Voting Machine Glitches Already Being Reported
Neovanglist writes "CNN, FOX, and MSNBC are reporting that voting machines in three states (Ohio, Indiana, and Florida) have already been showing issues, both in the machines themselves and in the training of poll attendants, causing many districts to switch to paper ballots." From the article: "Voters put the Republican congressional majority and a multitude of new voting equipment to the test Tuesday in an election that defined the balance of power for the rest of George W. Bush's presidency. Both parties hustled to get their supporters out in high-stakes contests across the country, Democrats appealing one more time for change, and appearing confident the mood was on their side. Republicans conceded nothing as their vaunted get-out-the-vote machine swung into motion." If you're in the U.S., and you haven't voted already, go do it!
What is wrong with paper ballots?!!!??!? Canada seems to be able to handle paper balloting followed up with results within 24 hours, so what is the deal with all of the money and risk associated with trusting our politics to hackable solutions?
I was out this morning at 7:00am voting and predictably, two of the ten voting machines (20% folks!) at our location would not take their programs...... Take their programs! And how many times do we have to be shown how easy it is to hack the system? When I left after voting, we were still looking at machines that were not working.
Again, paper ballots folks. It's a simple, cost effective solution that is easier to secure than electronic voting. I have yet to see a valid statistical study that demonstrates that electronic voting is inherently more reliable/statistically valid than paper ballot voting. How much is this move towards electronic voting costing the US taxpayer? Was this a favor for political contributors? I think that the evidence is pretty strong for it which might give even more credibility to the FBI in their new focus on corruption in Washington DC politics.
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Dont forget to pour one out for your 500,000 homies in washington DC who are disenfranchised and not represented in congress and therefore wont be voting for anyone besides our corrupt crack-smoking city officials and thus would gladly change places with any of you. :D
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No matter how thin you slice it, its still baloney.
go vote if you have not voted yet. no excuses
if you do not vote, you forfeit all right to complain about anything your government does until november 2008 (by which time, you will have learned your lesson and will vote, right?)
the gore bush fiasco back in 2000 should have finally once and for all taught everyone how much their vote really does matter
imagine the state of the world today had the vote tally been slightly different back in 2000
if the government does something you don't like from 2007-2008, and you do not vote today, then go find a mirror, and look at yourself for blame
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
I'm awfully sure that some script kiddie moron can't alter tens of thousands of paper ballots instantly with a fucking Excel hack.
If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
Here's Fox News' roundup on the voting shenanigans.
It leads with coverage of the voter intimidation in the Virgina Allen/Web race (in which registered democrats are receiving calls informing them, incorrectly, that their polling place has changed), but does not list the candidates or parties involved. And the description of the incidents was written to make them sound vague:
Note the "use" of "quotes" around "single" words when they're really not "necessary."
Okay, so they're not naming names, right? But the second report in the Fox News article gets right to the point:
<Borat>very nice.</Borat>
And then Fox News found it necessary to report some graffiti with a Republican's name in it:
...but no mention whatsoever that Colorado Democrat candidate Jay Fawcett's HQ was also vandalized overnight.
And more naming names:
Compare this to Fox News' coverage of the incidents reported last week in Florida and Texas, in which people who tried to vote Democrat had their votes changed to Republican. Oh yeah, there wasn't any (please post a link if I'm wrong).
And then back to giving vague details that don't mention party affiliation:
Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
However, the real question is, would a direct democratic system be inferior to the reality of our current representative system, which functions nothing at all like how you describe?
Having every citizen decide based on a 5-sentence position statement, seems like it might be better than letting a handful of citizens decide based on that same 5-sentence position statement and a large wad of cash.
"Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."