recognition from the press.

      One of the perpetual tricks played by the Democrats and Republicans in many states is to highball the number of signatures needed to get a candidated from a "non-recognized" party onto any given jurisdiction's presidential ballot. The established parties have it easy. They only need a fraction of the recognition that the third-parties need. And given that they tend to control the government at the local level (something to do with lack of recognition of third parties), they can and do continually raise the bar for them. Acting separately and individually, they collude to keep the game to themselves.

      And how does a third party get "recognition?" There's a number of votes they need to get. It varies from area to area, and it tends to be high. (Higher, in fact, than the Democrats and Republicans have. It's good to be the major party.)

      Now, consider this scenario. Start with two unpopular major party candidates (check). Mix in some third party candidates which at least sound different from the major party talking heads (check). Mix well in a slightly cracked election (check) and bake in the hot air of conspiratorial speculation (oh hell yeah check).

      Their ability to get recognition as viable third parties depends greatly on their ability to get votes, which is why, even if they don't have a snowball's chance in Tampa of winning, they'd still want to verify any votes that might have been cast for them. I described elsewhere how votes could be juggled to steal from them and aid others. If it turns out that they got a good many more votes than was originally reported, then they earn credibility from that. And who knows, maybe a recount would put them above the line.

      --
      You cannot truly appreciate Dilbert until you read it in the original Klingon.
  24. Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by AltControlsDelete · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Kerry lost too. The Democrats have just a bit more cash than the Libs or the Greens, why aren't they the ones paying for this?

    As someone who's voted Libertarian in the past two presidential elections, it seems like a terrible waste of limited party funds to do this. Why not spend that money toward winning more local elections?

    1. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They're not paying for it yet - they're "raising funds" to pay the large fee for it.

      Personally - I can only think that we've got two political parties still "unencumbered" by incumbent political games and still able to actually act out of principle (egad, that's a FAR less cynical statement than usually comes from me on political matters...). It's all I can figure - there's obviously no chance that the recount will show the Greens or Libertarians winning the election, and in fact I honestly suspect the vote recount won't change the final result, but I do think it's important to get an accurate accounting of the votes. In so doing, we'll also get a good picture of how innacurate the initial count was. If it's way off, even assuming the recount still shows Bush winning, we'll have proof that there is something wrong with the voting procedures, and probably some idea of WHAT is wrong. And then, next time around, there's a chance there'll be fewer problems...

      Besides, bear in mind that while the Democrats can't reasonably make this demand or formally donate money to the effort without being accused of being big babies and spreading political FUD about the vote in Ohio...but INDIVIDUAL Democrats ought to be able to easily donate to the cause. Maybe somebody should call that rich Soros guy.

      And, yes, I DID vote for Michael Badnarik in this election...

    2. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by DeComposer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I suspect that the DNC is doing their part to contribute to the re-count fund. Hell, if they emailed their base with nothing more than the news--not even asking for donations, they'd probably get enough folks to contribute to the fund that the GL consortium would have enough cash on hand to demand re-counts in as many states as they'd like.

      --


      Karma
    3. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by Brandybuck · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The only logical reason I can see for this move is to retain ballot access (eg. they're very close to the number of votes needed to stay on the ballot for next election). But I see no mention of this anywhere. So I don't believe it's true.

      There's no way in hell I'm contributing to this. Badnarik was my candidate, but any donations now do absolutely NOTHING to help any Libertarian candidate or cause. I don't even care if they're right or wrong in their suspicion, because even if hell did freeze over and they were proven right, it still doesn't help any Libertarian candidate or cause.

      It's like a dog shitting on your lawn. In many jurisdictions you can take the dog owner to court. But why spend $110,000 to sue the owner of a shitting dog? It's a waste!

      Let me be perfectly clear here. I did not vote for Kerry, I voted for Badnarik. If I wanted Kerry to win I would have voted for him. It doesn't matter to me if Bush wins over Kerry or Kerry wins over Bush, I lose either way.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    4. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by revscat · · Score: 1

      Because some people realize that without ensuring the votes are properly counted today that there is no way they can win tomorrow. Doing this is a smart thing, and the right thing.

    5. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by Selecter · · Score: 1
      Maybe they are only nominally funding it.

      http://timwest.blogs.com

      the point should be made that Greens or Libertarians need to disclose where these funds come from. If the major donators come from the Democrats in one way or another, it's nothing more than whoring. I happen to think it's throwing bad money after good, but as long as the money comes from only Green and Libertarian donors, I dont have a problem with bad judgement, but I do have a problem with shadow donors. Party members on either side have a expectation that the funds are their money.

    6. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by Draknor · · Score: 1

      I've donated, and I'm an independent who voted for Kerry. I consider myself socially liberal & fiscally conservative. Right now, the Republicans are neither of those, so I voted Democrat.

      While I don't like this administration, I do care about the integrity of the electoral process. At this point, I'm not even sure I'd want to see the result changed (because I think the Democratic party needs a major overhaul, and a victory here might do more damage to the party than it would help).

      From what I've seen on blogs and forums, there's no real Dem party backing to this movement; it's people who care about their votes, and having their votes counted. People like Bev Harris (http://www.blackboxvoting.org/) and others, who are pushing the Greens & Libertarians to do the recount (precisely because the Democrats can't/won't).

    7. Re:Why are the Libs and Greens footing this? by Draknor · · Score: 1

      And if this election is hailed as a "success" for Diebold, ES&S, and other BBV vendors, you'll always lose.

      Maybe I'm foolish, but I hope one day that 3rd parties can challenge the two juggernaughts we have now. But if electronic voting is sanctified after this election, then democracy (and our democractic republic) has lost. When you voted this year, your vote counted. Next election, it may not. Or worse, it may be switched to a major party, and you'll never know it.

      Freedom to challenging the electoral process should be a non-partisan issue. It only becomes partisan when someone has something to hide. Personal privacy is one thing; elections require transparency.

  25. Here's a wild-assed guess... by HotNeedleOfInquiry · · Score: 4, Insightful

    He's smart enough to not want the Democratic Party to look like a bunch of sore losers two elections in a row.

    --
    "Eve of Destruction", it's not just for old hippies anymore...
    1. Re:Here's a wild-assed guess... by torpor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What is the point of democracy if it isn't to be fair to all, winners and losers both?

      Its pathetic that on the one hand, people propose that democracy is the 'solution' to mans mob-mind dilemna, but on the other hand, spare no second in applying that same mob-mind to the destruction/derision of 'The Unpopular".

      Pathetic. Bring back monarchs, I say!

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    2. Re:Here's a wild-assed guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He's smart enough to not want the Democratic Party to look like a bunch of sore losers two elections in a row.

      They were sore winners in the first election (actual number of votes in the whole US, actual number of votes in the State of Florida). Please don't rewrite how much Bush GW I as a legitimate election.

    3. Re:Here's a wild-assed guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong on both counts. Popular vote doesn't determine the president, and in Florida Gore got fewer votes.

      Deal with it, you've had four years to bitch.

  26. Re:A quest to expose elections fraud? by andreMA · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It could also be related to maintaining ballot status, which exempts a party from needing to collect massive numbers of signatures if they got X% in the previous election.

  27. I demand... by aztektum · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    /. stories be run through spellcheck software or, it's a stretch, actually proof read before being posted.

    --
    :: aztek ::
    No sig for you!!
  28. Re: by phoenix.bam! · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And you are the reason the democrats weren't able to win. Calling the otherside stupid isn't the best way to sway their opinion.

  29. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Kris_J · · Score: 1

    That's pretty crap logic there. There's some significant weirdness in the automated vote counting. There's not reason to believe that a hand count would be wrong. By your logic we should object to anyone doing or asking for anything even once because they might bother you about it forever.

  30. Not newsworthy? by shankar2k · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A quick search of Google News and a couple other websites revealed that this isn't being given all that much importance. It's probably because A.) Kerry doesn't have much of a change of winning in Ohio and B.) The major media outlets don't care about third parties.

    That said, I agree with the many who said this is a worthwhile endeavor to see how well elections proceeded this time around.

    1. Re:Not newsworthy? by The+Great+Stormrider · · Score: 1

      Maybe the reason it's not newsworthy is the fact that the major media completly ignores third parties?

  31. Put your money where your mouths are! by spineboy · · Score: 1

    I'm seeing Slashdot user numbers in the 350k range. If roughly 50% of these are Democrats, then 1 dollar each will pay for the recount. I donated $20.
    Let's do our civic duty

    --
    ..........FULL STOP.
    1. Re:Put your money where your mouths are! by HerbieTMac · · Score: 1

      Spineboy speaks truth! I donated $100 (but only because I got that fat tax break last year).

      Might I recommend that people spend a moment or two typing a personal e-mail to their fellow citizens to encourage similar behavior?

  32. But I almost have this conciliatory poem down! by artifex2004 · · Score: 5, Funny
    The election is over, the results are now known.
    The will of the people has clearly been shown.
    We should show by our thoughts, our words and our deeds
    That unity is just what our country needs.
    Let's all get together. Let bitterness pass.
    I'll hug your elephant.
    You kiss my ass.


    From here.
    1. Re:But I almost have this conciliatory poem down! by artifex2004 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, it's from an unnamed reader at politicalwire.com.

  33. early voting not absentee by goombah99 · · Score: 1

    pre-filled in ballots are a bad idea. Part of the voting process is to sequester the person voting from undue influence and thus assure a secret ballot. Absentee ballots are problematical on that score as well. Hopefully early voting will reduce the need for both conditions.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:early voting not absentee by Babbster · · Score: 1
      Oregon does mail-in voting and it seems to work just fine. Get the ballot in the mail, spend a bit of time figuring out who to vote for, mark up the ballot, drop it in the mailbox. I don't see a single problem with it.

      Of course, I don't buy into your "undue influence" argument, either. Like the woman who was wearing a Bush/Cheney shirt and wasn't allowed to vote (don't recall the location) until she took it off. What's the undue influence of seeing a candidate's name? After all, you're going to see it on the ballot in just a minute anyway. Now, having someone standing over your shoulder and "advising" you on your vote is going too far (and obviously active campaigning shouldn't be permitted at polling places), but that kind of thing is easy to avoid with mail-in ballots by simply filling them out when nobody else is around.

      The punch card garbage has to be eliminated completely. It's archaic and doesn't do anything better than a simple pen and paper followed by an optical scan, not to mention the fact that a ballot marked with a pen is easier to read in a hand recount. I find it quite understandable, especially with the machine punchers, that people can screw up their ballots on the punch system. With pen and paper, virtually all excuses - apart maybe from Parkinson's or similar tremor problems - go right out the window.

    2. Re:early voting not absentee by Darth_Burrito · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the info. I would not have thought of that one.

    3. Re:early voting not absentee by DavidTC · · Score: 1
      She, technically, shouldn't have been allowed within 100 feet of the voting area, much less voting, if wherever you're talking about has similiar laws to Georgia.

      You're not allowed to campaign at a voting area. At all. It's not allowed. People should be able to vote without having to put up with it, or feel intimidated because everyone else is wearing a certain t-shirt, or telling them if they don't vote for X than the economy will fail, or maybe every bad things will personally happen to them when they leave...

      Yes, it's harse, but there's a reason for it. You had months to show support. You can still stand 100 feet away and campaign during the vote. But there's supposed to be a magical void around the vote area where no one tries to influence anyone, so that people don't feel pressured.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  34. Non sequiteur... by jonadab · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > It could even tip the state (and thus the election) from Bush to Kerry.

    Statistically, no, it couldn't. In fantasy fiction, it could, but in real life,
    with Bush leading by over a hundred thousand votes, it ain't gonna happen. For
    Gore in Florida in 2000, trailing by about a thousand votes, the recount was a
    bit of a longshot, although it was not beyond the realm of possibility that it
    could, against the odds, pan out -- but here, the margin is plainly way too
    large. (Kerry knew this, presumably, which is why he conceded.) Do all the
    recounts you want. Recount from now till inauguration day if you like -- but
    don't hold your breath waiting for any big announcements reversing the outcome.
    130 thousand votes is close, yes, but it's not so razor thin that a recount
    has any realistic chance to alter the outcome. The counting process just
    isn't as sloppy as that. (Yes, there are ballots that weren't counted, but
    statistically they aren't going to deviate as wildly as all that from the
    rest. Even if 100% of them are valid and countable, and even if there are
    250 thousand of them outstanding (the highest, most optimistic estimates for
    the Dems; the Blackwell figure of 175 thousand is probably much closer), and,
    indeed, even if Kerry gets a wildly unlikely 70% of those 250 thousand (in
    Ohio, where it is very unlikely for either party to top 60%), Bush would
    still have a comfortable enough margin of victory to be confident of the
    outcome of any recount (at least, any recount observed by representatives
    from both parties).)

    I'm all for the hand recounts. They will verify what we already know.

    (What we do not know is what would have happened if it hadn't rained all day
    statewide. There are always unknowns in life.)

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    1. Re:Non sequiteur... by dosguru · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Do the democrates, the ones whom bitched about winning the popular vote and loosing electorally for 4 years really want to loose the popular vote, then win in the EC? (not that this sore-looser attempt will change anything.)

      A minority president who would face an even more conservitive congress? Ya that'll be real good for the country. Look at the circluar fireing squad the dems are already involved in, a president kerry (not that it'll happen) is already politically dead in the water.

    2. Re:Non sequiteur... by reverius · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The purpose of a recount this time around is a bit different than the purpose in 2000. The recount in 2000 was to get around that pesky margin of error, and as such, 1000 votes was feasible (though improbable) and 100,000 votes would have been statistically impossible.

      However, the recount this time is being called for because of potential tampering with voting machines. Such tampering statewide could easily produce the 100,000 vote difference, because although it's outside the margin of error, it's certainly not ouside the margin of (ALL VOTES) which is potentially (mathematically speaking) the number of votes changed.

      It is highly unlikely that 100,000 votes were changed by voting machines, but not as unlikely as you make it sound.

      What IS unlikely, however, is that a hand recount will turn out differently, because the ones changed (if any) would probably be those with no paper trail and no verifiability.

    3. Re:Non sequiteur... by cgenman · · Score: 1

      I do have to ask, will the recount be done upon the same voting machines? Obviously the concept of recounting a voting machine that has no paper trail is just silly, but for the ones that do would the recount be done by having human tabulators look for colored holes, or by feeding it into the same machines that gave the results the first time?

    4. Re:Non sequiteur... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I do have to ask, will the recount be done upon the same voting machines?

      One imagines that the phrase "hand recount" would indicate that the recount
      would be done by hand, not by machine. HTH.HAND.

      I have nothing against doing the recount, but don't expect a very different
      outcome. If they want to do it to allay the fears of tampering, I have no
      problem with that. It will not, of course, shut up the conspiracy theorists.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    5. Re:Non sequiteur... by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Actually Ohio only had 7 counties without a paper trail. For the life of me I can't find a list of these counties. But looking at the county by county
      http://election.sos.state.oh.us/results/Ra ceDetail .aspx?race=PP
      most of the largest counties voted Kerry. It would be interesting to compare these 7 counties exit polls with actual votes. Probably nothing close to 100,000 votes difference though, but given the manual recount in the rest of the state, and then add the exit poll number estimates (I know they can't do this, but this is important to test the system) it would douptful to change the results, but interesting none the less.

    6. Re:Non sequiteur... by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      I don't know, I've always thought a deadlocked congress was a good thing. When the president and congress are from different parties, only bills that get support from both sides get through. Either way the thought of Kerry running the military scares me, so nevermind :)

    7. Re:Non sequiteur... by Arkhan · · Score: 1

      It's still unlikely that Ohio will tip from red to blue, but the number of votes in question is higher than either 175 or 250 (K). Those numbers were both estimates of Provisional + Absentee.

      Neither number takes into account the ~3% of ballots considered Spoiled. If there's a manual recount, those Spoiled ballots will also be examined, to try to determine voter intent.

      Yeah, you remember that phrase from 2000. Get ready for lawyers trying to be The Great Kreskin and flamewars galore.

    8. Re:Non sequiteur... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Neither number takes into account the ~3% of ballots considered Spoiled.
      > If there's a manual recount, those Spoiled ballots will also be examined,
      > to try to determine voter intent. Yeah, you remember that phrase from 2000.

      I remember it made a difference of about 500 votes, not 350 thousand.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    9. Re:Non sequiteur... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I remember it made a difference of about 500 votes, not 350 thousand.

      s/350/130/; Sorry, momentarily got confused. Still, that's quite beyond
      the reach of even the scariest demon lawyers.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    10. Re:Non sequiteur... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > When the president and congress are from different parties, only bills
      > that get support from both sides get through.

      Agreed. At one time, the salary of congresspersons was such that most of
      them worked other jobs for most of the year, and congress met for a few weeks
      each session. That has a certain appeal to it.

      OTOH, while we're dreaming impossible dreams, what I really want is an
      ammendment so that if spending exceeds tax revenues, the congresspeople
      all forfeit their salaries and cannot run for reelection. That'd balance
      the budget in a hurry.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    11. Re:Non sequiteur... by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Agreed on second part slightly. Though you do have to realize that sometimes congress has to appprove money that is seen as an investment. Research for example can have high cost now for later returns in savings. I wouldn't want to force congress to raise taxes when its not nessesary. Either way much of our deficite is actually from things like savings bonds which are a form of investment. You wouldn't accuse google of being horribly in the red because its spending IPO dollars would you?

    12. Re:Non sequiteur... by cyberformer · · Score: 1

      The theory is that both provisional and spoiled ballots are overwhelmingly for Kerry. You can read more about the precise numbers in this article by Greg Palast, the BBC reporter who uncovered the disenfranchisement in Florida. The recount will test whether his theory is true.

      Provisional ballots are cast when there is some doubt over whether a voter is legally allowed to vote. In Ohio, the GOP hired people to "challenge" likely Kerry (ie. black) voters, which probably resulted in some being unable to vote at all and others being given provisional ballots. These are currently being counted, and (like absentee ballots) were excluded from the totals given on election night.

      Spoiled ballots tend to be much more common in poorer areas, because these use older, less reliable voting and counting machines. (I mean less reliable compared to newer machines with a paper trail, not the black boxes.) These are what Cobb and Badnarik are aiming to count. Unlike Florida, Ohio has clear rules on hanging chads, etc., so a count of spoiled ballots shouldn't result in legal challenges.

      This isn't about Diebold or black box voting: Nearly all the voting machines in Ohio do keep a voter-verifiable paper trail (which is why a recount is possible), and none of them are made by Diebold.

    13. Re:Non sequiteur... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > Though you do have to realize that sometimes congress has to appprove
      > money that is seen as an investment. Research for example can have high
      > cost now for later returns in savings.

      It can. But very significant amounts of money are spent on things that really
      don't belong in the federal budget. (Granted, they might cut the wrong things.
      But, fundamentally, federal spending has been way out of hand for a long time.)

      > You wouldn't accuse google of being horribly in the red because its spending
      > IPO dollars would you?

      That's not debt. Debt is something you have to pay back. IPO money is
      revenue, money collected in return for something -- specifically, in return
      for shares in the ownership of the company.

      I would *NOT* want to see the US Federal Goverment sell shares of ownership
      in itself at an IPO. That would be rather scary. But it's okay for Google
      to do that. In either case, it's not the same thing as debt.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    14. Re:Non sequiteur... by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      But thats what bonds are, shares of the government. Either way I agree that federal spending is way outta hand, but I don't dept in itself an end all of everything, most economist agree that some federal dept is a good thing economically. Though we are way out of the range of "some".

    15. Re:Non sequiteur... by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure calling bonds "shares of the government" is entirely accurate. You still get 1 person == 1 vote no matter how many bonds you have. It's more like giving a loan to the gov't, and getting paid back after X amount of months with interest.

      Buying lots of savings bonds isn't going to keep them from screwing you over.

  35. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by OsamaBinLogin · · Score: 1, Interesting

    >So what happens if the FIRST recount doesn't make Mr.
    >Kerry President? Do we ask for ANOTHER recount ala 2000?

    Wrong. In 2000, there was no "another" recount. There were ZERO recounts in Florida. The republicans (american flagwavers all) stood in the way of all recounts until it was too late. We now know that Gore would have won if real democracy had happened and the recount went ahead on schedule. And it would have been a landslide for Gore if the phony felons lists hadn't happened.

    --
    Marketing-driven companies end up over-marketing their products. Engineering-driven companies end up over-engineering
  36. Ironies abound by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Nader was actually one of the first to demand a recount. On Tuesday, November 9, 2004, Jay Leno got his witless jab in at Nader's recount call. But, ironically, this recount will end up being little more than an academic excercise if Kerry doesn't recant his premature concession.

    Also ironic that the man (and, now, a party) who the Democrats spent so much time and money on in order to prevent appearance on the ballot are now those who ask for democracy in the form of counting all the ballots (and accounting for the ballots). Also, ironic that the Greens are so vocal in asking for this: Cobb's stumped for Kerry in contested states, yet the Democrats tried to keep Greens off the ballot as well this year. Meanwhile, in Illinois, the Democrats are changing the law to make sure the Republicans got their candidate on Illinois ballots.

    I'm guessing that in 3 years this will all be forgotten and we'll see an unapologetic Democratic party ready to spread more lies and half-truths about their left-leaning competition (this time, the smear job included failing to point out the orders of magnitude more Republican financial support that went to the Kerry campaign versus the Nader campaign: $10.7 Million for Kerry vs. $111,700 for Nader, according to Counterpunch). Ah, if only that time and money had gone to winning senate seats instead, the Democrats could have won back the senate.

    Nader's campaign platform more closely matched what Democratic party voters wanted (most importantly, getting out of the occupation of Iraq). Yet Democrats lost with a combination of "lesser evil" and fearmongering.

    What does the future for the Democrats hold? I think not much of interest for those who don't like corporate-funded good-cop/bad-cop: When Nader says

    "You will know within a week whether there'll be a turn around in the Democratic Party. There'd have to be a complete turnover of personnel; a clean out of the stables."

    I look at the Democrats and I look forward to seeing such action.

  37. Re: by empaler · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Erm. Errr. I can't see your comment being any less idiotic.
    "Your side is stupid because you called the other side stupid"

    Right.

  38. Clarification by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    Reading this, I realize someone might misinterpret the reversal of concession as some kind of legally binding prerequisite. It is not, however it will not happen even if Kerry did somehow get the votes needed to win key states (and thus their electoral votes). I believe that the Democrats are firmly committed to not putting the country through a long pursuit of determining who actually won.

    1. Re:Clarification by Knetzar · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, it isn't up to the party, it's up to the electoral college and the laws of the state. If someone gets enough electoral votes, then that person is the president.

    2. Re:Clarification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reading this, I realize someone might misinterpret the reversal of concession as some kind of legally binding prerequisite

      No, but I did correctly interpret that you are a retarded, volvo-driving, virigin socialist. Shut up, loser.

  39. Libertarian Idealist Philosophy... by Dr.Dubious+DDQ · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...in the form of a flash animation may be found on newgrounds.com here...

    Obviously in the real world, practical matters soften the idealistic concepts in the animation, but it gives you a good idea of the direction that Libertarian political philosophy takes.

  40. 72% of Ohioans used punchcards + 12% used optical by ugmoe · · Score: 1
    Hello,

    72% of Ohio voters used punchcards.

    12% of Ohio voters used optical scan (bubble on paper)

    16% of Ohio voters used electronic voting.

    Should be possible to recount 84% of the votes

    http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:AEDmyoVJM-YJ:ww w.ohio.com/mld/beaconjournal/news/state/9982287.ht m%3F1c+Ohio++voting+system&hl=en

  41. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by ReaperOfSouls · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Libritarians ally themselves with Republicans on in the sence that there are still many Paleo-cons out there. Bush is anything but a Paleocon, he is a neocon. Lets look.

    Libritarians hate anything that has to do with making the government bigger. Well lets look, the largest deficit(number not % of GDP, but still huge) in history.

    Libritarians are generally about liberty and human(negitive) rights. Bush and his new appointment to Attorny General think human rights are up for discussion(ala Gitmo, Abu Grab). The Patiot Act certianly doesn't make us libritarians happy campers.

    Lets see, faith based inititives, i.e funding churches do create social programs, which is no better then when the government does it.
    Heck in his 2003 budget, he proposed and increase in NEA funding, which is a hot button issue for palocons and libritarians.

    Libritarians see the purpose of the Military for defence, not nation building or premtive/preventive war. Even Bush said in 2000 that he didn't believe in nation building.

    Ultimately the only thing that Bush has done right by libritarians is cutting taxes, but all the other stuff he has done soooo out weighs that.

    I have been a libritarian for as long as I have been interested in politics. I supported and worked for campains in 1994 to put the conservatives in control of the house and senate. Heck I even voted for Bush the first time around. The fact of the matter for me is, Bush's performance has been anything but remotely close to "libritarian" ideals. This year I voted for Kerry, because at least with Kerry we would have dead lock, and if 1994-2000 is any measure, it was the only chance to stall the growth of government.

    --
    Shameless self promotion : The Misadvetures of the in
  42. Re:but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    Even if he did win Ohio Kerry still would have lost the popular vote... Sure he would have one the electorial college but... Wouldn't that be stealing the electon on a technicality?
    Frankly it is not going to happen. So scream away.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  43. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Jerf · · Score: 1

    By your logic we should object to anyone doing or asking for anything even once because they might bother you about it forever.

    Ever raised a kid?

    From where I sit, not saying no, firmly, the first time, is a Top 5 parental mistake. Make that mistake a couple of times and suddenly the kid is effectively in charge.

    While the logic may or may not apply in this case, it is not always useless, as you imply, and more work is needed to establish the invalidity of the argument. I think you're probably right in general, though.

  44. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Paladin128 · · Score: 1

    I think you're missing the point -- the Libs and the Greens want ALL of the votes counted to bolster thier numbers a tad. Voting for a third party is only a truly wasted vote if you use an absentee ballot, which won't be counted at all, thus not give to the party total.

    --
    Lex orandi, lex credendi.
  45. Re:but... by HerbieTMac · · Score: 1

    Umm...

    May I ask where you have been for the past four years? A President who lost the popular vote but won the electoral vote ring any bells?

  46. I donated 20 by cgenman · · Score: 1

    Agreed. I donated 20.

  47. Votergate the movie by cgenman · · Score: 1

    BTW, the film mentioned in the second link, votergate, is worth downloading. A torrent is available if the main site is going slowly, though they seem to have upgraded their bandwidth.

  48. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Kris_J · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Ever raised a kid?
    If you're implying that the goverment treats the population like children I couldn't agree more.
  49. Attention grabbing ... by arhar · · Score: 1

    Seems like Badnarik and Cobb would do anything for attention. Well, since the media is ignoring them, I think that's justified. More power to 'em!

    1. Re:Attention grabbing ... by east+coast · · Score: 1

      Well, since the media is ignoring them, I think that's justified.

      I dunno about that.

      Don't get me wrong, I voted third party for everything this election and I normally do supoort third parties in elections. I'm a member of a third party. I openly endorse third parties. So do you really think I want a citizen's first introduction to third party action being third parties trying to upset an election and perhaps fal into litigation ala Gore 2000? Let's face facts, no one wants that and having that associated with your party isn't really a good idea.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  50. That's almost as good as this guy by devphil · · Score: 1


    who believes that the purpose of the Democratic party should be to provide "cute but not that bright" comfort women to Republicans.

    No, he's not joking. Yes, he's publishing a book.

    There are jokes about how "he needed killin'" is a valid murder defense in Texas. Sheesh, this guy qualifies.

    --
    You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)
    1. Re:That's almost as good as this guy by DeltaSigma · · Score: 1

      Eh, don't let that scare you. Out in the goth parts we've got our own scary "conservative" that said roughly the same thing recently.

      Believe it or not, this wacko is also publishing a book.

      So don't sweat it, there's a lot of weirdos out there, I think the REAL majority of Americans understand this was a close election and compromises will still have to be made by both parties.

  51. Here's a fun way to spend time... by mbourgon · · Score: 1

    Tell me how many votes Badnarik got nationwide. Honestly - I went looking (CNN.COM, Foxnews.com, google) and only found contradictory evidence (LP says they got more than 1% in 8 states, Fox says they didn't crack 1% anywhere).

    I did find one story with numbers.
    Nader: 395000
    Badnarik: 377000

    But I barely heard Badnarik mentioned, especially considering how much coverage Nader got.

    --
    "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    1. Re:Here's a fun way to spend time... by Mekabyte · · Score: 1

      FWIW, the last count I was able to find listed:
      Ralph Nader: 406,937
      Michael Badnarik: 384,171

      Updated 11/11/04 2:09 AM ET

      Source: Washington Post

  52. Easy to follow instructions on how to help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This site http://www.fugw.org/ Fraud Uncovered - Government Watch has easy to follow instructions on how to help.

  53. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Who needs math when you've got Jesus?

  54. Re:but... by N3WBI3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    For the past four years I have been listening to the left moan and cry that because Gore won the popular vote bush was not really the president. Spokesmen for the DNC like Jessie Jackson have cried "let the winner win, and the loser lose but never again let the loser win and the winner lose".

    If the recount goes kerry's way (and I doubt they'll find 130K votes) he will be the president, Ill have no complaints about it (I voted 3rd Party). What I will love to see is the left embrace their guy and ignore the partisan crap they have been spewing for four years..

    --
  55. Re:A quest to expose elections fraud? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently they aren't very good at politics or maybe they'd have a better showing in the elections.

  56. Re: by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

    The election was last week. The decisions were made last week. Right now there's no point in swaying anyone's opinion, and we can fairly judge them by the decision they eventually made.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  57. Just thought something funny (tinfoil hat on) by Lisandro · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Remember the ill-famed John Titor story. It said things would get ugly with "civil unrest" after the 2004 US election. Well, what would happen if, by some reason, the recounts come back wildly different - or even declaring Kerry winner of the elections?

    I'm bored, and that site is a fascinating read. It's like watching a trainwreck, you know you're not supposed to enjoy it but just can't look away.

  58. Update 2 by Mekabyte · · Score: 1

    Somehow Nader suddenly got a bunch of votes or somebody's sources are funky...

    Ralph Nader: 505,013
    Michael Badnarik: 400,871

    Updated 11/11 9:37AM

    Source: SFGate

    1. Re:Update 2 by Mekabyte · · Score: 1

      It turns out that SFGate has a 98,133 vote total for Nader in Pennsylvania whereas no other source has Nader listed at all, accounting for the ~100k difference. There was a ballot access court battle in that state, but I'm not sure how some sources have numbers and others don't.

  59. Glad to know by ag0ny · · Score: 1

    I however would like to know that the votes were counted right. I like Bush being in office, but fair voting is more important than which politician holds the office.

    Even though I hate Bush, I'm glad to know that there are people who think like you among his supporters.

    1. Re:Glad to know by Hyecee · · Score: 1

      Amen. It would be good to remember that despite the "rabids" in either camp, the majority are no doubt rational, intelligent individuals and not raving bigots.

  60. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by dasunt · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Moreover, I've been hearing too many theories about how voters were forced, deceived or generally brainwashed into voting for Bush. I've heard similar gripes about 'stupid' vs. 'smart', and of course seen the standard IQ by state chart.

    Guess what, kids: sometimes in a democracy, other people win. This is what most of the American voters wanted, and that's the way it works.

    The following is presented for discussion only -- I don't necessarily endorse these viewpoint, but I think they are interesting.

    The founding fathers did not have voting for the common man. Those only in good standing in the community (property owners) could vote[1]. There was also was the barrier that the horribly uneducated tended to be illiterate.

    Now, anyone who wants to vote can vote. This may be an improvement. It may not be.

    People occasionally come up with the idea of manditory voting, or a vacation day on election day. For the health of the country, are we better off forcing people to vote? Polls are open all day, and are easy to find. If the only reason you have to vote is to avoid a fine, perhaps the country is better off if you don't vote.

    In the same light, imagine a ballot that has no party affiliation listed. George Washington was against political parties, he thought they'd be the death of the country. Perhaps he was right. Imagine a country where any party was unable to voice any support for a candidate[2].

    Or perhaps a ballot that only has positions listed, no names. You must remember the correct spelling of your candidates' names, or at least write them down on a slip of paper beforehand. If you can't spell "John Kerry and John Edwards" or "George Bush and Dick Cheney", perhaps your vote is better off uncounted.[3]

    Just food for thought.

    [1] Of course, they also had sexist exclusions, as well as discounting the votes of slaves.

    [2] A party could still work for a candidate, but could not publicaly state that it was aiding a candidate.

    [3] I'm imagining the political ads right now: Democrats for John Kerry. That is J- O- H- N- Space- K- E- R- R- Y-. Remember, an 'h' in "John" and two 'r's in "Kerry".

  61. Re: by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    It's not just rabid Kerryists that want the recounts, and acting like a rabid Bushist doesn't help your argument any. The point here is not who won, but how fairly.

    Problem is that we don't trust the "recount" to be as fair as the initial count.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  62. Cobb's votes 10k down to 0 by hitchhacker · · Score: 2, Interesting


    At a bit less than 40% of the precincts reporting in Ohio, I saw David Cobb's votes go from around 10,000 down to ZERO. After that, I started taking screenshots of the Ohio state departments website.

    you can see a few of them here: http://64.71.168.78/

    Was Cobb a write-in in Ohio? Maybe that explains it. The ohio state department's website still only shows Cobb with 24 votes

    -metric

    1. Re:Cobb's votes 10k down to 0 by Undertaker43017 · · Score: 1

      He wasn't on my precincts ballot. Badnarik, Bush, Kerry, a sticker indicating removed by court order (Nadar ;) and Peroutka, where the only candidates on the ballot.

      Which brings up an interesting point, since Cobb wasn't even on the ballot, why put any money into getting a recount?

    2. Re:Cobb's votes 10k down to 0 by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      I can't find it, but I swear I read about this. Some machine overcounted Cobb by a bunch of votes. This was later fixed.

    3. Re:Cobb's votes 10k down to 0 by jc42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Some machine overcounted Cobb by a bunch of votes. This was later fixed.

      Well, that's reassuring!

      It's funny how often people say such things, and seem to expect that it will calm the discussion. But such things should tell you something about how many problems there are in the voting system.

      All the "machine error" and "user error" reports coming from Ohio just tell me that their voting system (using the term lightly) is so screwed up that no thoughtful person would expect that the results are accurate to within a few million votes.

      Funny thing is, American-made electronic voting equipment is being used in several other countries, where they demand full auditing and accountability. American companies know full well how to build such equipment. If our own elections don't use the good equipment, we should have strong suspicions about the reasons. And it's not likely that stupidity or incompetence explains it. There is a lot at stake in an election, and there are strong motives for doctoring the results. If there's a way to do it, most of the candidates will attempt it.

      Of course, the two major parties both have long histories of voting fraud. So the Ohio results could be off by millions in either direction.

      We have a lot of work to do before American elections can be trusted.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
  63. Re:but... by GryMor · · Score: 2, Informative

    The whole stolen election thing isn't with regards to winning or losing the popular vote. It's the opinion that Bush one Florida in 2000 on Fraud.

    So long as there is the appearance of impropriaty, thats all you'll get. Same goes of Kerry, except it wasn't people close to Kerry disenfranchising the voters of Ohio and it wasn't people close to Gore disenfranchising the voters of Florida.

    --
    Realities just a bunch of bits.
  64. Republicans are the opposite of Libertarian by jayveekay · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I believe in smaller government, less taxes, less intervention in people's lives (at home and abroad) by the government.

    Republicans have shown themselves to be the opposite of that.

    One theory is that the Republicans are trying to reduce the entitlement programs (like Medicare) by growing them (and other government spending) in an uncontrollable fashion while cutting taxes, to the point where force cutbacks across the board become mandatory. I doubt that it is intentional. I think that the Republicans are just incompetent fiscal managers.

  65. kurt vonnegut's thoughts on bush and math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "And do you know why I think [George W. Bush] is so pissed off at Arabs? They invented algebra. Arabs also invented the numbers we use, including a symbol for nothing, which nobody else had ever had before. You think Arabs are dumb? Try doing long division with Roman numerals."

    not entirely historically accurate, but i thought it was funny. you can read the full article here

  66. Clone Jesus! by Elkboy · · Score: 1

    Dread the day when the right embraces cloning! Imagine what they could do with a thousand Jesuses.

    Or would that be Jesii?

    1. Re:Clone Jesus! by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Jesu- got to remember your Latin

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    2. Re:Clone Jesus! by whovian · · Score: 1

      Iesu, not Jesu. Latin had no "j".

      --
      To-do List: Receive telemarketing call during a tornado warning. Check.
    3. Re:Clone Jesus! by mink · · Score: 1

      If this is any indication, I'm not too worried.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    4. Re:Clone Jesus! by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Classic Latin didn't. Vulgar Latin, which was used by the Church since St. Jerome translated the Mass and the Bible from Greek and Hebrew into "the language of the people" did and does. The Vulgate is full of J's.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  67. Re:but... by gerddie · · Score: 1

    ... the left embrace their guy ...
    Kerry == left? Okay, it may be difficult to be not left of Bush, but left in the real sense - no way.
    Here is an interesting reading about the "two" choices Bush vs. Kerry.

  68. Re:Bush? BUSH? by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1, Troll

    You're on slashdot, and you're glad Bush won?

    I'm not a Bush-ite, but your comment was as illogical as the arguments used by the Right to support morality laws in order to abate the impending wrath of God.

    We are so partisan that our idea of political discourse is like a junior high dance--boys on the left side of the gymnasium, girls on the right.

    About the economy comment, I see the Democrats have programmed you well. Unfortunately, Bush isn't on the Ways and Means committee, nor is he on the Federal Reserve board, nor is he part of any decision making process that Constitutionally *ought* to have anything to do with the control of the economy.

    And Congress did declare war. It may or may not have been political suicide to go against it, but at the time there was a lot of false intelligence floating around, and it sure seemed like Saddamm wasn't really planning on letting the US in to check for WMD. I'm not saying it's right--I think the war is wrong, but I don't think we should blame the President for the economic ramifications.

    I'm sick of liberals who think that the President and his staff are the only officials that we hold accountable in this country.

    This zealous, blind hatred for Bush probably turned off a lot of would-be Kerry voters. And now Democrats have started coming down on Kerry for being too soft.

    Democrats *hate* the Witchunter logic used by the Right Wing today (I'm thinking evangelicals). Of course, human nature being what it is, I suppose I shouldn't expect anything more out of them than the same rabid hatred and unwillingness to understand the "other side."

    The two-party system has destroyed this country and made the more intelligent succumb to groupthink and a willingness to abandon truth in favor of getting a quick bash in on those with whom you disagree.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  69. Re: by martinde · · Score: 1

    > Who needs math when you've got Jesus?

    Even Jesus needed math - he was a carpenter until he was 30 or so - I bet he was pretty good at fractions!

  70. Re:Bush? BUSH? by flyingsquid · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I'm sick of liberals who think that the President and his staff are the only officials that we hold accountable in this country.

    When has Bush ever been held responsible? When has he ever admitted to a mistake? Was he held responsible for ignoring warnings about Osama bin Laden being determined to strike inside the United States? Was he held accountable for not planning the occupation of Iraq? Has he been held accountable for the massive deficit caused by his tax cuts? Has he been held accountable for the massive cockup of Falluja (when we first went in)? Quite the contrary, he's actually managed to capitalize on these errors.

    Maybe I'm completely wrong about Bush being bad for the nation... all I can say is, check back in a few years, and if he's fucked up completely (like he's done the first four years) don't say we didn't warn you.

    I'm not sure it matters anymore. The problem is, democracy depends on an informed public making decisions, but the public isn't informed, and doesn't want to be informed.

  71. these guys are ambitious by dingDaShan · · Score: 1

    Couldn't they better spend their money on philanthropy or something? It's not as if they are going to win the election by doing this. They are wasting time and money. John Kerry is behind by a lot in Ohio, and he has already conceded. A recount will not change that many votes. It did not in Florida last election, and it won't in Ohio now.

  72. Re:Bush? BUSH? by w3rzr0b0t5 · · Score: 1, Funny

    You're already bitching about Gonzales? He's not even a conservative! Let's just be honest. You would complain if Bush appointed Papa Fucking Smurf to AG.

    And don't worry, after this election, the Catholics are definitely not on their way to any camp. Most of them voted the right way.

  73. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by mzieg · · Score: 1
    Wrong. In 2000, there was no "another" recount. There were ZERO recounts in Florida.
    I shouldn't go that far. The NORC Study spent far more manhours and money over their 6-month intensive operation than election officials possibly could have focused in the few weeks left before inauguration (this would have had to occur over Christmas and New Years, remember, when staffing and budgets are at their tightest).

    I'm aware that the NORC study does not label itself as a "recount", but they have surely amassed far more data than any court-ordered recount could possibly have accrued.

    We now know that Gore would have won
    Wow, you know that, even though you claim no recounts were ever done?

    The truth is that the NORC results were massively inconclusive. "Who would have won" would have depended entirely on what ruleset you used to validate or disqualify ballots. Such a detailed ruleset does not exist in any legislative or voter-approved constitutional text. Therefore, any ruleset picked would have been annointed by a set of judges.

    No matter what ruleset emerged, the winner would have been appointed by the judiciary. You can't escape that conclusion. I agree with those who, at the time, decided it would be better to simply go with the first count, which was in fact in accordance with existing voter-enacted law.

  74. Re:Bush? BUSH? by bevo14 · · Score: 1

    Hello World

  75. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by j-turkey · · Score: 2, Informative
    Bush is anything but a Paleocon, he is a neocon.

    Bush may have neoconservatives on his staff, but he is not a neoconservative. He's a social conservative who spends like a Democrat (a Democrat in Republican's clothing?).

    Bush was never a neoconservative. It's my belief that after September 11th, he pulled a Kennedy and said (something along the lines of) no idea should be left off the table, and the worst thing that we can do here is nothing. (I suppose that he also took a page from Jimmy Carter's failure in the hostage crisis on the dosomethingism ideal). I can't say that I agree with his decision to listen to the neoconservatives, but I seriously do not believe that he's a neoconservative. Neocons don't care much about a conservative social policy like he does. Neocon's are like libertarians who don't care about domestic policy (well, as long as the policy is good for business and the economy) and also believe in preemptive wars, as opposed to Nixon's foreign policy which revolved around diplomacy.

    --

    -Turkey

  76. Re: by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And you are the reason the democrats weren't able to win. Calling the otherside stupid isn't the best way to sway their opinion.

    Because it's not like anybody on the right-wing ever calls us stupid or cowards or anything like that. Oh wait....

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  77. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Agreed. Moreover, I've been hearing too many theories about how voters were forced, deceived or generally brainwashed into voting for Bush.

    Those theories are true. They tried to screw up my vote. When I went in to vote, they kept trying to get me to sign under the wrong name (relatives of mine who had already voted elsewhere). It took them 3 tries before they finally pointed me to the correct name on the list. I am a hippy-looking kind of guy, so the person working there must have assumed I was not voting for Bush, and thus was trying to screw up my vote. Voting under the same name twice would nullify both votes. These kinds of things ARE happening.

  78. Losers by muss02 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Someone is a sore loser and won't accept a defeat.

    1. Re:Losers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone is a sore loser and won't accept a defeat.

      Clearly these two didn't really expect to win. They're not idiots. They're just trying to make sure the entire country didn't just lose democracy. There's nothing wrong with that.

  79. Re:but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Even if he did win Ohio Kerry still would have lost the popular vote... Sure he would have one the electorial college but... Wouldn't that be stealing the electon on a technicality?

    WTF? Why is it that we make immigrants learn and understand the electoral process before they can become naturalized citizens, but people who were born in this country have no such requirement?

    Start here Article II Section I

  80. Re:Bush? BUSH? by truthsearch · · Score: 1

    girls on the right

    Are you calling the Republicans a bunch of sissies? ;)

  81. Children of the corney. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If you're implying that the goverment treats the population like children I couldn't agree more."''

    Unfortunately sometimes the population acts like it. Now give me my entitlement check.

  82. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't count the 4K votes that the FUBAR machine gave George it is only a 96K vote difference for Kerry to overcome. /optimistic

  83. Re:Bush? BUSH? by CTachyon · · Score: 1
    The two-party system has destroyed this country and made the more intelligent succumb to groupthink and a willingness to abandon truth in favor of getting a quick bash in on those with whom you disagree.

    Sounds like an opening to plug Condorcet and Approval voting and ask everyone who agrees to write their state legislators about it. The two-party system will never collapse if we don't do something about it -- too many politicians have made their careers out of playing the duopoly, and they need a fire lit under their ass before they'll upset it. (Oh, and please try not to spook the horses, so to speak. Don't say the "d" word, even if you might be thinking it -- phrase it in positive terms like voter expressiveness, legislative teamwork, and the like. You should also butter them up with some examples specific to their party, like Libertarians and Perot for the Republicans, or Greens and Nader for the Democrats. Think of your target audience. And if you send an e-mail, follow up with a written letter if you don't get a reply in a reasonable amount of time.)

    --
    Range Voting: preference intensity matters
  84. speaking of ditto heads by phyruxus · · Score: 1
    ...there's been something bothering me for a while and I've just recently been able to express it.

    It's a question I have to those who believe that we should take everything our president says on faith, and agree without question.

    If we take everything on faith, how is that democracy?

    Seriously; I can't see how that differs from dictatorship. If everyone gets their view from the same source, and no one questions the validity or utility of that view, doesn't the system become a monoculture? A democracy where everyone agrees is just an obfuscated kingdom.

    --
    "A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
    "d'Oh!" ~Homer
    1. Re:speaking of ditto heads by zCyl · · Score: 1

      Because none of the blindfolded people want the boat rocked while they think it's heading in the direction they want to go.

  85. Electoral voting. by exodist-Admin-Ra · · Score: 1

    I am not completely sure about this, but I heard that one person from each state goes to a meeting to cast the state electoral votes, I also heard (please correct me if wrong) that there is no regulation or checks, that someone from a bush state could walk in and say the vote goes to kerry, and vice versa. as an american voter this thaught scares me. Please respond and clarify, is there any kind of checks or regulastion of the electoral vote casting? Location: California Age: 21 Profession: Student/Programmer Vote: Bush yeah I broke the steriotype.

    1. Re:Electoral voting. by mpost4 · · Score: 1

      Yes you are not voting for your candidate, but their electoral. The Electoral can vote how ever they want. Don't worry, the ones you vote for will 95% of the time vote for who they pledged to vote for. But lets say for the sake of argument, Bush does something completely massively illegal (found murdering Dick Channy (sp?) ) the electoral can all turn around and vote for who ever they want. So we could see Mike Peroutka (I use him just for the fun of it) as the president.

    2. Re:Electoral voting. by thpr · · Score: 1
      "Some states (24 plus D.C. at last count) require Electors to cast their votes according to the popular vote."

      Extracted from this FAQ.

      Wikipedia has good information on the Electoral College, too. (see Faithless Electors).

      Sorry I can't find any specifics on California's laws with regards to electors.

    3. Re:Electoral voting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "there is no regulation or checks", "as an american voter this thaught scares me", "is there any kind of checks or regulastion of the electoral vote casting", "Vote: Bush yeah I broke the steriotype." ------------- Hmm, as an American voter, you scare me.

    4. Re:Electoral voting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you asked: it's spelt 'Cheney'.

    5. Re:Electoral voting. by exodist-Admin-Ra · · Score: 1

      would that be because I have a different view than you and am continually seeking information with which to mold my opinions? I asked questions, some people answered information was exchanged. I consider alternate opinions and seek information, I have reached my current conclusions and opinions and stick to them, but I am open to alternate ideas and will consider any that are given to me, but it is hard to see what exactly your opinion is beyond your fear of me that seems to be because I am not the steriotype californian democrat but instead a conservative in a liberal area.

  86. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Leftist+Troll · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're already bitching about Gonzales? He's not even a conservative! Let's just be honest. You would complain if Bush appointed Papa Fucking Smurf to AG.

    Not everything is about "social issues".
    Gonzales is a social liberal. But he wrote memos authorizing torture.

    Not exactly Papa Fucking Smurf.

    And don't worry, after this election, the Catholics are definitely not on their way to any camp. Most of them voted the right way.

    The margian really wasn't that big. 47% of Catholics voted for Kerry.

  87. I am not Democrat, I am Mexiacn. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    You insensitive clod, etc..

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  88. Re:A quest to expose elections fraud? by jilles · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the rumours alone warrant a recount. If only just to disprove them. The fact that nobody seems to be interested in disproving what are very serious allegations is more worrysome then any outcome of the election.

    --

    Jilles
  89. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    These kinds of things ARE happening.

    They happen four million times?

  90. Re:Bush? BUSH? by geoffspear · · Score: 1
    I wouldn't even call him a social liberal. Conservatives are pissed that as a Supreme Court justice in Texas, he didn't treat abortion as "a heinous crime", but that's because, ummm... it's not a crime.

    A justice who made rulings that clearly violated SCOTUS's precedents to match his personal beliefs isn't a conservative, he's an idiot. Why would they expect Gonzales to make rulings that would have just been appealed to a federal court and overturned, making the Texas court completely irrelevant?

    I'd hope that regardless of political beliefs, anyone could agree that a judge or attorney general should at least have respect for current law and precedent and follow the law instead of his conscience. For all the talk about "activist judges", it sure seems like it's the conservatives who are demanding judicial activism. Only the Supreme Court can overturn its own rulings. It's not that hard to understand.

    --
    Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  91. Re:Bush? BUSH? by w3rzr0b0t5 · · Score: 0

    The Geneva Convention does not apply to enemy combatants who are not aligned with an officially recognized state. There's no sense imposing a set of rules on people who are not going to follow them. We could put Al Qaeda prisoners up in Smurf Village, and they'll simply cut our guys' heads off. They aren't entitled to GC treatment anyway, since they are operating outside the boundaries of both US and precious, precious international law. You guys only seem to quote international law when it's convenient.

    And your comment about Gonzales not being Papa Smurf is just silly. It's obvious from the memo that he is under an evil spell from Gargamel.

    Anyone can see that.

  92. The answer is by mercedo · · Score: 1

    Why not change to the Direct Election System nation wide? Electoral Colleges do not reflect people's wish well any longer.

    --
    Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters
    1. Re:The answer is by eglamkowski · · Score: 1

      The electoral college was never meant to reflect the people's will. Indeed, the presidency was never intended to determined by any sort of popular election at all. It was until the 1860s that all the states finally used popular election of electors. In The Beginning such an idea was unthinkable.

      The problem isn't a lack of democracy, it's too much democracy.

      --
      Government IS the problem.
    2. Re:The answer is by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      This would require amending the U.S. Constitution and would require the support of states that stand to lose with a pure popular vote.

      It ain't gonna happen.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    3. Re:The answer is by mercedo · · Score: 1

      The problem in this system is 1) Winner-take-all does not reflect the people's will. 2) The number of Electoral College is very small and does not reflect the population of the State's voters. 1) is seems Federal government is respecting each State's decision who they choose. -But actually autonomous significance each state used to have now almost faded out. 2) is those of similar to the propotional representation, which is regarded as one of the best ways to reflect the people's will. But this case is different. We don't have to have Electoral Colleges for this (to reflect the people's will well ) purpose. The role of Electoral Colleges are rather ambiguous. And incorrect.

      --
      Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters
    4. Re:The answer is by mercedo · · Score: 1

      Seeing that the results of 2004 Presidential Election, Urban areas like California, East Coast elected Democratic electorates and in the rest of the US, they elected Republicans. If each state wanted to elect Democrat or Republican governer, this system would work well. But things are not for governers but for the President. The US President has to reflect people's will regardless where they live and doesn't necessarily reflect which candidate the State chose.

      --
      Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters
    5. Re:The answer is by calidoscope · · Score: 1
      You're not getting the point - in order to go to direct election of the president, the constitution needs to be amended - which requires ratification of 3/4 of the states - and a lot of the states that would be needed for ratification would stand to lose if the Electoral College goes bye-bye.

      I don't know if you're a USian or not, but you obviously don't grok basic US civics.

      --
      A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
    6. Re:The answer is by Hassman · · Score: 1

      WE don't need to necessarily chagne the electoral college system via the constitutions.

      The states themselves decide how to vote with the electoral votes. They can update their own practicies that says the % of electoral votes coinsides with their popular vote. Colorado was trying to change this.

      For example. Lets say state X has 10 votes. 60% of the people voted for Bush, the rest Kerry. Bush would get 6 votes, Kerry 4.

      I think this is a lot more fair and would better reflect the minds of the people than the current system. Plus this wouldn't require an update to the constitution.

      --
      -Mark
      Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
    7. Re:The answer is by mercedo · · Score: 1

      This option clearly reflects much more of the minds of the people. They don't have to change current electoral college system, therefore they don't need an amendment of the Constitution. Once proportional representation is introduced in the electral college system, electoral colleges are becoming more and more ceremonial and will not affect anything regarding electing the US President, which will eventually lead to the amendment of the Constitution as an optimal consequences.

      --
      Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters
    8. Re:The answer is by mercedo · · Score: 1

      Let's come closer to the favourable state. Winner-take-all does not mean much more than it used to do. If many people started thinking so, what would be likely to happen next? ...I learned 75% of ya is necessary to amend the constitution. It's hard, but first of all I don't believe the constitution should regulate every nook and crany.- Should be just a declaration of principles on how to govern the country. Such details as regards electral college are enough to be ruled by related laws or other rulings. ...But the reality is different. Things might be completely different if you knew the priceless importance of this system.

      --
      Ancient Greek Philosophers -18c Enlightenment Thinkers -Slashdotters
  93. It would be hilarious by 4of12 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What would happen if it turned out Kerry won?

    Suddenly, the Democratic support for abolishing the electoral college, which, in the 2000 election permitted Bush to win despite Gore carrying a majority of the popular vote, would vanish in a puff of smoke.

    And it would be the Republicans complaining because a mere 60,000 vote switch in Ohio gave Kerry the presidency through the electoral college system despite Bush having won the popular vote by over 3 million.

    It would be hilarious to watch as strident principled Democrats fell silent while the vocal Republicans would begin attacking positions that they themselves previously held onto with great fervor.

    As if the whole thing weren't farcical enough already.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
    1. Re:It would be hilarious by zCyl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And it would be the Republicans complaining because a mere 60,000 vote switch in Ohio gave Kerry the presidency through the electoral college system despite Bush having won the popular vote by over 3 million.

      If there are enough votes in error to cause the election to shift, then much of the rest of the country would have to be recounted for this popular vote tally to be considered valid. The unadjusted final exit polls were also showing the popular vote in the other direction.

    2. Re:It would be hilarious by putch · · Score: 1

      hey, if it gets rid of bush and the electoral college at the same time i dont see the problem. two birds with one stone.

      --
      just because I don't care doesn't mean I don't understand!
    3. Re:It would be hilarious by Oblio · · Score: 1

      bah.

      As happy as I would be to see an end to the Bush presidency, I wouldn't expect an end to opposition to the Electoral College among liberals. Neither would I expect republicans to start supporting its abolition (though it would certainly draw some bad press) - regardless of the outcome of one election, the system favors them.

      I would see a Kerry victory at this point simply more evidence of the need for a popular vote of the President, regardless of my great despise for the current incumbent. To put it another way, I would easily give up 4 years to the opposition in favor of a lifetime of equity in voting.

      --
      Pax -- Ob
    4. Re:It would be hilarious by Golias · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Personally, as a Bush voter, I would completely support the election of Kerry if he won enough electoral votes. It's how we do things here. Clinton never won a popular majority, but I still considered him my legitimate President.

      That said, I think people are probably getting worked up over nothing. Bush won Ohio before all the absentee ballots were counted. I suspect that a recount will probably show an even wider margin of victory for Bush in that state.

      Now, call for a recount in a few other close states, such as Iowa, and you might be able to string something together.

      Kerry gets my official Class Act Recognition Award for doing the right thing here and not whining about it. Even if he throws that award over the White House fence, I'll still always remember the graceful way in which he accepted a relatively narrow defeat. I hope he considers running again in 2008.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    5. Re:It would be hilarious by mog007 · · Score: 0

      We have a phrase here:

      "Turn about is fair play."

      If those fuckers were willing to put somebody in office that the people decided wasn't supposed to be there, then it's just as fair for it to happen again.

  94. ANN COULTER! by Rares+Marian · · Score: 2, Funny

    sorry the blog lists her as columnist worth reading. I think I lost a kidney processing the shock (ok so it wasn't really a surprise) of that one.

    --
    The message on the other side of this sig is false.
  95. Copyright request by tinkerton · · Score: 1

    Since the republicans dominate the rural areas, maybe i am going to be rich.

    Can i still get a copyright on the word "backwatergate" ?

  96. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2, Informative

    And Congress did declare war.

    Uh, no, they didn't declare war. They gave the President the authority to use force, but stopped short of a true Declaration of War- the likes of which we have not seen since WWII

    If Congress had declared war, by international treaty our soldiers would be facing international war crimes tribunals rather than simple court martials for Abu Gharib and the like- and such international tribunals would not stop with low-ranking soldiers, but travel up the chain of command to Bush himself. Do your really want that?

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  97. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    The margian really wasn't that big. 47% of Catholics voted for Kerry.

    Only those of us who hate fundamentalism more than we hate abortion...either that or know that the best weapon against abortion is Charity and thus Kerry was the pro-seamless-garment-of-life candidate all along.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  98. Re: by Indianwells · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Thanks for 4 more years of nazism jerk.

    I have an intense dislike for people that:

    1. Support Torture
    2. Support Liars.
    3. Support Killing
    4. Are opposed to civil liberties.

    A vote for Bush is a vote for all of the above. Please leave my country.

  99. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Or perhaps a ballot that only has positions listed, no names. You must remember the correct spelling of your candidates' names, or at least write them down on a slip of paper beforehand. If you can't spell "John Kerry and John Edwards" or "George Bush and Dick Cheney", perhaps your vote is better off uncounted.

    Would such a system have a chance of getting passed in California? I don't think Gov. Schwarzenegger would like it.

  100. Re:Bush? BUSH? by chitownIrish · · Score: 1
    About the economy comment, I see the Democrats have programmed you well. Unfortunately, Bush isn't on the Ways and Means committee, nor is he on the Federal Reserve board, nor is he part of any decision making process that Constitutionally *ought* to have anything to do with the control of the economy.

    You think those on the Ways And Means Committee (majority Republican) aren't influenced by Bush?

    You think that Bush's budget busting tax cuts are not affecting the economy? They were nominally intended to provide short-term stimulus (which it did not provide), but the long term effect of the excessive borrowing required to finance the deficit will likely be higher interest rates.

    You think that war (especially unnecessary war) does not have an effect on the market? Do you think war in Iraq and $55/bbl oil are a coincidence?

    Your comment about the president not having control of the economy reminds me of a quote from one of the Godfather movies where Michael Corleone compares himself to a Senator:

    Kate: "Senators don't have people killed, Michael."

    Michael: "Now who's being naive, Kate?"

  101. Re: by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Besides, changing ohio STILL won't win it for Kerry.

    According to the final tallies at http://www.electoral-vote.com/, Kerry currently has 252 EVs, Bush 286. Flip Ohio's 20 votes- and Kerry has 272 Evs to Bush's 266. Thus Kerry will win. So sorry- you're wrong- changing Ohio WOULD win it for Kerry. Of course, the FIRST count in Ohio isn't done yet (absentee and provisional ballots legally will be able to be counted tomorrow), so we'll have more data then.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  102. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Draknor · · Score: 1

    If Congress had declared war, by international treaty our soldiers would be facing international war crimes tribunals rather than simple court martials for Abu Gharib and the like- and such international tribunals would not stop with low-ranking soldiers, but travel up the chain of command to Bush himself. Do your really want that?

    Yes.

  103. Re:but... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

    No Bush did not win Florida on fraud. They had recounts. Not as many as some would have liked and Bush won. The place that was the most disputed was Palm Beach and there the supervisor of elections was a democrat. A democrat "screwed" up the ballot. Frankly I am a bit of an eliteist and feel if you screwed up voting it is a good thing it did not get counted. Frankly you can not in all honesty say that Gore won the popular vote. It was so close that you would have to have a nation wide recount "maybe several" to prove it if it is even possible. Frankly it was a HUGE mess but not some great evil plot. In retrospect it looks like Bush is liked by a greater percentage of people in the US then even Clinton since he won a clear majority of the popular vote "Clinton never won a majority just a plurality" and the number of Republicans in congress went up. Frankly for those that do not like it all I can say is your congressman is going to be up for an election in two years. Get out and vote the one you want in that is the way the system works.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  104. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

    If you can't spell "John Kerry and John Edwards" or "George Bush and Dick Cheney", perhaps your vote is better off uncounted.[3]

    I hope in your alternative universe,
    Mieczyslaw Krzyzewski never runs for president.

    --
    The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
  105. Keep insulting us! by jmorris42 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    > Right now there's no point in swaying anyone's opinion,

    Uh huh. I'd bet more of us Red staters have read Jane Smiley's tirade on Slate than you guys considering how many links I have seen to it in the last week. If you don't think every fscking one of us redoubled our resolve to make sure none of you freaks, misfits and wierdos EVER get near the levers of power again, you are going to be sadly mistaken come the midterms.

    And it isn't just that one twit, there have been dozens of similar rants against the "stupid rednecks in Jesusland" in all of the nations most read publications by leaders in the Democratic Party who SHOULD know better than to hurl childish insults at over half of the country they expect to lead someday. If our side is bright enough to be clipping this stuff and bold enough to throw it right back in your faces in two years we could see the end of you, and that would be a beautiful day.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
    1. Re:Keep insulting us! by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
      I'd bet more of us Red staters have read Jane Smiley's tirade on Slate than you guys
      Never heard of her. Should I have done?
      If you don't think every fscking one of us redoubled our resolve to make sure none of you freaks, misfits and wierdos EVER get near the levers of power again, you are going to be sadly mistaken come the midterms.
      Oh, pot calling the kettle black, I love it.
      And it isn't just that one twit, there have been dozens of similar rants against the "stupid rednecks in Jesusland" in all of the nations most read publications by leaders in the Democratic Party who SHOULD know better than to hurl childish insults at over half of the country they expect to lead someday.
      Sure, whatever. From where I've stood, the abuse has largely come from the right. It came before the election. It's come after the election. Everyone from Slashdot's Pudge to Peggy Noonan seems to feel that any criticism of the decision of a sliver over half the population comprises of Liberal Elitism and Hatred of Ordinary Americans. Of course, with nearly 49% of the population on our side, that's inherently false.

      And most liberals, of course, do not consider redneck conservative christian bigots to make up the bulk of Americans. But you wouldn't understand that, as you surround yourself with so many of them you can't see anyone else.

      If our side is bright enough to be clipping this stuff and bold enough to throw it right back in your faces in two years we could see the end of you, and that would be a beautiful day.
      You're hardly bright now are you? You just re-elected the worst President in living memory.

      And, for what it's worth, the left will continue to remind you of that. We'll continue to point out that you, and 52% of the population with you, just made one of the most disasterously stupid decisions you'll ever make in your lives.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    2. Re:Keep insulting us! by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      > > I'd bet more of us Red staters have read Jane Smiley's tirade on
      >Never heard of her. Should I have done?

      Considering the damage she is inflicting on your cause, compounded by the fact nary a word of reproach has yet to issue from your side to what by any definition of the word would be 'hate speech', I'd say yes you probably should go look it up.

      > Oh, pot calling the kettle black, I love it.

      Yea, but I'm just a guy on /. stirring the pot. And we do have a bit of a right to be pissed, between the piece I referrenced and the headlines on most of the world's newspapers calling people like myself 'idiots' and worse for daring to disagree with your side.

      I mean, sure we have bombthrowers and fringe elements on our side, life is more fun with em on both sides for us political junkies. Hell, as above, I like lobbing a few myself. Difference is Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter and Pat Robertson aren't considered major policymaking forces in our party unlike Howard Dean (who could have actually WON your party's nomination!), Micheal Moore and James Carville.

      > And most liberals, of course, do not consider redneck conservative
      > christian bigots to make up the bulk of Americans. But you wouldn't
      > understand that, as you surround yourself with so many of them you
      > can't see anyone else.

      If you would carry your butt out of your blue state cocoon you would discover a few facts:

      1. Out here in the Red States, most of us aren't mouth breathing morons.

      2. Most are Christians, a reality you on the pagan left are just going to have to deal with. (Although I am not, being an Agnostic.)

      3. We are conservative. The only reason Democrats won elections in the past was the phenomenon of the Southern "Yellow Dog" Democrats who are dying off and/or finally realizing that the Democratic party has totally changed and they now vote Republican.

      4. Voting Republican is NOT a codeword for a return to the Jim Crow era. (Who by the way, like most Southern Politicians of the era, were lifelong Democrats.) The sooner you guys figure that out the sooner you can return to being a viable opposition party again.

      > You're hardly bright now are you? You just re-elected the worst
      > President in living memory.

      Yea, right. I am old enough to have heard all this crap before. You intellectual lightweights were spouting this same line twenty years ago about a certain "senile old actor who thinks he is some sort of cowboy". Earlier this year Democrats could line up fast enough to say nice things about the Gipper they used to hate. Nothing succeeds like success, if Bush can push through on Iraq and win you guys will be pretending you never opposed him at every step either.

      For some reason, in your perverted fantasy world, every Republican is an idiot. Nixon was an evil idiot, Reagan was a senile old idiot, Bush the elder did get somewhat of a pass on the idiot charge but it is back with a vengence for Shrub. Graduating both Harvard AND Yale isn't enough for a Republican to escape being called an idiot, so why don't you explain what it takes for a Republican to be deemed of 'average intelligence' in you worldview? Yes, Bush 43 has his dreaded speech impediment but after listening to him I always know exactly what he was trying to say, couldn't for the life of me figure out what Kerry was really saying half the time even though his use of English was perfect.... perfect but so nuanced you could read into it whatever you wanted to.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    3. Re:Keep insulting us! by Golias · · Score: 1

      I might not get tired of repeating this anytime soon, because it's an important point:

      Almost all the states are purple.

      There were only five states in which one candidate or the other won 2/3 of the vote (Idaho, Nebraska, Wyoming and Utah for Bush, the District of Columbia for Kerry). Most of the other states were extremely close. The margin of victory was 10% or less in 25 states.

      "Blue State" Demorctats: Unless you are from DC, Mass, RI, or VT (states where Kerry had a margin of victory over 20%), you are not really from a blue state. There are several neighbors on your block who voted for Bush.

      Notice that neither Texas nor California, states which were supposedly extremely partisan one way or the other, turned out to be not as lopsided as everybody thought.

      Democrats and Republicans live near each other all over the country, so we can all drop this "Jesusland" and "People's Republic of Canada" crap any time now, okay?

      (Disclaimer: I voted for Bush, but come from Minnesota, which Kerry won by 3%... and I get along great with friends who voted Democrat. People who actively dislike members of the opposite party genuinely baffle me.)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  106. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Exitthree · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If Congress had declared war, by international treaty our soldiers would be facing international war crimes tribunals rather than simple court martials for Abu Gharib and the like- and such international tribunals would not stop with low-ranking soldiers, but travel up the chain of command to Bush himself. Do your really want that?

    If soldiers and commanders committed war crimes, why wouldn't we want that? Would we not want it to happen just because it's "our guys"?

  107. Hah! :^) by phyruxus · · Score: 1

    It's amazing how funny everything is since I stopped caring (roughly nov 3). Thanks for the laff. You funny!

    --
    "A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
    "d'Oh!" ~Homer
  108. Re:Bush? BUSH? by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

    You think those on the Ways And Means Committee (majority Republican) aren't influenced by Bush?

    No, I didn't say that. They (the committee) should be held more accountable than the President. Ideally, thy wouldn't be influenced by him at all. At any rate, the President will continue to have influence in this committee as long as we hold him accountable for the economy.

    You think that Bush's budget busting tax cuts are not affecting the economy? They were nominally intended to provide short-term stimulus (which it did not provide), but the long term effect of the excessive borrowing required to finance the deficit will likely be higher interest rates.

    I don't think that the President should have the kind of power to propose legislation and have it pushed through. The reason he does is because we expect the President to fix our economy. If we began holding our senators and reps accountable, then the President, who is usually not an economist by trade, will no longer have to be responsible. Besides, I think you've overestimated the effect that these tax cuts have had--which is exactly what King George wants us to do.

    You think that war (especially unnecessary war) does not have an effect on the market? Do you think war in Iraq and $55/bbl oil are a coincidence?

    Of course not--but whether or not we should go to war should be based on whether or not the political reasons for going to war are correct. Where in my original statement did I fail to make this clear?

    Your comment about the president not having control of the economy reminds me of a quote from one of the Godfather movies where Michael Corleone compares himself to a Senator:

    He has de facto power, but he doesn't have power granted to him by the Constitution. This is something about American politics I can't stand, and the solution (as I see it) is to not blame the President for a bad economy, and not praise a President for a good one.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  109. Re: by EnderWiggnz · · Score: 1

    why?

    the initial count varied greatly from the exit polls - in most countries, if the election result is different than the exit polls, the people REVOLT.

    it happened with shreverdnazi (however the hell you spell that name), and it should have happened in 2k, and 2002, and 2004.

    in closing, let me quote che guevarra:
    "if you cannot trust the election results, then the war has already begun"

    so - if the election is kosher, then the recount is not a threat. if the election was not kosher, and the recount changes results, then the american people have won.

    the only bad choice here is to deny the recount.

    --
    ... hi bingo ...
  110. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >We are so partisan that our idea of political
    >discourse is like a junior high dance--boys on the
    >left side of the gymnasium, girls on the right.

    Your man Bush has been the most partisan president in years. He has split the country right down the middle and shown no regard whatsoever for those who disagree with him. He has, in fact, questioned the patriotism of those who even dare to disagree! Wake up.

    >About the economy comment, I see the Democrats
    >have programmed you well.

    Your completely partisan post really destroys your credibility. One could argue you too have been programmed by your Republican masters the way you deride liberals and Democrats alike.

    >And Congress did declare war.

    You are factually wrong. Congress authorized the use of force. How a falsehood could be labeled insightful is beyond me.

    >but at the time there was a lot of false
    >intelligence floating around, and it sure seemed
    >like Saddamm wasn't really planning on letting >the US in to check for WMD.

    Once again, you are factually wrong. In the build up to the war Saddam allowed unprecedented access for us to search for WMD. International weapons inspectors found absolutely nothing despite even greater access than they had before they were kicked out.

    >but I don't think we should blame the President
    >for the economic ramifications.

    Congress authorized the president to use his sole discretion on whether to wage war. This gave Bush total control on going to war. Yet you don't think Bush should be held accountable for the results of the war he singlehandedly CHOSE to wage? This just defies logic. Who should we hold accountable for these problems if not at least partially the one person who created them?

    >I'm sick of liberals who think that the President
    >and his staff are the only officials that we hold
    >accountable in this country.

    If you actually listened to us liberals and what we say, you would realize we are asking that all republicans and dirty democrats like former Sen. Miller be held accountable too! Are you honestly listening to the opinions of those with whom you disagree?

    >This zealous, blind hatred for Bush probably
    >turned off a lot of would-be Kerry voters.

    Blind hatred? Please, you are merely being inflammatory by acting like there are no legitimate criticisms of the Bush administration. You are showing your true zealotry and being quite hypocritical at the same time.

    >Democrats *hate* the Witchunter logic used by the
    >Right Wing today

    This is no witch hunt. Bush has done enough on his own to justify a plethora of investigations all of which are based on more credible evidence of wrong doing than the $40 million investigation of Clinton.

    > I suppose I shouldn't expect anything more out
    >of them than the same rabid hatred and
    >unwillingness to understand the "other side."

    Again, your entire post is inflammatory and not designed with factual evidence, just your zealous opinion of liberals and Democrats. Since you are so "sick of liberals" and you are so willing to declare it in a public forum, you are showing your own "rabid hatred and unwillingness to understand the 'other side'."

    >The two-party system has destroyed this country
    >and made the more intelligent succumb to
    >groupthink and a willingness to abandon truth in >favor of getting a quick bash in on those with >whom you disagree.

    Seeing as how your entire rant is about how sick you are of Democrats and those you disagree with without any truth or factually correct evidence to back up your arguments, you seem to have abandonned truth and made a quick bash against those you disagree with.

    You really are a lot like most of your party. This is why we liberals hold such disdain for what the Republican party has done to this country. Inflammatory, disrespectful, and factually questionable arguments are the only venom Republicans seem to spit.

  111. The left would have to explain their excuses by Shivetya · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    for declaring their loss before wasn't true?

    (read the whole thing before karma nuking me)

    After all they have blamed everyone BUT THEMSELVES.

    they blame evangelicals
    they blame rednecks
    they blame idiots
    they blame racists
    they blame bigots
    they blame homophobes
    they blame ballot tampering
    they blame initimidation
    they blame lack of information
    they blame the swift boat veterans
    they blame the Clinton team (new one today)

    So suddenly if they won how would they explain Bush's loss?

    Until you look inward you will never find the problem. This has been the primary problem with the Democrat party these last 4+ years. You cannot win if all you are doing is blaming someone else for your failure.

    Asking for a recount is just another way of trying to insinuate something was amiss and caused the loss. Having these third party people demanding a recount is nothing but pure audacity which will cost many communities more money than is justifiable.

    What should be done is to identify ways to make the next Presidential election smoother. Instead of wasting taxpayer money on an election that will NOT change I want the money used to prevent this type of BS.

    I don't want a recount.

    I want a verifiable election system where the voter is photo verified that they are who they are and they have proof that their vote was accounted for properly. That is all we need.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  112. Re:Bush? BUSH? by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

    I am not a Republican--I disagree with Bush on the war in Iraq, and I did not vote for him.

    I even said that I am not a Bush supporter in my post.

    Do I need to say it again? I AM NOT A REPUBLICAN.

    --
    Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
  113. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    without mentioning war, how has bush f'ed up the country?

    If you were told by YOUR top intelligence that your spouse was sleeping with someone what would you do?
    I obviously would not sit back and wait for her to come and tell me about it. I wouldn't just ignore it.

    Sometimes the only way you can know the truth is by confronting it. And that is what "W" did. And when you find out your wife was not sleeping with someone else but you are already divorced and NOW she is. It is too late to go back and say "Honey, I didn't mean it."
    If you don't understand this maybe her life is much better without you.

    I'm not sure it matters anymore. The problem is, democracy depends on an informed public making decisions, but the public isn't informed, and doesn't want to be informed.

    Are you saying those who think the war is "good" are not informed. I don't think they we are closing our eyes and hoping nothing is happening. I don't think we are running around shouting "war is bad, war is bad..." I think we realize that thing will be better in the end. Have you seen any terrorism in the US since 9/11? Can you say there was not going to be any without Bush pushing against them? Have you ever heard the best defense is a good offense.

    It is sad when the "minority" (by 3 million votes) speak like they are the "majority" and expect the rest of us to give up and say "yeah, you are right...we really are dumb and see bush is an idiot."

  114. Or perhaps we just don't trust the exit polls? You know lies, damn lies, and statistics.

    --
    I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
  115. Re: by EnderWiggnz · · Score: 1

    bullshit.

    the purpose of exit polls is to audit the election results, its not to give you a "horse race" feeling throughout the day, you are supposed to compare the tallies, against the projected results, and figure out why there is a discrepency.

    exi polls wrong in three national elections in a row? no effing way.

    all we want to do, is count the votes, accurately.

    if everything is fine, then we'll be on our merry way.

    --
    ... hi bingo ...
  116. Re:A quest to expose elections fraud? by ElForesto · · Score: 1

    Good point. They barely maintained ballot status in Nevada. I would wonder, however, if the $100K spent on verifying the votes would be better spent on just gathering the needed signatures if/when the time comes.

    --
    There is a difference between "insightful" and "inciteful" other than spelling.
  117. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    I'm truly sorry I'm glad Bush won. I made a fundamental error in my thinking. I mean, we should vote for the only good candidate, since his enemy is purely evil. That's the foundation of democracy, isn't it? Knowing that this candidate is the only one worth voting for, and not allowing people to disagree with you?

    Oh, wait...

    (I have my right to support Bush, and you have your right to support Kerry. If that is infringed upon, our country is in far more danger than either Bush or Kerry could inflict if they wanted to.)

  118. Vote for your registered party. by ugmoe · · Score: 1
    Why isn't everyone required to vote the same as their voter registration party?

    What is the point of registering for a party if you're going to vote differently?

    1. Re:Vote for your registered party. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your favorite candidate may not have shown up ballot because they lost the primaries. Also, you may have changed your mind between the time you registered and the time you voted.

    2. Re:Vote for your registered party. by wertarbyte · · Score: 1

      What is the point of registering for a party if you're going to vote differently?

      What's the whole point of registering? This is one of the situations where an ID card comes in handy. The state knows that you exist (yeah, start screaming 'Big Brother!' now), and you get your voting notification indepent from any political parties. That's how it works in germany, the whole US voting stuff seems highly obscure to me.

      --
      Life is just nature's way of keeping meat fresh.
  119. Re: by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    A vote for Bush is a vote for all of the above. Please leave my country.

    Well, given that the majority of the US apparently supports Bush, which "your country" am I in?

    And if you ask people of differing opinions to leave your country, it's no more the USA as we know it. You've destroyed political freedom.

  120. Re: by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    Completely off-topic but vaguely related: Wednesday I returned from a math club work meeting at about 4:30. I left for church choir practice at around 6:00.

  121. Re: by Indianwells · · Score: 1

    Unless the election was FRAUDULANT.

  122. Re: by Indianwells · · Score: 1

    Please see: http://www.indyvoter.org/ http://www.blacboxvoting.org Etc. ...

  123. Okay, fine. Let's recount all the close states. by H0NGK0NGPH00EY · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Fine. Re-count Ohio. It won't change anything. While we're at it, why don't we recount Pennsylvania, whose vote count was actually closer than Ohio? Or Wisconsin, which was even closer?

    Oh, that's right. We only want to recount states that may cause Kerry to win.

    Is it really every vote that we want counted, or is it just every vote in certain states?

    Ohio: Bush by 136,483 votes, 2.5%
    Pennsylvania: Kerry by 128,869 votes, 2.3%
    Wisconsin: Kerry by 11,813 votes, 0.4%

    --
    Do not read this sig.
  124. fuck the recount by flyingsquid · · Score: 2, Funny
    I'm starting an armed resistance movement, supported by a Canadian-based group of fighters called the "Free American Forces", modeled on Chalabi's "Free Iraqi Forces". We'll get the French to fund the whole thing.

    Join me in the hills, democratic brothers! Any freedom fighter who dies in the glorious fight to liberate our country goes straight to Democratic Heaven, where nubile, liberal virgins await!

    1. Re:fuck the recount by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Funny

      And with a single post, User #813711 becomes prisoner 655321.

      FlyingSquid, we hardly knew ye...

  125. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ...but at the time there was a lot of false intelligence floating around, and it sure seemed like Saddamm wasn't really planning on letting the US in to check for WMD.

    There was no quesion of Saddam not planning on letting in the US. I seem to recall that weapons inspectors were already back in Iraq by that time and that Saddam had agreed to all their demands in terms of when and where they could look for WMD. Also the weapons inspectors were there monitoring compliance with resolutions set by the United Nations not the myopic US foreign policy.

    L.

  126. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by lav-chan · · Score: 1

    ... Um. Are you really an American? And are you really a supporter of the Libertarian Party?

    Because, you know, you misspelled 'Libertarian' NINE TIMES in a single post. You also made sixteen or seventeen other mistakes. I hope you didn't learn that in private school. :/

  127. Re:Bush? BUSH? by JapaneseChipmonk · · Score: 0, Troll

    If you'd studied Politics you'd realise that politicians are held accountable through elections. Bush was held accountable at the presidential elections and the people decided to keep him on. If you like it or not, he was held accountable and people agreed with what he had done.

  128. Almost, but.... by Chmcginn · · Score: 1

    Not quite. Most of the state (84%) didn't use electronic voting. But... some of them certainly did.

    --
    Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
  129. Re: by gerddie · · Score: 1

    Well, given that the majority of the US apparently supports Bush ...

    Just for the record: What you forget is that 40% or so did not vote at all, therefore, only approximately 30% support Bush, and this is not the majority.

  130. Re: by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    You assume that people who didn't vote don't support the president. Somehow, I would think that if you're truly opposed to Bush, you wouldn't not vote, and that those who support the incumbent are less likely to vote. Either way, you can't say that "only 30% support Bush" - at least some of the nonvoters support him.

  131. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Raven_Stark · · Score: 1
    You must remember the correct spelling of your candidates' names, or at least write them down on a slip of paper beforehand. If you can't spell "John Kerry and John Edwards" or "George Bush and Dick Cheney", perhaps your vote is better off uncounted.

    Thanks, you've just inspired me to never use a spell checker when posting to /. I know many intelligent people who cannot spell. I know many idiots who can spell. If English spelling were based on a logically consistant set of rules maybe you'd have a point, but spelling is almost arbitrary. The ability to remember random strings is a relatively insignificant aspect of intelligence.

    Perhaps an obsessive desire to remember random strings and insistance that others do the same should be a disqualification for voting!-)

    Dyslexics of the world unite!

    --
    http://www.marxist.com/
  132. Re:but... by corbettw · · Score: 1

    Sure he would have one the electorial college but... Wouldn't that be stealing the electon on a technicality?

    You must have been sick the day in Civics Class when they explained the Constitution and how electors work.

    Here's it in a nutshell: the popular vote means fuck-all. The state legislators determine how to pick electors, then those electors pick the President. Technically, the state legislators could use a random lottery to pick 'em, since the Constitution just says "as the State legislators may determine". Nothing is mentioned about ordinary people voting for them.

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  133. Re:A quest to expose elections fraud? by andreMA · · Score: 1

    Much of that $100K will probably be collected from Democrats who would have otherwise donated it to Kerry, had he contested the results... so it's not completely a matter of diverting funds into a recount effort.

  134. There's a reason Kerry et al aren't pursuing this by KalvinB · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Internet is abuzz with speculation that there were so many voting irregularities this election that President Bush may not have won after all.

    But the man who headed the Democrats' team of 3,600 attorneys, spread across the country to address irregularities, says, "that ain't the case." Kerry adviser Jack Corrigan, quoted by the Boston Globe, says, "No one would be more interested than me in finding out that we really won ... I get why people are frustrated, but [Republicans] did not steal this election. There were a few problems here and there in the election. But unlike 2000, there is no doubt that they actually got more votes than we did, and they got them in the states that mattered."

    Other Kerry campaign officials agree.
    --------

    You can find that quote in a number of news sources now. That blurb is from FoxNews.com but you can also find it here:

    http://www.iht.com/articles/2004/11/11/news/elec t. html

    He Lost, MoveOn.

    Ben

  135. Papa smurf is a mutant-commie traitor! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  136. Re:but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Frankly I am a bit of an eliteist

    You are apparently an elitist who can't spell.

  137. Why a recount is important by robindmorris · · Score: 2, Insightful
    There is a great deal of evidence that the precincts that had the highest rate of "spoiled" ballots where predominantly African American. Whilst a ballot-counting machine can't determine the "will of the voter" if there is a hanging chad, a manual recount certainly can. Also, a punch card is rejected if any ballot is unclear - so even if the chad for dog-catcher is hanging, the one for president may be very clear indeed. It's important that these spoiled ballots are counted.

    And then there's the situation with the provisional ballots.

    See Just count the ballots at the back of the bus.

  138. Re: by CptNerd · · Score: 1

    Exit polls are statistical estimates, not actual enumeration of votes.

    But, your logic is the same that people are trying to apply to the census, where actually counting people isn't as important as statistically estimating how many are "undercounted" and "correcting" the actual enumeration.

    --
    By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
  139. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *shrug* he also replied to a post that said basically "libertarians hate bush" with a post that basically said, "no, you're wrong. libertarians hate bush."

  140. Re:Okay, fine. Let's recount all the close states. by Hassman · · Score: 1

    No. Why waste time in states that won't sway the election?

    WI won't. Ohio will. If they find Ohio for kerry this time around, expect Bush to want a recount in PA...

    What we need is a better voting system. The electorial college is crap. It needs to be updated.

    --
    -Mark
    Dovie'andi se tovya sagain.
  141. Re:Bush? BUSH? by stanmann · · Score: 1
    >And Congress did declare war.

    You are factually wrong. Congress authorized the use of force. How a falsehood could be labeled insightful is beyond me.
    If I "authorize" my fist(the executive branch) to punch you in the face(use force) I'm starting a fight(declaring war) the use of semantics by those "opposed to war and in favor of force" is one of the many things that lost kerry the election.

    >but at the time there was a lot of false >intelligence floating around, and it sure seemed >like Saddamm wasn't really planning on letting >the US in to check for WMD.

    Once again, you are factually wrong. In the build up to the war Saddam allowed unprecedented access for us to search for WMD. International weapons inspectors found absolutely nothing despite even greater access than they had before they were kicked out.
    Unprecedented and still inconsequential and incomplete. Funny how that works... If I allow you unprecedented access to my front porch, but keep you out of my kitchen bathroom and bedroom, I still haven't let you search my house.
    --
    Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  142. Re: by stanmann · · Score: 1

    I bet he didn't use metric. :)

    --
    Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  143. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the best weapon against abortion is Charity and thus Kerry was the pro-seamless-garment-of-life candidate all along

    Tax records show that Bush & Cheney have been much more generous charitable givers than Kerry & Edwards, but you keep telling yourself whatever you gotta tell yourself to make it okay that you are voting against the principles of your own religion.

    Then again, I suppose you think of taxing poor working families to give AFDC checks to poor non-working families the only real definition of "Charity." Too bad for that argument that the Bush administration did nothing to change Clinton-era welfare systems in the first term, apart from broadly extending Unemployment benifits.

  144. Re:Okay, fine. Let's recount all the close states. by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1

    In announcing their choice for a recount location, Cobb and Badnarik talk a lot about "reports of irregularities", "the integrity of the democratic process" being compromised, "voter intimidation", "voter suppression", and so on. Are we understand that these things are fine as long as Kerry won a state, but make one "compelled to demand a recount" if Bush won?

    A recount and investigation should look into all the states, especially the close ones, whichever way they fell. How accurate WAS electronic voting? Were the new provisional ballot rules followed properly, or were they a means of stuffing ballot boxes with phony votes? How much "voter intimidation" took place in states where exercising your First Amendment rights with a Bush bumper sticker would get your tires slashed?

    If Cobb and Badnarik are really serious about looking into irregularities and protecting the integrity of the democratic process, let's do it across the country. Sure, Ohio has the appeal of that of the "if this one state had voted the other way, the whole election would have turned out differently" states, it was closer than Florida or Texas, but Bush still won by a significant margin and counting the ballots over and over isn't going to alter that. Rather than doing a symbolic recount in a single state that was neither the closest nor home to the most irregularities, we should be looking into reported problems across the country and trying to fix things instead of doing this sort of ridiculous grandstanding.

  145. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You talk like there was a realistic alternative to all of the above on the ballot.

  146. Re: by fenris_23 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Why does that matter when so many of them think their God wants them to elect George Bush? Regarding the non-"values" Bush voters, if they are not one of the few rich individuals set to gain big these next four years, then what else should we call them?

    The irony is that one of the biggest voting groups for Bush is the lower middle class. Most of these people are either not college-educated, possess a two-year degree, or work in a trade. These people are the primary victims of Bush's tax cut bonanza and his lack of concern for outsourcing.

    If God didn't make them do this to themselves, then what should we call them?

  147. Re:but... by Golias · · Score: 1

    When people say "left" in America, they mean "left" in the American sense of the word (Howard Dean, Jessie Jackson, and yes... John Kerry), not in the European Socialist sense of the word.

    I know that no leader among the Democrats has been left enough to keep the wackos at the Villiage Voice happy, but in the US, anybody that far left is considered part of the lunatic fringe.

    In fact, no Democrat since Mondale has advocated returning tax policy to pre-Reagan levels.

    For that matter, the left-right battles of 40 years ago on social issues are mostly over, with the exception of abortion rights. All of the other hot-button civil rights issues of the 20th Century (integrated schools, anti-segregation laws, sexual harrassment and discrimination, accissibility for people with disabilities, etc.) have not only been won by the progressives, but won so firmly that you would have a hard time finding a Republican who disagrees with them.

    On social issues, we are down to wrangling over whether same-sex couples can call their union a "marriage" or not. On fiscal matters, we are debating on whether the top marginal rate should be in the high 30s or the low 30s.

    In spite of how noisy the last election was, the fact is that most Americans have already reached a consensus on most of the big issues. There are new defninitions for "right" and "left", based on how one wishes to make minor tweaks within the kind of society we currently have, and that's simply how it's going to be for the immediate future.

    --

    Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

  148. Ok, I donated. by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 1

    Just $20, but I really want to be a part of this.

    --

    "Reactionaries must be deprived of the right to voice their opinions; only the people have that right." - Mao

  149. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    Tax records show that Bush & Cheney have been much more generous charitable givers than Kerry & Edwards, but you keep telling yourself whatever you gotta tell yourself to make it okay that you are voting against the principles of your own religion.

    Ah, but how generous are Bush and Cheney with GOVERNMENT money? Are they willing to give up say, 1% of all corporate profits to insure that no woman is forced into an abortion ever again?

    Then again, I suppose you think of taxing poor working families to give AFDC checks to poor non-working families the only real definition of "Charity." Too bad for that argument that the Bush administration did nothing to change Clinton-era welfare systems in the first term, apart from broadly extending Unemployment benifits.

    Once again, idiots, being against Bush doesn't mean being for Clinton. One can be equally against both. Heck- I'm equally against Kerry on that score- his wife is yet another one of the parasites that I wish we could rid society of. But unemployment benefits do not an anti-ABORTION program make; I was thinking more about universal health care with a requirement that every woman who tested positive for pregnancy have an ultrasound before any decisions were made.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  150. Spot on. by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    Lets just make sure all the votes get counted ok?

  151. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Have you seen any terrorism in the US since 9/11? Have you ever heard the best defense is a good offense....

    Homer: "Not a bear in sight. The Bear Patrol must be working like a charm."
    Lisa: "That's specious reasoning, Dad."
    Homer: "Thank you, dear."
    Lisa: "By your logic I could claim that this rock keeps tigers away."
    Homer: "Oh, how does it work?"
    Lisa: "It doesn't work."
    Homer: "Uh-huh."
    Lisa: "It's just a stupid rock."
    Homer: "Uh-huh."
    Lisa: "But I don't see any tigers around, do you?"
    Homer: "Lisa, I want to buy your rock."

  152. I Smell a Rat - interesting article re: Florida by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.zogby.com/soundbites/index.cfm I Smell a Rat I smell a rat. It has that distinctive and all-too-familiar odor of the species Republicanus floridius. We got a nasty bite from this pest four years ago and never quite recovered. Symptoms of a long-term infection are becoming distressingly apparent. The first sign of the rat was on election night. The jubilation of early exit polling had given way to rising anxiety as states fell one by one to the Red Tide. It was getting late in the smoky cellar of a Prague sports bar where a crowd of expats had gathered. We had been hoping to go home to bed early, confident of victory. Those hopes had evaporated in a flurry of early precinct reports from Florida and Ohio. By 3 AM, conversation had died and we were grimly sipping beers and watching as those two key states seemed to be slipping further and further to crimson. Suddenly, a friend who had left two hours earlier rushed in and handed us a printout. "Zogby's calling it for Kerry." He smacked the sheet decisively. "Definitely. He's got both Florida and Ohio in the Kerry column. Kerry only needs one." Satisfied, we went to bed, confident we would wake with the world a better place. Victory was at hand. The morning told a different story, of course. No Florida victory for Kerry--Bush had a decisive margin of nearly 400,000 votes. Ohio was not even close enough for Kerry to demand that all the votes be counted. The pollsters had been dead wrong, Bush had four more years and a powerful mandate. Onward Christian soldiers--next stop, Tehran. Lies, damn lies, and statistics I work with statistics and polling data every day. Something rubbed me the wrong way. I checked the exit polls for Florida--all wrong. CNN's results indicated a Kerry win: turnout matched voter registration, and independents had broken 59% to 41% for Kerry. Polling is an imprecise science. Yet its very imprecision is itself quantifiable and follows regular patterns. Differences between actual results and those expected from polling data must be explainable by identifiable factors if the polling sample is robust enough. With almost 3.000 respondents in Florida alone, the CNN poll sample was pretty robust. The first signs of the rat were identified by Kathy Dopp, who conducted a simple analysis of voter registrations by party in Florida and compared them to presidential vote results. Basically she multiplied the total votes cast in a county by the percentage of voters registered Republican: this gave an expected Republican vote. She then compared this to the actual result. Her analysis is startling. Certain counties voted for Bush far in excess of what one would expect based on the share of Republican registrations in that county. They key phrase is "certain counties"--there is extraordinary variance between individual counties. Most counties fall more or less in line with what one would expect based on the share of Republican registrations, but some differ wildly. How to explain this incredible variance? Dopp found one over-riding factor: whether the county used electronic touch-screen voting, or paper ballots which were optically scanned into a computer. All of those with touch-screen voting had results relatively in line with her expected results, while all of those with extreme variance were in counties with optical scanning. The intimation, clearly, is fraud. Ballots are scanned; results are fed into precinct computers; these are sent to a county-wide database, whose results are fed into the statewide electoral totals. At any point after physical ballots become databases, the system is vulnerable to external hackers. It seemed too easy, and Dopp's method seemed simplistic. I re-ran the results using CNN's exit polling data. In each county, I took the number of registrations and assigned correctional factors based on the CNN poll to predict turnout among Republicans, Democrats, and independents. I then used the vote shares from the polls to predict a likely number of Republican votes per county. I compared this 'expected' Republican vote to t

  153. Re:There's a reason Kerry et al aren't pursuing th by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i dont expect a recount to change the winner, but i expect it to find the problematic districts that are either rampant with fraud, or just generally innocent problems.

    those things should be fixed. and anyone using fraud in an election should be tried for treason

  154. Re:Okay, fine. Let's recount all the close states. by barawn · · Score: 1


    Ohio: Bush by 136,483 votes, 2.5%


    More like ~132,000 or so. 4000 of those votes for Bush in Gahanna in Columbus, OH were some election worker (or machine)'s fantasy, remember?

  155. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is the final exit poll data bush by 1 which puts bushes victory in the margin of error for the exit poll (+/- 3). Also how accurate can an exit poll be if only 13,047 voters made up the exit poll in an election of well over 100,000,000 people. have a nice day, your average anonymous coward

  156. Can non-Americans donate? by relaxmax · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was curious to know if non-Americans can donate as well. As for all of us who're not in the US, we feel that mankind as a whole stands to pay the price for Bush's reelection.

    -- rxMx --

    --
    Love all, Trust few, Follow one.
  157. I second my parent by relaxmax · · Score: 1

    I second this

    -- IndianCitizen --

    --
    Love all, Trust few, Follow one.
  158. Open-up the source? by relaxmax · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I was genuinely wondering if there's a way for the e-voting machine manufacturers to reveal the exact code that was used on the physical voting machines. This could put to sleep quite a bit of the often-unpleasant debating going around all over the world (apart from /., of course).

    -- rxMx --

    --
    Love all, Trust few, Follow one.
  159. Re:Bush? BUSH? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell me, have our "inspectors" who now have complete access found the weapons yet?

  160. Re:Bush? BUSH? by stanmann · · Score: 1

    No, but there are still 45000 floorboards left to peel up.

    --
    Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
  161. Re:Bush? BUSH? by mpaon · · Score: 1

    Sometimes the only way you can know the truth is by confronting it. And that is what "W" did. And when you find out your wife was not sleeping with someone else but you are already divorced and NOW she is. It is too late to go back and say "Honey, I didn't mean it." If you don't understand this maybe her life is much better without you.

    I don't know about you, but it sounds like you just fucked up your marriage. For no reason. Because of bad information. (sound familiar?)

  162. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You didn't manage to represent his argument correctly, whether out of stupidity or sheer denial. His argument was "Your side is stupid because by calling the other side stupid rather than spending more time presenting cogent arguments on the issues, you hurt your own cause."

    You didn't understand that?

  163. Re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    That's not the point. Both sides have frothing, raving hatredbots. His impression seems to have been (as well as mine), that there was a lot more of that coming from the followers of the Democratic Party.

    Did you not understand, or decide to just talk past him? Either way, I'd guess you were one who was part of the problem.

  164. Re: by gerddie · · Score: 1

    Sure, absolute numbers may differ, but given the number of non-voters, you can not claim that the majority of the US supports Bush - there is still a long way from 30% of the votes to 50% = being a majority. Anyway, I would guess that most of the non-voters either don't care, or they just don't think that it would make a difference. Therefore, it is my opinion that non-voters can not be counted as supporters of any candidate.

  165. Re: by Indianwells · · Score: 1

    Sure I can, in light of the massive fraud that seems to have gone on: http://ucdata.berkeley.edu/new_web/VOTE2004/index. html Covered elsewhere in Slashdot. Sorry for the flamebait, I'm still quite angry that the voting process was hacked.

  166. Re:Conspiracy theories taken to their natural limi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's libertarian. LIBERTARIAN!! How do you manage to know so much about their stances on various policies and issues but can't spell there name?

    Just think liberty^Harian, okay?