Slashdot Mirror


Court Filing On How 2004 Ohio Election Hacked

chimpo13 writes "A new filing in the King Lincoln Bronzeville v. Blackwell case includes a copy of the Ohio Secretary of State election production system configuration that was in use in Ohio's 2004 presidential election when there was a sudden and unexpected shift in votes for George W. Bush."

82 of 504 comments (clear)

  1. Unexpected? by cmdr_klarg · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Unexpected? Really? When the CEO of Diebold was "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president"?

    --
    THE SOFTWARE, IT NO WORKY!!!
  2. Re:This just proves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    or a nonpartisan transparent one that works and is sized in proportion to the population, area governed, world role, and gdp

  3. Re:Funny how by Tsingi · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The thing is, he didn't win, he stole the election. The same thing happened in Florida.
    That ass should be in jail for so many reasons.

  4. Re:This just proves by cgenman · · Score: 2

    Sadly, I fear that the DNC response is probably "We need to figure out how to do that too."

  5. Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Real Clear Politics poll aggregation showed that Bush led Kerry going into the election in Ohio, and had led nationally since the September before the election - it would have been surprising if Kerry won. Exit polling can be and has been unreliable - that's why it's only used as an indicator and not on it's own (precinct turnout is usually more indicative of who's going to win).

    Really, just let it go. Kerry just lost - sometimes that's all there is to it.

    1. Re:Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by rockclimber · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But Thats the Problem with election Machines, or E-Voting.
      You can't know. You can't Recount. You don't know the source. YOU CAN NOT VERYFY.
      This is why e-voting undermines the base of democracy.
      What we need is a competition for voting macines, like for encryption http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Encryption_Standard. To declare an open standard after the worlds brightest securtiy people tried 4-8 years to break it.
      Oh, and Voting over the Internet or by text messaging? I can think of so many things that can go wrong that it should be illegal.

    2. Re:Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by phlinn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Personally, I prefer human readable paper ballots. It's simply not as easy to fudge physical ballots as elecrontic ones.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    3. Re:Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 2

      Really, just let it go. Kerry just lost - sometimes that's all there is to it.

      Letting Bush-vs-Kerry go is easy. That's all done.

      Saying "that's all there is to it" is total bullshit, though. How many other races were decided by the same machines in the 2004 elections? How many other elections were these machines used for? Did you check the exit polls for all of those too?

      How do you feel about the next election, which is likely to be run based on identical policies, known to be vulnerable?

      If you find a security hole in your server, and then determine that your companies' losses were probably not caused by one particular attacker at one particular time, exploiting that one particular bug, you don't say "that's all there is to it," and decide to not fix the bug.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    4. Re:Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by DavidTC · · Score: 2

      Because technology can not be observed. I do not understand why this is not obvious to people.

      There is a secret vote. People must not be able to see the votes after they are made.

      Meanwhile, the system must be set up where votes cannot be added or removed in secret. (It means jack-shit if you can prove your vote was in there if you can't prove if the other votes were or not.)

      You could do one or the other with a computer. You could have a computer that does the first, easily. You could have a computer that does the second, easily.

      You cannot have a computer that does both. No, I don't care what sort of stupid mathematical tricks you get up to...you can perhaps verify that your vote is in there, but you can't verify that votes were not added by some piece of software somewhere. (And now you've added vote buying if you let people see their vote, and you've rendered the system useless if you don't...it's pointless to prove the vote is 'there' if you cannot actually look at it add to the vote totals.)

      This is because computers will do whatever you tell them to, and barring decades worth of time with electron microscopes, no one can ever prove what that is.

      Luckily, we appear to operate in a universe with actual laws of physics, and one of those rules is 'no teleporting'. So, if instead of putting the votes in a computer, where they can magically be added to or removed, we can put the votes in a big box that we make sure is empty to start with, and then watch the box.

      It's not fucking rocket science. If we ever come out with teleporters, or with nanotech that can run around changing the print on ballots, we'll have to reevaluate the process, but until then, using the actual laws of physics seems much saner than pretending we can keep track of everything that might happen in a computer.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    5. Re:Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by racermd · · Score: 2

      Las Vegas casinos have better security than what we (collectively) put on election systems. There's a good reason for that as Las Vegas casinos need to be vigilant about their income else they risk violating a bunch of laws under which they operate. After all, they need to pay taxes on that money. The more money they bring in, the better for them and the better for their community. There are cameras that watch the entire flow of money coming in and going back out to make sure that nobody is trying to beat their system.

      There is certainly as much motivation to tinker with election results as it would be to get a little more money out of a casino. Why we aren't putting better security measures in place for elections than what already exists completely baffles me. How can I trust that my vote actually counts as I cast it? How can I trust our government at all if they don't value our votes as much as a casino values their money? And the only thing I trust about casinos is that they're legally and openly screwing their customers while filming it to ensure they're doing it properly and it doesn't violate any rules. That should tell you how much I trust our government, regardless of which way the political winds blow - but that's a story for another time.

      At this point, I am so dismayed that we (collectively) can't get this crap figured out. It's not difficult. It's not terribly more expensive than what we already have (which amounts to nearly nothing). Either let's get it done or tear it out and start over.

      I'll be back over here shaking my fist at the kids on my lawn, now...

      --
      My sources are unreliable, but their information is fascinating. -- Ashleigh Brilliant
    6. Re:Bush led in pre-election polls in Ohio by Politburo · · Score: 2

      The found votes were from different areas, not all in one district. In King County, Gregiore got 65% of the additional votes. She got 57% of the total votes in that county. All of the King County votes were found in a 3 day period (and most were on one day), not "weeks on end".

  6. Mod parent FUNNY by damn_registrars · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hmm, could that sudden shift have been caused by people getting off of work and then voting?

    That's a good one, there. We heard about the massive lines in the largest cities in Ohio, where working people had to stand in line for several hours to vote if they lived in less-than-affluent districts. Many people were unable to take enough time off of work, and simply walked away from the line, not casting a vote at all.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Mod parent FUNNY by damn_registrars · · Score: 2

      Whose fault was that?

      The significant choices that were made by the republicans in charge included the number of voting machines available per location, which directly influences how long it takes to get through the line. There was nothing even remotely approaching equality in terms of voting machines per capita in various voting districts in Ohio. Suburban whites found they could vote in 5 minutes, urban blacks found it took 5 hours or more.

      And am I supposed to believe that not only do all "working people" vote Democrat, they all voted Kerry?

      No, but you should be aware of the blatant voter suppression effort that took place in Ohio at the hands of the republicans. If all people in Ohio had genuinely equal ability to vote, the results could have been vastly different.

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  7. Wow, who could have seen a conflict of interest? by elrous0 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well, when the CEO of Diebold (the company making the voting machines), Walden O'Dell is also doubling as a major Bush fundraiser and promising to "to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the President", is anyone really surprised that serious questions were raised about these e-voting machines--which were already controversial long before Wally O'Dell ever started fundraising?

    Some things are still best done the old-fashioned way. And voting is one of them.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  8. It was hacked? by KermodeBear · · Score: 4, Informative

    I read through the article and all I found was information that it was possible to do so - but we at Slashdot ALL know that all electronic voting systems are heavily flawed. I didn't see any evidence in the article that voter fraud actually did occur, only that it was possible.

    What IS mentioned is that an intermediate vote count was transferred to another server, but that just means that early vote totals were made available, not that fraudulent votes were cast.

    What is with Slashdot and the craptacular headlines lately?

    --
    Love sees no species.
    1. Re:It was hacked? by nahdude812 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It says that they were set up to be a fallback authority with complete control to be able to modify votes in case the primary systems failed. Those who were responsible for overseeing the systems were sent home by agents of Blackwell, and during that time, control was sent to these fallback servers even though there was no evidence there had been any failed systems to spur it.

      They could only steal votes if they were granted the failover scenario, and the architecture made it easy to do so should that have happened - so easy in fact that it appears evident that it was designed with this purpose in mind. Then, private contractors take control of things late in the evening of the election, transfer control to the fully-falsifiable system, then transfer control back, all without any evidence that there had been failures to trigger the transfer of control.

      They had motive and opportunity, and the design of the system is such that any actual proof against tampering could be falsified without means of detection. You're right, it doesn't say "votes were tampered with," but the only remaining possible evidence would be a confession. The one man who began to disclose more details died in a mysterious plane crash shortly after.

    2. Re:It was hacked? by Baloroth · · Score: 5, Informative

      Oh thank God, someone on Slashdot actually has some sens. All it takes is one quick visit to TFA to see that that news site is the most biased news outlet I have ever seen. Its literally more sensationalist than Fox News, just in the other direction. The people who wrote the article authored no less than 4 books like "Did George W. Bush Steal America's 2004 Election". The entire things takes "it might have been possible to hack the election" to "look! It was possible, so they did!" They don't say "reveals how it might have been hacked", which would be true, they say "was hacked", which they have absolutely no proof of whatsoever. Just suspicions, and their suspicions at that. And saying people died in "a suspicious plane crash"? Thats some nice inuendo right there. They are literally suggesting that Bush had a person killed for testifying against him. Over the top, much?

      --
      "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
  9. Why John Kerry lost by snsh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Kerry's biggest problem in 2004 was not the voting machines in Ohio or Pennsylvania, but his inability to coherently and succinctly answer a simple question.

    In 2004, a ham sandwich would have out-polled George W, but the Democrats nominated John Friggin Kerry. Vote tampering in Ohio does not excuse the Democrats for losing that election.

    1. Re:Why John Kerry lost by CraftyJack · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Vote tampering in Ohio does not excuse the Democrats for losing that election.

      No, but a weak candidate doesn't excuse vote tampering either. No matter which way I vote, I'd like to know that it counted. I'd like to know that it's not being tampered with for profit, malice, or mischief.

    2. Re:Why John Kerry lost by dcavanaugh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Let's not forget how Bush became President in the first place. The Democrats nominated Al Gore in 2000. Everyone remembers how Florida results were within the margin of error for their stupid punch card ballots. But nobody seems to remember that Gore lost his own home state (Tennessee), which in my opinion should result in automatic disqualification. If your own state won't vote for you, go directly to epic fail.

      Bush was one of the weakest candidates in modern times. In a way, he was similar to Nixon. Both were weak candidates who enjoyed the benefit of weaker opponents. Nixon defeated Humphrey in 1968 and McGovern in 1972; Bush defeated Gore in 2000 and Kerry in 2004. Obama might fit into the same discussion, having defeated the Republican throwaway ticket of McCain/Palin in 2008. It remains to be seen if the Republicans can nominate a weak enough candidate to give Obama a second term.

    3. Re:Why John Kerry lost by Arterion · · Score: 2

      As someone who lives in Tennessee, I don't really blame Gore for losing here in 2000. Gore's political ideas were far too progressive for this backwater hellhole. Mainly, he wasn't christian enough, in that he had respect for non-Christians, and in that he relied heavily on science for making decisions, rather than the bible. It really would have been wasted effort if he'd tried. I mean, the people here think that god punishes america with natural disasters because of abortions and gays.

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
  10. Re:oh please by Hatta · · Score: 2

    This whole argument is "it could have happened, therefore it happened."

    If you care at all about the integrity of our electoral system that's the position you have to take, no matter who benefits from the error. We won't send a man to jail when there's reasonable doubt, why should we elect a president on less?

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  11. Seriously, making excuses? by Lance+Dearnis · · Score: 2

    Exit polls are, frankly, more reliable then our actual vote tallies now. The Florida ballot was, quite clearly, confusing. Go look at it from a statistical perspective - Buchanan's results were clearly skewed, as acknowledge by everyone but Bush (Meaning, Buchanan agreed they were screwed up too!), because only Bush had soemthing to gain. Oh, and he was elected president without a plurality popular support. In Florida, back then, the Republicans clearly proved that they were in this to win the presidency, not win an election. If you want to contest this, offer more proof.

    Meanwhile, in this article, the argument is not as simple 'It COULD have happened therefore it happened", which would be the grounds you would use to contest any election in any system no matter what. No, here, you have a clearly partisan system, you have an unexplained security lapse, you have an unexplained vote shift. You have strong circumstantial effort of foul play - and while it's not enough to convict someone, this bloody well should have invalidated the election results and forced a revote. You need to know that your election system is clean and reliable, and in this, Ohio's system failed - there's just too great of a chnce for the election to have been stolen to tolerate it. We're America. Run another election. We're supposed to care about that, right?

    1. Re:Seriously, making excuses? by jimbolauski · · Score: 2

      Exit polls are very accurate if done properly, Ohio wasn't the only state with discrepancies in 2004 Florida, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada and Iowa exit polls all showed Kerry winning and none of them he did win. Either there was a fundamental flaw in the exit polls of those swing states or there was election fraud in many states.

      --
      Knowledge = Power
      P= W/t
      t=Money
      Money = Work/Knowledge so the less you know the more you make
  12. Re:This just proves by Jawnn · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sadder still, the electorate will continue to care more about American Idol, instead of rising up in utter outrage about what has been done to their nation.

  13. Re:Funny how by Overzeetop · · Score: 2

    Most of those people are the same ones that said if you leave the financial instruments market unregulated, all hell will break loose.

    8% - that's quite revisionist. I believe they were talking "north of 10%, and possibly 15%" before the stimulus. But hey, believe whatever Rush tells you today.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  14. So what? by FiloEleven · · Score: 2

    By the time it comes down to actually voting for one of two "viable" candidates, the statist agenda is bound to be fulfilled. There are meaningful differences between Republican and Democrat, but on the whole they will both tend to do things that increase the role of federal government in our everyday lives and insidiously undermine our rights.

    Give me a third party with the size and principles to actually change the course of government and I'll care more about what happens in the final round of elections.

    1. Re:So what? by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There are no meaningful differences between Republicans and Democrats, unless you count their donors. It is, and has been for some time, a one-party system with the veil of "choice" pulled over the eyes of the voters. Both parties increase the power of the Federal government (against the constitution and the will of the people), and both parties want more of our money.

      The only difference (if you can call it that) between the parties (besides the mascot) is their stance on "scary social problems" like gay marriage and abortion. Both of which have nothing to do with governing and the federal government, if it were Constitutionally sound and legal, would not be involved in either item at all. The Constitution makes clear what the federal government can do, yet we keep electing these asspiles who ignore it.

      I wish there was enough outrage to give a third party support, but it appears the deck is stacked against any candidate that isn't an elephant or donkey.

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    2. Re:So what? by e3m4n · · Score: 2

      After the oil spill incident I realized it doesnt matter who wins, they still follow orders of some other puppet master. For two months the POTUS didnt even comment on the spill let alone take action. It was if he was told to run interference. In 2003 our current president, then senator, was adamant against war in general. I truly believe he was against war. After 3 years the gitmo base is still open (something he was against), we still have troops in Afghanistan and Iraq. We supposedly announced troop withdraw in Iraq but the numbers are still much higher than their 2003 - 2006 levels pre-surge. Now we are in a third war in Lybia. In fact the president is blatantly violating the war powers act (60 days) by another 30 days and counting. The white house response? This isnt a war, its "kinetic military action". I kid you not, that was the word play used to side-step the constitution. This is not a warmonger, quite the opposite. For the current president to do the same sort of thing we blasted the previous president of doing, seems to prove they are just front-men for the real people calling the shots. The elections are just a competition to see who gets lifetime retirement benefits for a small length term.
       

    3. Re:So what? by Cajun+Hell · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Give me a third party with the size and principles..

      Maybe someone should give you a pony too.

      It's particularly disappointing that you want the size given to you. It sounds like you're saying you refuse to vote for real candidates (assuming someone else does the job of giving them to you), unless a bunch of other people vote for them first (of course, by then, it's too late and the candidate has lost, because you refused to vote along side them, since that candidate's victory had not already been assured).

      Your attitude is why we can't escape the Democrats and Republicans. You are the problem that you're complaining about.

      Imagine the world where Thomas Jefferson wrote:

      When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, we can only hope that someone gives those people what they want. King George is bad, and we humbly request him to appoint a new king. (We don't care who; that's not our problem.) If he refuses to do so, we will continue to recognize his authority but we'll be slightly irked.

      --
      "Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
    4. Re:So what? by Sebastopol · · Score: 2

      "The only difference (if you can call it that) between the parties (besides the mascot) is their stance on "scary social problems" like gay marriage and abortion. Both of which have nothing to do with governing and the federal government, if it were Constitutionally sound and legal, would not be involved in either item at all. The Constitution makes clear what the federal government can do, yet we keep electing these asspiles who ignore it." A budding federalist, I see? "Nothing matters... except these small irrelevant issues". For you they are irrelevant, but for gays and women, they are quite huge. States rights or not, these are big issues that need federal referees, and hence, federal policy. I'm not condoning the idiocy on the hill, but dismissing two very, very large issues as "scary social problems" which you believe have no federal responsibility is quite cavalier, and IMHO, a horribly pretentious and elitist philosophy which completely ignores the entire concept of government.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
  15. Re:Funny how by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Check your facts. News orgs. did check in FL after the 2K election and found that Bush would have won. He did not steal the election. However, I disagreed with the Supremes when they wrote that it was too late and gave Bush the win.

    Except for that whole removing thousands of democratic voters from the roles even though they were qualified to vote thing, right? I'm sure that had no possible impact on an election that hinged on a few hundred votes, right?

  16. Re:Funny how by ByOhTek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Umm... The unemployment numbers have always been garbage. The length of time that unemployment could be collected has been increased, so the numbers went up.

    The Republicans would drop it to a month, and the numbers would be down to a couple of percent, and they'd say "Look how we improved things! Low unemployment!" while people are jobless, starving in the streets.

    --
    Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
  17. Re:oh please by elrous0 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Oh, there is way more to this one than mere liberal whining and "it could have happened, therefore it happened." I fully concede that the whining over the 2000 election was unwarranted (and frankly made the Dem's look like sore losers, which was embarrassing). But in the particular case of Ohio in 2004, there was some REALLY FISHY stuff going on there. The CEO of the company making the e-voting machines was a major Bush fundraiser (which is highly unethical and a serious conflict of interest in and of itself), promising to help deliver Ohio for Bush in fundraising letters. Combine that with the discrepancy between the results and the exit polling, and you have a situation where serious questions have to be raised about the whole situation there. And O'Dell later resigning from Diebold amid charges of insider trading a year later didn't exactly bolster a reputation for honesty on his part. The whole thing cast a real cloud over the legitimacy of the results in Ohio.

    Does all that NECESSARILY point to corruption? Of course not. But it sure as hell raises the question of it.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  18. Re:This just proves by dkleinsc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Actually, what you need is a political culture in your state that values integrity and good ideas over party loyalty. A great example of this is New Hampshire: Their Secretary of State, Bill Gardner, has been in office since 1976, throughout both Democratic and Republican governorships and legislatures, mostly because he's very good at his job and widely seen as valuing clean elections expressing the will of the voters.

    Compare that to Ohio, where Secretary of State is often a very politicized position and where Ken Blackwell (the defendant) was doing everything he could to ensure that his party would win. These kinds of things were widely reported in newspapers:
    - Rejecting voter registrations from heavily Democratic areas because they were on the wrong paper stock.
    - Rejecting voter registrations from liberal political groups because they had, in order to comply with applicable laws, submitted all the registration forms they got, including ones from Mickey Mouse and the like.
    - Refusing to do anything at all about churches explicitly endorsing Republican candidates (if a religious body endorses a candidate, they are supposed to lose their tax-exempt status).
    - Putting fewer voting machines in precincts likely to vote Democrat than in precincts likely to vote Republican, so that Democratic voters had to wait for hours to vote while Republican voters took about 15-30 minutes.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  19. Re:Funny how by kilfarsnar · · Score: 2
    RTFA:

    Spoonamore also swore that "...the architecture further confirms how this election was stolen. The computer system and SmarTech had the correct placement, connectivity, and computer experts necessary to change the election in any manner desired by the controllers of the SmarTech computers."

    The 2004 election was stolen the new fashioned way. If people haven't they should really Google Stephen Spoonamore. He has this shit down.

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  20. Re:Funny how by Kagato · · Score: 2

    That depends on how you recount. If you recount the entire state gore wins. If you only do the contested areas then bush wins.

  21. Re:You can hack paper votes by goldspider · · Score: 2

    This is America, damnit!

    Why do it RIGHT when you can do it EASY.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
  22. Re:Funny how by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Informative

    You are correct. Unemployment is closer to 25%.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  23. Re:This just proves by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Funny

    But while we're at it, why not replace the old fashion voting with an American Idol style one? I mean, it's not like money didn't already rule the whole deal, let's at least be honest about it. And while we're at it, we could use that lot of 1-900 money to balance the budget.

    It's not like it matters what sock puppet sits on the throne.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  24. Re:oh please by bughunter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not only that, but the Secretary of State in Ohio - they guy charged with making sure the voting process was fair and uncorruptable, and that all precincts had enough resources - was the leader of the Bush campaign for Ohio. The systems engineer was a Rove operative. Everything's done in secret and no one can audit the system. And when the votes are cast, there's a deviation from the poll results that make statisticians suspicious.

    What? The? Fuck? How does that pass ANY sniff test, ever? Especially Blackwell's conflict of interest?

    You know, you can have one orange finger and I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. Two orange fingers, and you'll still get the 'innocent until proven guilty' treatment. But when your whole hand is orange and there's cheese powder on your lips and teeth? Dude, I didn't have to see you do it to know that you stole the fucking cheetos.

    --
    I can see the fnords!
  25. Re:Funny how by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2

    I believe they were talking "north of 10%, and possibly 15%" before the stimulus.

    Hmm, a quick Google, and I find that unemployment rates under Bush peaked at about 7% when he left office (average over his terms looks to be between 5% and 5.25%, based on a quick eyeballing of the graph).

    Since then, it's been higher, though it looks like it may have peaked at about where it is now.

    Note that these numbers are the official numbers, and thus don't include people who are no longer collecting unemployment.

    Note further that the unemployment extensions voted into place over the last few years would tend to result in an apparently higher unemployment rate, IF people tend to be unemployed for longer than the "standard" unemployment period, but not so long as the "revised" unemployment period. Otherwise, it would tend to hide the long-term unemployed from counting as unemployed.

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  26. Even if they prove this by Murdoch5 · · Score: 2

    Even if they prove this last time I checked George W isn't in office anymore and you can't go back in time.

  27. Re:Funny how by ArcherB · · Score: 2

    That depends on how you recount. If you recount the entire state gore wins. If you only do the contested areas then bush wins.

    If you change the rules and recount the whole state, then Gore may have won. However, as I remember it, James Baker, the representative for the Republicans in FL 2000 wanted a full state recount but the Gore people rejected it, opting to only recount the heavily Democratic areas trying to squeeze every vote out of the areas where he was likely to get more votes and leave the Republican areas as they were.

    If what you say is true, and I have heard nothing to back that up, then it sounds like the Democrats screwed themselves. So Bush didn't steal the election. Democrats gave it to him.

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  28. Re:This just proves by sycodon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Just remember, this is the United States of America. We write 80 million checks a month. There are millions and millions of Americans that depend on those checks coming on time," Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner

    Well, THERE's your problem.

    And of course, it seems the more he talks, the less people like him.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  29. Re:You can hack paper votes by lysdexia · · Score: 2

    Just wondering ... are you a Perl coder by any chance?

  30. Re:Wow, who could have seen a conflict of interest by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's what's really annoying about that particular quote: I can't find the full text of it, least not in 15 minutes of noodling around on Google. There are tons of references to that quote, plenty of references to the responses to the quote, but nothing at all which could put that quote into context. I'm not saying it's a case of misinterpretation... but I am saying that we don't have the facts. What we have is a great soundbite.

    Then we have this FTA:

    Spoonamore also swore that "...the architecture further confirms how this election was stolen. The computer system and SmarTech had the correct placement, connectivity, and computer experts necessary to change the election in any manner desired by the controllers of the SmarTech computers."

    Which sums it up nicely. The filings show how it could have been stolen - but do not prove that it was stolen. It seems to me that the same can be said of any election using this equipment and architecture.

    In spite of that, I agree with your statement. The old fashioned way seems to be the one that is most foolproof. While that process can obviously be hacked as well, it typically needs to be done on a machine by machine basis and is quite a bit more traceable.

  31. Lack of transparency by grimmjeeper · · Score: 2

    Most of the accusations of voter fraud stem from one horrible shortcoming in American elections. Quite simply, it's a lack of transparency. If the election work was done out in the open for all to see, we wouldn't have so much fraud. But that's exactly why it's done in secret. Both sides WANT fraud. When things aren't going their way they want to have all sorts of leverage to shift the election to them. Ballot stuffing has a long and glorious tradition in this country. The Republicans are being accused today, though there isn't any hard evidence that would convict beyond a reasonable doubt (again, transparency). The Democratic machine in Chicago is legendary for their fraud. If elections were done out in the open where people could see what's going on, a lot of this fraud would become substantially more difficult.

    But here's the kicker. It really doesn't make all that much difference who actually gets elected. We had a Republican who got us into two wars. He was replaced by a Democrat promising to get us out of war but all he did was get us involved in a third war. Every time one party takes over, they seem to outspend the party they just replaced. And it doesn't matter which party replaces which, the spending just keeps going up. For all of the talk about about the other issues, it seems to me that day to day life doesn't change. All of the bickering about the hot button topics (abortion, gay rights, gun rights, the environment, etc.) is just a way for the parties to pander to the masses, keeping them distracted from what's actually going on behind the curtain. I firmly believe that the Tea Party movement was engineered by the Republicans to distract the more radical portion of their base. They get themselves in a lather about everything, yelling slogans and rallying against big government but end up voting for the Republican candidate as a means of voting against the Democrat. Win for the Republican machine.

    I've said it for a long time. The only real difference between the parties is who they take money from and who they give it to.

  32. Re:This just proves by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually it just proves that we should trust neither slashdot nor truth-out.org for headlines. If you read TFA it essentially says that a case is made that the architecture made it *possible* for fraud to have occurred; and TFA is apparently trying to slant that as proof that it *did* occur. It is less clear whether or not those pursuing the case are trying to make the same point; or if their point is only to prove that the architecture allowed the possibility of fraud.

  33. Re:Working People by hesiod · · Score: 2

    Or you can cast people who disagree with you off in to a position that isn't theirs, but you don't have to think about and can reject on its face. That's political discourse, right?

    It seems you have been paying attention to the world around you. Yes, that is the essence of politics: trying to demonize the "other side" and try to get the idiot populace to hate and/or look down upon them.

  34. Re:This just proves by fruitbane · · Score: 2

    So long as each state is wholly responsible for their own election standards and processes, even for presidential elections, there will be no way to address problems centrally in an organized fashion.

  35. And that's what makes voting machines dangerous by Opportunist · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The voting machines are not beyond doubt. Any time they are being used, the losing side can cry foul. Even if they were "secure", which they are not.

    The reason is that the majority of affected people cannot verify their honesty. I could audit them. Probably. Provided I'd be allowed to. Can you? Possibly. Can Joe Randomvoter? No. Joe'd have to trust us. But why should he? Why should he trust you or me? We could be part of the big conspiracy. We've been bought by those that want to steal the election. And there is actually no good way to disprove it.

    With pen and paper, it's easy. Here, Joe, have all the voting cards, you can read, you can count, go check. It's very easy to debunk conspiracy theories like that with good ol' paper voting. Nearly everyone can recount that.

    This is why voting machines are dangerous to democracy and faith in it. Not because they are insecure and can be rigged. The danger is that it is very hard to prove beyond doubt to technical illiterates that their pet candidate didn't lose because of shenanigans.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  36. Re:This just proves by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

    +1 insightful.

    I agree with you, if he called it for what it is, a class rebellion, the 1000x poor folks vs the 1x rich folks would finally have their say!

    but think about it - 100.0% of the politicians are NOT the poor folks! they and their cronies will be up against the wall when the rev comes. no one in power WANTS the revolution; they have everything to lose!

    calling attention on class struggle is never going to happen here. obama, while black, still acts like a 'rich spoiled white guy'. he's not a leader of his people OR the poor or even the middle class.

    you can't expect the fat cats who are PART of the system to want to change the system. that's foolishness.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  37. Re:Funny how by antifoidulus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If what you say is true, and I have heard nothing to back that up, then it sounds like the Democrats screwed themselves. So Bush didn't steal the election. Democrats gave it to him.

    In more ways than one. The outrage over Clinton's handling of the Elian Gonzalez debacle enraged the quite sizable Cuban American community in Florida. And while Gore did some half-assed back pedaling on the issue, there were probably more than 500 people who were so mad over how Clinton, and by extension Gore, handled the whole thing that they either changed their vote, voted for a 3rd party, or abstained. Had Clinton just let the whole thing slide then the election may have turned out very differently.

    I guess you could consider the whole thing a study in chaos theory. Had Gonzalez's family waited another year to try to flee Cuba history may have turned out differently.

  38. Re:Funny how by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 2

    bush brought religion to the US from day-1. sorry, but I consider that to be his worthless act #1.

    after that, it was an endless stream of crimes against americans. liberties taken, wars started, economies collapsed, companies getting more powerful and the state also getting more powerful. government in your bedroom and 'every child left behind'.

    you want more? I got LOTS more.

    he was a hated asshole and I hope he has a very bad terminal illness and suffers great pain for the rest of his life. he fucked us REAL good and I hope he gets justice for what he did.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  39. Re:oh please by sycodon · · Score: 2

    A "court document" means shit. It was submitted by party with a vested interest and essentially says "See! see!? They COULD have done it."

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  40. Re:Funny how by flaming+error · · Score: 2

    > War is a necessary thing
    I'll let Switzerland know.

    > This was not a war we needed to fight
    Except for our "global political goals"?

    > --at least not so viciously.
    I here we've already booked Joan Baez and Amy Grant for Warstock Iran, sponsored by Nerf, Bungie, and Patagonia.

  41. Meanwhile here in Oregon... by wbav · · Score: 3, Interesting
    We have a different type of electronic voting. Oregon uses vote by mail, and each person fills out a scan-tron form (something a 2nd grader can do). Not only is there a paper trail, but it is proven technology.

    Voting intimidation is eliminated when you vote in your own home and you don't have to deal with crowded poll places. I don't understand why more states don't do this.

    And now for the tangent, more and more we are seeing the evil republican label. Similarly, it is the socialist, Marxist liberals. Both labels are hyperbole. The two parties aren't all that different really, they agree on most things. The thing that kills me is people don't realize that to make it to congress, you must be at least millionaire. You want to know why the Bush tax cuts haven't expired? Why the democrats haven't beaten the republicans over the head with it? They don't want to see their own taxes go up, just like the republicans. They just have to talk a good game to continue to be elected.

    It is only when their supporters really get pissed off that they do something, because they like their cushy job and free, government run health care.

    As for claims of vote hacking, neither side really wants an investigation. Think about it, right now the US is seen is fat, lazy and stupid. Do you really want to add slow to that mix? While it would make a lot of us feel good, from the outside, if a former president is put in jail, what does it look like?

    Probably something like, we're stupid, fat, lazy, slow and cannot properly investigate a crime. The last thing anyone on either side wants to do is suggest that our law enforcement is somehow inadequate, it would just invite others to exploit that. It is the same security theater as TSA, just on a different stage.

    --

    =================
    Unix is very user friendly, it's just picky about who its friends are.
  42. Re:This just proves by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    obama, while half black, still acts like a 'rich spoiled half white guy'.

    FIFU

  43. Re:This just proves by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And the real bitch? They didn't need to hack shit to rig the election, just run off those they didn't want to vote. Look up videos taken in Ohio of the 04 election and you'll see the poor neighborhoods would get one or two broke ass machines while the rich areas got MUCH more machines than required, those that tried to hand voters a slip that pointed out their right to ask for a provisional ballot, since they were making people wait several hours in line only to tell them "you're in the wrong place" and expect them to go do it all over again were first threatened and then arrested, the whole thing was a scam from the word go.

    Of course with BOTH parties now owned legally by the megacorps thanks to Citizens United you might as well not bother, hell the ballots might as well only have two choices "Show your love, vote for supermegacorp!" or "Teach those guys in DC a lesson, vote for supermegacorp!".

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  44. Re:This just proves by ArcherB · · Score: 2

    So long as each state is wholly responsible for their own election standards and processes, even for presidential elections, there will be no way to address problems centrally in an organized fashion.

    You could also say:
    So long as each state is wholly responsible for their own election standards and processes, even for presidential elections, there will be no way to corrupt them centrally in an organized fashion.

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  45. Re:This just proves by bucky0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not to comment at all on the rest of it (I've got a paper to write!) but, I thought it was strange people jumped on that number and conflated it to mean that our government is supporting 80 million freeloaders (not saying you specifically, but if you look at the rabid articles about it on the internet, that's the impression I get)

    a) There's no comparison made to other countries, so that's just an arbitrary measurement in arbitrary units (If I told you the higgs boson was 114 GeV, and didn't give you any sense of scale, would you think that was big or small?)

    b) When you look at the breakdown, 55 million of those checks come from only social security. Are we now arguing that people who collect SS are freeloaders?

    c) Of the remaining 35 million checks, 10 million checks comes from tax refunds (they obviously cluster around april 15th, but when you amortize it, it's 10 million/month)

    d) We're down to 25 million checks then, and pay for veterans benefits (4.1 mil), retirements (2.6 mil), and contractors (1.4 mil) out of that leaving us with ~16.9 million or so checks.

    The breakdown I found has more categories, but I picked off all the things that would be pretty non-contentious (I didn't include medicare or medicade, which seems to be a lot of people's big target these things). It's not like our government is a freewheeling money-printing machine like people keep making it out to be

    --

    -Bucky
  46. Re:Funny how by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

    Unemployment is closer to 25%.

    Citation provided.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  47. Re:This just proves by ArcherB · · Score: 3, Informative

    Actually it just proves that we should trust neither slashdot nor truth-out.org for headlines. If you read TFA it essentially says that a case is made that the architecture made it *possible* for fraud to have occurred; and TFA is apparently trying to slant that as proof that it *did* occur. It is less clear whether or not those pursuing the case are trying to make the same point; or if their point is only to prove that the architecture allowed the possibility of fraud.

    TFA is guilty of not having any idea how computers work. They claim the vote totals were manipulated by a "man in the middle" machine that received votes from the precincts, changed them, and then forwarded them on be counted. The site assumes that electronic data is the same as paper data, meaning that once you send it, you no longer have a copy of it. The article never makes any attempt to show that the data forwarded by the supposed "man in the middle" computer was somehow different than the data it received and even implies that such verification would be impossible. All TFA does is say that the servers that collected the data changed it, as if it were fact, for no other reason than a result they didn't expect, even though it matched polling data prior to the election.

    Here is just a single example of the crap from the article (emphasis mine):

    The filing also includes the revealing deposition of the late Michael Connell. Connell served as the IT guru for the Bush family and Karl Rove. Connell ran the private IT firm GovTech that created the controversial system that transferred Ohio's vote count late on election night 2004 to a partisan Republican server site in Chattanooga, Tennessee owned by SmarTech. That is when the vote shift happened, not predicted by the exit polls, that led to Bush's unexpected victory. Connell died a month and a half after giving this deposition in a suspicious small plane crash.

    So the vote totals went from the precincts (article doesn't say how GovTech received the data or where from, so we have to assume), and sent it to a "partisan Republican server", (can a server be partisan?) out of state, which is where the vote totals changed. What happened to the totals after they hit SmarTech? Does SmarTech host a website that simply posts vote totals to the public? Article doesn't say. We are left to assume that somehow, SmarTech then forwarded the totals to the Ohio Secretary of State. So, according to TFA, the votes went like this: precincts --> GovTech --> SmarTech --> (We don't know, but somewhere official), instead of precincts --> Secretary of State servers. Why?

    Seriously? No independent, or even partisan group has bother to look at the vote totals, reported precinct by precinct on every news network in America received directly from the precincts themselves, and realized that the numbers that reported then were different than the final count?

    This article is pure BS. I think the point is to accuse Republicans of vote tampering to insulate the Democrats from any accusations in the next election. Or maybe they are just hoping that GWB was never really elected. Who knows. It's BS either way.

    --
    There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
  48. Re:This just proves by DavidTC · · Score: 3

    He was using 'tax exempt' as a shorthand for donations to it are tax exempt.

    There are various types of non-profits that exist in various ways. 501(c)(3) is 'charitable' organizations. To be a 'charity', which means people can donate money to it and those donations be tax deductible, it cannot endorse a political candidate. It must serve the public good, or at least not do various things that the government explicitly excludes from 'the public good' list, and promoting individual candidates or legislation is the most obvious exclusion. (And the other most obvious one is that it must be organized to help society at large, or at least some subset of society, and not just members.)

    Other non-profits, generally under the 501(c) area of code, do not have to, for example, pay income tax, but people cannot deduct donations to them from their taxes. For example, the Freemasons are a 501(c)(10). You cannot deduct the dues to the Freemasons from your taxes.

    Almost all churches attempt to fall under the 501(c)(3) 'charity' banner. If they endorse candidates, they risk losing their 'charity' status, which means people cannot get a tax deduction from donations to them.

    The law's over here. Although the 'you can deduct the donation from your taxes to a 501(c)(3)' rule is somewhere over under the personal income tax code.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  49. Re:This just proves by nschubach · · Score: 2

    The fact that it matters that he's "half anything" is the biggest problem. I was kind of hoping that we would have gotten over the whole race thing and not made such a big deal about the color of our President but it seems that racism still has some way to go. I guess it's pure naivety on my part since we still have organizations setup simply to "benefit" people based on race.

    --
    Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
  50. The only thing this proves... by DesScorp · · Score: 2

    ...is that some editors here may have no shame.

    CmdrTaco: Truthout.org? Seriously?

    This is your source? The people that "scooped" the "Karl Rove has been indicted" story? And they never retracted it, even when it became apparent that there wasn't even a scintilla of fact to it?

      And from the story you linked:

    "That is when the vote shift happened, not predicted by the exit polls, that led to Bush's unexpected victory."

    This is demonstrably false. Bush led in pre-election day polls in Ohio, as other posters have noted here. My link... which actually has verifiable evidence... shows that Bush led Kerry in close to a dozen major polls the week leading up to the election, and that the Ohio results near-exactly matched those poll averages.

    You have, whether deliberately or not, I'm not sure, promoted a conspiracy theory.

    Truthout? Is Slashdot's credibility worth that little to you?

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  51. Re:Funny how by dkleinsc · · Score: 2

    Bush did pretty good until he started a war.

    Depends what you mean by "pretty good". He spent a large percentage of his time on vacation in Texas, basically ignored National Intelligence Estimates about Al Qaida, and the only major legislation he pushed through before 9/11/2001 was the giant tax cut, mostly for the wealthy, that now has the budget in a serious hole. So if you like tax cuts on principle, you think he did pretty good. If you think the job of the president includes protecting the US from terrorist attack and responding appropriately if they are attacked, then he did a lousy job.

    And then, as you noted, started not 1 but 2 wars that were basically unnecessary, accomplished exactly 1 of the stated goals after 10 years (for the record, longer than WWI and WWII combined), at enormous cost.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  52. Re:This just proves by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, the elections are run by the state they're in, not "locally". In Ohio, they're run by the Secretary of State, who was Ken Blackwell. That's why Blackwell is the defendant in this court case. Blackwell was also simultaneously the Bush/Cheney 2004 Ohio Campaign Manager, the clearest possible conflict of interest. Evidently that conflict itself is not illegal in Ohio, though it's probably up to the SoS (Blackwell) whether that conflict is prohibited. But in this case the conflict evidently saw the Bush/Cheney campaign manager to change the votes cast to hand Bush/Cheney the state's Electoral Votes. Not to mention how the conflict saw Blackwell short poor/Black (Democratic) neighborhoods of machines in which to cast original votes.

    And of course Ken Blackwell executed directly to whatever plans Karl Rove dictated to him. That's what state campaign managers' jobs are. And both of them have lied about it for years now.

    The real question is why you are lying about how elections are run. You're a Republican, right? And don't tell me you're a "Libertarian", or an "independent". Did you vote for Bush in 2004? 2000?

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  53. Re:MOD PARENT UP by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 2

    The opening paragraph of that article is very interesting:

    IN mid-August, Walden W. O'Dell, the chief executive of Diebold Inc. , sat down at his computer to compose a letter inviting 100 wealthy and politically inclined friends to a Republican Party fund-raiser, to be held at his home in a suburb of Columbus, Ohio. "I am committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year," wrote Mr. O'Dell, whose company is based in Canton, Ohio.

    Contextually, that tell us that he did this in his capacity as a supporting member and fundraiser. I think this makes it more likely to mean that he intended to raise funds either from Ohio constituents, or simply to show financial support within the state of Ohio. The connection between this and voting machine fraud seems to have been a fabrication of later media reports and/or bloggers -- but again, without the full original letter to provide context, we really can't be sure.

    But here's another way to consider it: do people really believe that a high-profile person planning to engage in election fraud would commit that intention to paper and mail it out in hard copy to a couple hundred people in the form of an invite?

  54. Re:Working People by kilfarsnar · · Score: 2

    In 1992 Clinton ran on a platform to lower taxes. In 2004 Senator Kerry said that he would repeal the Bush tax cuts for households with incomes over $200,000, but not the middle-class tax cuts, which he would make permanent. He also proposed a new refundable tax credit for higher education expenses, and changes to the estate tax. On balance, these provisions would reduce federal revenues by at least $425 billion over ten years. For businesses, Senator Kerry proposed a 5 percent (1.75 percentage point) reduction in corporate tax rates, financed by increasing the tax on US corporations that produce goods and services overseas for third-country markets and by the elimination of corporate tax loopholes. From http://www.urban.org/uploadedpdf/1000634_KerryPlan.pdf

    So it's not quite a stark as you seem to think, but your knee reflex is working just fine.

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  55. Re:This just proves by Dishevel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Then you have the states.

    10 Million people getting unemployment checks.

    Fuck. In California they have decided that there are not enough people getting food stamps.
    In order to get more they changed the name of the program to "Cal Fresh" and are spending shiloads of tax dollars to advertize
    how awesome it is to get government handouts.

    Don't get me wrong. I have no love for the Pubs.
    I live in California though. Here the Dems have 100% control over the state.
    When they tell me they need to spend more of my tax money because not enough people are taking full advantage of my tax money
    I get upset. I get upset at the program of course but more than that it pisses me off that you can say that.

    Shouldn't that have to be some hushed up back room deal that could never see the light of day to work.
    How did we get so all fuck stupid that we can sit there and watch commercials encouraging people to get on "The Welfare"?

    --
    Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
  56. It's a politial non-profit by Quila · · Score: 2

    It's a liberal politial non-profit working on the side of the Democrats that mainly publishes liberal opinion pieces. They were rabidly anti-Bush during his term..

    These are the people who claimed Karl Rove had been indicted over the Plame thing, and when told it was false continued to press the claim. Rove was never indicted.

  57. Re:This just proves by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

    The breakdown I found has more categories, but I picked off all the things that would be pretty non-contentious (I didn't include medicare or medicade, which seems to be a lot of people's big target these things).

    What's contentious about MediCare, unless you're an extremist? MC is just like SS: it's something you pay into when you're young, and then you receive payments when you're old. It just has a different aim; SS gives you a pension, while MC is health insurance for old people. But it's certainly not freeloading, because you have to pay into the system with your FICA taxes of 15% while you're working. Taking away MC is basically stealing, because those people paid into the system for decades of their working years, so it's only fair that they receive the benefits they were promised in return for their contributions.

    Medicaid of course is a separate issue as it's not funded by contributions from working people to be returned to them later, it's a hand-out to the poor who never paid into the system, and that money has to come from somewhere.

    b) When you look at the breakdown, 55 million of those checks come from only social security. Are we now arguing that people who collect SS are freeloaders?

    Actually, many of them are. SS isn't one system, it's two systems with the same name. Part of the system is a retirement pension system, where people pay in when they're working, and then collect a pension after they retire. This obviously is not freeloading at all, and IMO should be strongly protected because these people were made a promise. The other part of the system is for poor and disabled people who frequently haven't paid into the system at all. This part is rife with abuse, and isn't funded by contributions from the recipients. How many of those 55 million checks are going to illegal immigrants with anchor babies, people who have a "bad back", etc.? While some recipients here may be genuinely needy, it's not a system funded by the recipients' contributions, but by the taxpayer, and worse it's full of people who are leaches on the system.

  58. You can't hack an election with a server! by davide+marney · · Score: 2

    I wish more technical people would volunteer to work the polls, and could spread the word about the controls built into our voting process.

    The first thing they'd learn is that votes are counted at the PRECINCT level. There's no "master server" in the sky where votes can be manipulated. The real votes are counted machine-by-machine, under the eye of volunteers who swear under oath that it has been operated properly. The machines print out a paper receipt of the tally, and that gets backed-up on hard disk and flash. The paper tape total is called into the Registrar. The paper records of the vote are certified by a local Board of Election, the machines are sealed, and the paper and flash media is typically also sealed and sequestered under a local Court.

    The servers used at the state levels are merely there to REPORT the results of the counts made at each precinct. They are not the actual vote tally. If the database is wrong, the Board goes back to the paper trail and updates it with the correct tally.

    Paper receipts at the voting machines are actually NOT a good idea, IMHO. Paper is a horrible medium for conducting an election: it can get lost, smeared, ripped, crumpled, folded, etc. There's a reason we don't run our accounting systems using ledger-books anymore, but instead use a computer. Those reasons apply double for voting. A computer-based tally is a dream to manage compared to the nightmare that is paper.

    I would like to see better use of paper for making spot-certifications that a machine is operating properly, but I would never want to run a whole election using paper. The error rate of paper can run as high as 1-2%. The error rate of a computer tally is minuscule by comparison.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  59. Re:This just proves by dcavanaugh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What I have seen is the opposite. In many states, ID requirements are weak, and urban districts are notorious for less than robust verification of IDs. Illegal aliens have a number of ways to slip through the cracks and vote. Although the Ohio system may have been designed to facilitate fraud, the low-tech systems of other states were designed to facilitate other types of fraud. There are many ways to rig an election.

    The beneficiaries of tax-and-spend policy are those who receive the spending, not those who pay the taxes. Considering how much money gets pumped into welfare and medicaid, I find it hard to believe that poor people are under-represented at the voting booth.

  60. Re:Wow, who could have seen a conflict of interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    "Here's what's really annoying about that particular quote: I can't find the full text of it, least not in 15 minutes of noodling around on Google."

    Your google noodling needs work. Three minutes: http://www.bbvdocs.org/diebold/wally-odell-letter.pdf

  61. Re:This just proves by MadMartigan2001 · · Score: 2

    Regardless of country or culture, any citizen who is afraid of a (government/tyrant/dictator/power structure) shutdown is a threat to freedom and a minion for the status quo.

  62. Re:This just proves by uniquename72 · · Score: 2

    The beneficiaries of tax-and-spend policy are those who receive the spending, not those who pay the taxes.

    Right. Unfortunately, those people also generally vote Republican: http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/266.html

  63. Re:This just proves by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

    Rural America is the biggest taker of Federal money. They live off Farm subsidies. The ones who don't are on welfare.

  64. Re:This just proves by dcavanaugh · · Score: 2

    Although I wonder if you can call the top 10 states Republican, you can definitely say the bottom 10 are mostly Democrat. Either way, I wish they would adjust that list for the effect of indirect federal spending. For example, Connecticut is ranked 48th at 69 cents on the dollar. But it's also Santa's workshop as far as Pentagon spending is concerned. What Connecticut fails to receive in direct federal spending it receives via indirect Pentagon spending. Connecticut is where they make submarines, helicopters, jet engines, tank engines, and all sorts of avionics. Defense spending is the ultimate perpetual "stimulus" program. Other states have large federal facilities (such as NASA and military bases) that probably escape the tax ROI calculation.

  65. Re:This just proves by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

    LOL wut? Dude the red states are the poorest in the nation by a pretty long shot. States like MS, AR, LA,OK, these states are traditionally poor as fuck and vote republican year in and year out.

    Now if you wanna argue that the MIC is sitting there with their hands out and we waste money on crap like planes and aircraft carriers we don't even need? Right there with ya pal. But trying to say people vote D because they are getting a check simply doesn't jive with the numbers. Hell every one of the poorest states voted McCain in 08!

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.