Florida Ruling May Lead To E-voting Paper Trail 209
dorkus123 points out this Palm Beach Post story which begins "An administrative law judge over-ruled an administrative decision Friday that the 15 counties that use touch-screen voting systems must be able to perform manual recounts in extremely close elections." Prior to this, counties using touch-screen voting were exempt from a requirement requiring that certified voting machines be amenable to manual recounts. wierzpio adds a link to the AP's similar story.
Let's hope taxpayers don't catch them... (Score:2, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bull (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.nydailynews.com/08-22-2004/f r ont/story/ 224449p-192807c.html
"Some 46,000 New Yorkers are registered to vote in both the city and Florida, a shocking finding that exposes both states to potential abuses that could alter the outcome of elections, a Daily News investigation shows."
"The News' investigation also found:
# Of the 46,000 registered in both states, 68% are Democrats, 12% are Republicans and 16% didn't claim a party.
# Ne
Re:bull (Score:5, Insightful)
I want Bush gone as much as anyone. But breaking the rules isn't the right way to acomplish that. After Kerry wins (which I think will happen by a suprising margin), I don't want the Republicans to have anything to bitch about.
-B
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:bull (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bull (Score:2, Interesting)
The recount, once it was finally permitted to commence by the courts, went off without a hitch and was almost finished when the Supreme Court stopped everyt
Re:bull (Score:2)
Re:bull (Score:5, Interesting)
If the correct count is close (i.e. a human would be likely to get it wrong), then we bring in the humans to add error. So yeah, stealing the election...but not by the machines.
During the 2000 election, the Diebold machines in Florida's Volusia County returned negative 16,022 votes for one candidate. Obviously those infallible machines were right, and we wouldn't want to introduce human error by having a recount.
Re:bull (Score:2)
Re:bull (Score:4, Insightful)
How do we know the count is correct?
Who has audited the code? How do we know? Can we trust this entity?
Do you know how we can certify that the version that was audited was on the machine used in voting?
And if there are any procedural issues, how can we retroactively find out what the voters intent was?
Theoretically, you are correct, but the devil is decidedly in the details.
Stupid (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Stupid (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Stupid (Score:5, Interesting)
The right way for paper-backed electronic voting to take place is to have the electronic system present an easy-to-use interface, which can be adapted on-the-fly for various limitations in voters (deaf, blind, unable to grasp objects, etc.). Have that interface be the way to vote. Then print the ballot out on a strip of paper and give that paper to the voter. The voter then walks to the ballot box and places the ballot in, just like we do now.
This eliminates ambiguity in deciding whether a particular ballot is valid or invalid, since the ballot would have a clear indication of the voters' intents.
Sure you can also get a quick, accurate count from the aper-ballot-printing machines, but if you want to do a "Recount", then there aren't any ballots for corrupt or inept voting officials to declare as invalid.
Re:Stupid (Score:2)
How is a laser printed reciept placed in a secure box any different than a punched card or marked paper slip placed in a secure box?
Re:Stupid (Score:4, Interesting)
How is a laser printed reciept placed in a secure box any different than a punched card or marked paper slip placed in a secure box?
In theory, it should be impossible to create an invalid paper receipt.
Compare to hanging chads or someone who checked more than a check only one box.
Re:Stupid (Score:3, Interesting)
If the ballot does come out with "votes" for more than one candidate, the voter can see that and show the election officials to have the problem taken care of.
In this way, any question of election results is far less ambiguous. Those who say that e-voting's purpose i
Re:Stupid (Score:2)
I really wish people would stop calling these things "receipts". They are "ballots", placed in a ballot box by the voter for eventual counting by voting officials.
The computer count should be nothing but a quick guide to the result. But if that result differs substantially from the exit polls and a random sampling of actual ballots, or the result is too close to call, then you throw the compu
Re:Stupid (Score:3, Interesting)
The thing is - no system is failure proof. In the matter of paper receipts someone could print up hundreds of invalid ballots and stuff the ballot box with them after th
Re:Stupid (Score:2)
Re:Stupid (Score:3, Interesting)
The point is simple, you either trust the system to work properly or you don't.
Sure it's simple. I don't trust the black-box voting machines. How many problems have to be reported before people finally realize these machines are not perfect? The paper trail means there is a fallback position when things go wrong.
Just look at the farce that happened in 2000 with Bush in Florida.
As I pointed out in a comment above, the Diebold machines in one Florida county returned a negative number for one candid
Re:Stupid (Score:3, Insightful)
Really, they should do some random checks of machine vs. paper anyway, to allay people's fears...
Re:Stupid (Score:2)
Given the disgust with both main-party candidates in this year's election... I suspect Nader will get at least one vote in each district.
Hell, I've always voted republican, and I'm considering voting for Nader. (For other offices, I'm thinking a straight-across-the-board method of voting for anybody but the incumbent.)
A week for a manual recount? (Score:2)
Welcome to the age of instant gratification (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A week for a manual recount? (Score:2)
Paper receipt? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:5, Insightful)
Diebold doesn't want to, because it's too much trouble to recall all the (election-stealing) machines they already have in place and equip them for printing. <Conspiracy Theory>Or their CEO doesn't want to because he promised Ohio's votes to Bush this year, and he wants to keep that promise.</Conspiracy>
The people who keep suggesting an electronic voting machine work exactly as a fill-in-the-circle paper voting machine are EXACTLY on the right track. Without such human-readable PAPER ballots, electronic voting will never be safe. There absolutely has to be a paper backup to the electronic voting.
p
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:2)
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:2)
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:2)
Presumably the process I watched was:
Scan barcode for (hopefully randomly assigned) voter ID
Program smart-card with ID
Hand card to voter, cross name off list
Put smart-card into machine, vote, register ID as having voted
Return card to official who wipes the ID and reprograms with the next voter ID
Nobody got to vote a hundred times, your name was crossed off the list so you can't get another card
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:2)
Florida's lotto machines.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Florida has had nearly the same machines spitting out the same paper lottery ticket, keeping the same journal, uploading each set of digits scanned from the same "blacken in the circle" forms for nearly * 15 FUCKING YEARS *
Change the firmware, repurpose some hardware, and give us a goddamned voting system with some EQUALLY STRINGENT ACCOUNTING [flsenate.gov]
This process has been carried out billions of times by now, and you'd think that they'd try to utilize some of the expertise accumulated through so many, many, many, many, many drawings (like mini-elections themselves.)This is important: -------------------
Re:Florida's lotto machines.. (Score:2)
Oh wait...
(Failure to provide a human-verifiable paper-trail, at the time the vote is placed, viewable by the voter and then secured in a lockbox should be prosecuted as voter fraud. After a hundred (more?) years of paper voting, I think we know the modes of failure and how to bypass/secure them. Ink on paper is simple and easy to understand. A magnetic-only record is still considered black magic.)
Re:Paper receipt? (Score:2)
Why would it be so damn hard for the e-voting machines to print out a receipt after a person votes - a receipt that is retained by the states? The whole point of e-voting is ease of use - maybe even cheaper deployment. But why would it be so hard to implement such a system...or is it all politics & big business?
It isn't hard to implement. Sample systems have been demonstrated. And yes, it's all about big business making billions of dollars from ill-considered legislation following the 2000 election
Re:Paper receipt -- the Irony! (Score:2)
Diebold's core business is ATMs!!! So, no, it *wouldn't* be that hard for them to design a machine that spits out a receipt. Of course, then the election couldn't be stolen quite as easily...and isn't that the point of creating touchscreen voting without a paper trail???
Florida, home of fair elections... (Score:5, Insightful)
What makes anyone think that Florida will get in right this time?
Re:Florida, home of fair elections... (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously when I hear/heard about the crap going on there it made me want to cut Florida off and send it to Cuba. If your in Florida and Black or a Democrat vote by absentee to make sure your vote counts. Any calls you get that the election day has changed or that they are trying to serve warrents at the voting booth are wrong.
Note that Republicans in Florida sent out a flier to some Miami-Dade Republicans that read "New electronic voting machines do not have
Re:Florida, home of fair elections... (Score:3, Informative)
And don't forget all those that VOTED TWICE [yahoo.com] in the same election.
"the newspaper found that between 400 and 1,000 registered voters voted twice in at least one election, a federal offense punishable by up to five year
Re:Florida, home of fair elections... (Score:3, Insightful)
Where people get turned away from voting stations by police,
I've seen a number of claims that poll workers turned away people, but not that police did it. Closet I've seen is the claim that running traffic checkpoints far from the polls on election night is somehow more likely to apprehend or delay Democrats than Republicans. (Not claiming there ARE no items to that effect. But five minutes of plausible searches with google didn't find 'em for me.) Refere
The quote in the summary, translated into English: (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The quote in the summary, translated into Engli (Score:2)
That was such a poorly worded quote that you couldn't tell whether he over-ruled the paper trail, or that they are NOW required to have a paper trail.
Re:The quote in the summary, translated into Engli (Score:2)
Uh oh! (Score:4, Funny)
Keep it simple (Score:5, Insightful)
Voter makes mark next to chosen candidate.
Voter places ballot in ballot box.
Count ballots in the presense of the candidates.
Here in the UK this system has worked without incident for several hundred years. Any other way opens up the system to irregularities, be they accidental or malicious.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Keep it simple (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Keep it simple (Score:2)
Re:Keep it simple (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Keep it simple (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Keep it simple (Score:2)
The only thing you can really do in a paper ballot is say that any box where you can measure a mark at least x mm long anywhere in it counts. Any paper with exactly one box so marked counts for the candidate whose box was marked; any other paper is invalid.
You might need some objective definition of how dark a mark has to be along that length, to avoid any petty arguments about things which clearly weren't meant to be marks b
Re:Keep it simple (Score:2)
Re:Keep it simple (Score:2)
How long after the polls close does this "checking of questionable ballots" happen?
What happens if a candidate or his/her representative decides to be stubborn and not agree with any of the decisions unless the consensus is for that candidate? It's entirely possible and very likely that these events are more civil in the UK. In the US, too many folks take the view of "I don't care what the right or proper thing to do
Re:Keep it simple (Score:4, Interesting)
There is a bit of info on this page [uiowa.edu] about the problem. The parties used to actually force people to vote on coloured paper depending on who they were supporting, and they made the ballot box transparent - so they could always tell who you were voting for! Of course, if all the officials at a particular voting station were corrupt, then practically anything could happen.
And, while I agree that without the correct technology paper voting as it is used in the UK and Australia is a much better plan, it's not as though the British system [schoolnet.co.uk] hasn't been the home of massive electoral fraud [fact-index.com] over the years. Blackadder probably sums it up pretty well:
Political Commentator: And now it's time, I think, for a result, and tension is running very high here. Mr. Blackadder assures me that this will be the first honest vote ever in a rotten borough. And I think we all hope for a result which reflects the real needs of the constituency. And behind me...yes, I can just see the Returning Officer moving to the front of the platform.
Blackadder: As the Acting Returning Officer of Dunny-on-the-World...
Commentator: The acting Returning Officer, Mr. E. Blackadder, of course. And we're all very grateful, indeed, that he stepped in at the last minute, when the previous Returning Officer accidently brutally stabbed himself in the stomach while shaving.
Blackadder: I now announce the number of votes cast as follows: Brigadier General Horace Bolsom...
Commentator: Cheap-Royalty-White-Rat-Catching-And-Safe-Sewage-
Blackadder: No votes.
Blackadder: Ivor Jest-ye-not-madam Biggun...
Commentator: Standing-At-The-Back-Dressed-Stupidly-And-Looking
Blackadder: No votes.
Blackadder: Pitt, the Even Younger...
Commantator: Whig...
Blackadder: No votes.
Commentator: Oh, there's a shock.
(Pitt the Even Younger turns to his mum and cries)
Blackadder: Mr. S. Baldrick...
Commentator: Adder Party...
Blackadder: Sixteen thousand, four hundred, and seventy-two.
(Cheers are heard.)
...
Commentator: And now, finally, a word with the man who is at the center of this bi- election mystery: the voter himself. And his name is Mr. E. Bla-- Mr. Blackadder, *you* are the only voter in this rotten borough...?
Blackadder: Yes, that's right.
Commentator: How long have you lived in this constituency?
Blackadder: Since Wednesday morning. I took over the previous electorate when he, very sadly, accidently brutally cut his head off while combing his hair.
Commentator: One voter; 16,472 votes. A slight anomaly...?
Blackadder: Not really -- you see, Baldrick may look like a monkey who's been put in a suit and then strategically shaved, but he is a brilliant politician. The number of votes I cast is simply a reflection of how firmly I believe in his policies.
Re:Keep it simple (Score:2)
The way we did this was to have two or three different ballot papers and two or three different ballot boxes. They count each one separately. The council / mayor votes on Thursday night onwards, and the European votes from Sunday onwards.
Re:Keep it simple (Score:2)
In the last general election (not counting the CA Recall), we had something like 15 different races (Gov, Lt. Gov, AG, Sec. State, various other state wide offices, congressional offices, local offices), plus about 12 different initiatives.
Separate ballots for each one would be a logistical nightmare.
Dot Matrix Printers (Score:2, Informative)
Then it scrolls out of view for the next voter.
Everything would be on one continuous numbered roll. With each vote accounted for in the same manner as those numbered voting slips they give us now.
Re:Dot Matrix Printers (Score:2)
Everything would be on one continuous numbered roll. With each vote accounted for in the same manner as those numbered voting slips they give us now.
The point of verification is to allow the voter to cancel. You don't want a continuous roll. One system that has been demonstrated prints and displays a sheet for each voter which can be accepted or rejected. If accepted, it goes in the ballot box, otherwise it's shredded, and the voter tries again.
2004: [Y]es | [N]o (Score:2)
NO PAPER TRAIL FOR THE VOTER! (Score:3, Insightful)
For those who are still not getting it: Guido will wait outside the polling area, if you don't have the "proper" vote, your kneecaps are fucked. Or your family, or your dog. Whatever. This is a silly example, but i figured i'd share with you why paper proof in your hand is NEVER a good idea. Yes, private paper trails for recounts, blah, blah, blah - that's not what i'm talking about here.
Re:NO PAPER TRAIL FOR THE VOTER! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:NO PAPER TRAIL FOR THE VOTER! (Score:2)
People associate receipts like they do when they go shopping. False analogy.
The state takes the reciept.
However what if I vote for 1 candidate yet the receipt says I voted for another? That is the only problem I see.
Re:NO PAPER TRAIL FOR THE VOTER! (Score:2)
That, my friend, is precisely the problem that the paper ballot (calling them receipts lends to the confusion...let's call them ballots) is designed to avoid. If the two differ, the discrepancy screams out "FRAUD!" and heads roll thereafter.
Re:NO PAPER TRAIL FOR THE VOTER! (Score:2, Insightful)
This creates a paper trail equivalent to paper ballots that are turned in with any other election, leaving them available for a recount. The voter doesn't keep anything resembling a "receipt".
From the AP story: (Score:5, Insightful)
Also: **Beats head against wall** Don't they realize that this defeats the entire point of the paper trail?! It needs to print as the vote is cast, so that the voter can verify it. By the time they print it out afterwards, it can already be changed!
Re:From the AP story: (Score:2)
They completely realize this, they were just hoping you wouldn't.
Re:From the AP story: (Score:2)
No, they just hope that 51% of the voting public don't realise this. They know we're not that stupid. They also know we are too politically useless to do anything about it.
Re:From the AP story: (Score:2)
Of course they do. There's no reason for them to fight so rabidly for abusable voting systems otherwise.
It's not ever going to be 100% (Score:5, Insightful)
An election is a measurement. When you take a measurement, you always end up dealing with the S/N ratio. Mostly the punch cards were fine, we got a good enough measurement to be confident of the results. The last election was close enough in Florida that the measurement was down in the noise, and it was hard to get an accurate reading.
I guess part of the problem is the "winner-take-all" Electoral College system, which has done a lot do disenfranchise a lot of voters.
Take me for instance. I am from a state that -always- goes for one of the parties. So the minority in that state never gets represented. If I happen to not agree with the majority of people in my state, I effectively don't have a vote.
It does free me up to (cynically) vote for a third party, FWIW...
Re:It's not ever going to be 100% (Score:2)
Of course, in a system as... interesting... as the US electoral college system, where winner takes all but it's an average of averages, any result too close to call is basically a random number generator. You might as well flip a coin rather than go to the hassle of a recount, because either way you're discarding the beliefs of a vast number of people before you reach the
Re:It's not ever going to be 100% (Score:2)
Historically, the reason for the electoral college is that the authors of the US Constitution were not democrats -- they were republicans (I'm talking the political science definition here, not the political party). The authors feared democracy and worked to limit it in many ways. Electing senators for 6 year terms but only e
Re:It's not ever going to be 100% (Score:2)
> third party, FWIW...
And you would not be thusly free otherwise exactly why?
Statewide, let alone nationwide, elections are always decided by more than one vote. Therefor, Electoral College or no, your vote has only one effect: it gives the candidate you vote for one more vote. This is true whether he wins the election or only gets five votes.
In other words, since no single vote determines an election, voting "third party" is no more "throwing away yo
Re:It's not ever going to be 100% (Score:2)
You're not supposed to, that's why it's called majority rule. Or mob rule, depending on your view.
It sounds like you want to be represented when you are the minority because your view is never in the majority. But I suppose you'd be the first one crying foul if you we
And In this year's election... (Score:4, Funny)
You mean 'chadons' (Score:2)
Seriously though, they do appear to be stupid enough to think that a 'recount' means you just print out the votes FROM THE DATABASE and count them. They don't seem to realise that the FRIGGING PROBLEM IS WITH HOW THE VOTES ARE GETTING INTO THE DATABASE! FU--K!!!!!!!
It makes me so angry I think I might explode...
wait, they were *exempted* ? (Score:2)
For some reason Florida still manages to shock me
Re:wait, they were *exempted* ? (Score:2)
For some reason Florida still manages to shock me.
Um, yeah. With judges like this, anything's possible:
http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/yahoo/orl-asec mjudge26a082604aug26,0,2266263.story?coll=orl-news aol-headlines [orlandosentinel.com]
Still working on the Y1K problem down there, apparently...
Re:wait, they were *exempted* ? (Score:2)
You're telling me a judge actually went out and said, nah, that recount thing is old fashioned, we don't really need it?
No, the person in charge of Florida's elections and protecting the rights of voters said that recounting was not needed. The judge said that Glenda Hood was full of it and did not have the authority to change state laws. So, at least for once, the Florida courts have managed to produce a sane ruling.
The articles miss the big point -- deliberately? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is the corporate media version of what happened in Florida. It deliberately misses the big picture.
What about the fact that Jeb Bush deliberately removed tens of thousands of "supposed" felons (who were 90%+ Democratic voters; he's trying it again this year but is meeting more criticism)? What about the counting of absentee military ballots which violated Florida law? What about the findings by the federal gov't that there was deliberate denials of voting rights to many Flordians? This included false information about voting places/times, closing roads, excessive police presence at selected voting precints.
I'm all for a paper ballot trail and audited code for voting machines and a clear oversight process. But the sham election in 2000 (see link below) was far more deliberate than just an issue of "hanging chads" -- and those issues are completely ignored.
Re:The articles miss the big point -- deliberately (Score:2)
Re:The articles miss the big point -- deliberately (Score:5, Insightful)
State law determines whether a felon can vote or not; some states allow felons to vote (though Florida does not). As discovered and reported by the BBC (since confirmed by others) Jeb Bush used "felon lists" to keep people from voting.
Originally about 170,000 people were kept from voting this way in Florida. Of that number, more than 90,000 people were not felons, and they were perfectly legal to vote. 90% of the 90K+ kept from voting were Democrats.
Nothing fishy there, right?!
Military absentee votes must count, federal law and state can't superceed that.
That's just wrong. State law determines voting procedures and practices. The states are fully in control of how the electors get selected
And remember, it is the Electoral College's electors that choose the president -- the popular vote is just a "democratic" illusion. Some states say that if one candidate gets 50%-plus-one-vote of the popular vote, they get all of the state's electors; other states rougly proportion their electors to the popular vote -- it's all up to the state.
During the 2000 vote just the absentee military ballot issue itself would have thrown the election to Gore. Kathrine Harris -- simultaneously the FL Sec. of State who was responsible for a fair FL election and Bush's FL campaign chair (no conflict of interest there, right?!) -- broke FL law by allowing enough bogus military absentee ballots to throw the election to Bush. The New York Times also confirmed this -- post election, of course.
You have to hand it to the Republicans on this issue though; James Baker and other false-patriots created great media propaganda about Gore wanting to "deny" our GIs their vote. The media sucked that up and Gore was definitely put on the defensive on this issue.
False information about voting places and times? Why wouldn't this have affected republican voters equally?
No. Election rigging is more of a science.
By determining which precincts you want to rig, you can ensure that while you might lose a few Republican votes, the overwhelming votes lost would be Democrat.
For example, Blacks in Florida voted about 90% for Gore, following the national trend. It's a no-brainer to this in black neighborhoods and too leave suburbia alone -- that will definitely skew the vote and that is one of the instances cited by the federal investigation after the election.
The federal gov'ts report which was done after the 2000 election found many cases of such dirty tricks -- but of course, that was months after the election.
The whole "hanging chad" thing statistically could have happened to just as many republicans as democrats, it was mechanically a poorly designed system (yes, I've seen and used one).
Yes, quite true. But the hanging chad issue was settled fairly -- with a Republican and Democrat looking over an election official's shoulder and having to agree with the official for the vote to count (see earlier posts of this article).
The election was not rigged as a result of hanging chads -- that was a red herring.
The election was rigged as a result of processes noted above.
Re:The articles miss the big point -- deliberately (Score:2)
One link I can find quickly is to the report of Voting Irregularities in Florida During the 2000 Presidential Election [usccr.gov].
IMHO, the gov't reports are typical bureaucratic-speak which tries too hard to be non-judgemental and non-offensive (remember, this report was being written when the authors knew that Bush would be in office for 4 years -- thus, the political price of taking a strong position would be substantial). Combining the gov't analysis wi
Why does everyone make this hard? (Score:3, Insightful)
The whole issue would pretty much go away if they just implemented a paper audit trail. Of course if you are doing that then you don't really need a fancy electronic system to record it. Just issue a felt tip marker. Much less expensive and fewer issues. But then the group pushing the expensive error prone electronic systems would lose money, and since they have purchased a few politicians that won't be allowed to happen. And the politicians have a desire to manipulate the results so they are not going do anything out of self interest.
What I find so funny is that the most vocal people on this topic seem to feel that the very same people that vote for them can't seem to understand how to do it correctly. So they have to "interpet" the ballots to guess how that person intended to vote.
Make it simple. Use a ballot that has the voter mark it with a marker. If they mark it wrong they can ask for a replacment ballot. If they deposit the ballot and it is marked incorrectly, either for the wrong candidate or marked such that it is unclear, then that ballot is voided and is not counted. Period, end of vote. This may get some cry baby liberals complaining that there is some issue with people not getting their vote counted. But if they are so stupid that they can not mark a simple paper ballot correctly then they should not have their vote counted!
The fact that most of the people having trouble understanding the ballots happen to be Democrats is either a fluke or an indication that like minds flock together.
Re:Why does everyone make this hard? (Score:2)
Well, I guess I have more than half a clue. Because electronic voting is not necessarily easier to manipulate than paper ballots. Yes, for a certain subset of a population, yes, it is easier. But for others it is more difficult.
You probably think it is easier to manipulate because you know a lot about computers. But paper ballots are EASY to manipulate (examples include: poor l
first hand encounter (Score:2, Interesting)
Computing Architecture (Score:3, Interesting)
Good question. The answer is: (Score:2)
International observers to monitor US elections (Score:5, Informative)
How did America get to the point where the fear of rigged elections (normally something reserved for so called "rogue states") is so real that many feel the neat to bring in overseers from abroad? Is it really ture that you always become what you hate?
Re:International observers to monitor US elections (Score:4, Informative)
We got there by having the Republican party repeatedly cook and subvert our electoral system.
Does the name Richard "Tricky Dick" Nixon ring a bell?! Read some good histories of the "Watergate era" -- he did far, far more than "just" break into the Watergate Hotel where the Democratic Party HQ was located.
How about Ronald Reagan keeping the US embassy hostages held by Iran locked up to prevent Jimmy Carter's "October Surprise"? That was a blatant rigging of an election.
Carter was close to doing an "arms for hostages" deal with Iran to bring back the hostages in October. Reagan sent Bush and others to Paris to negotiate a bigger "arms for hostages" deal with the Iranians. The Iranians took the better offer -- Reagan/Bush's.
Who says so? Former US CIA agents, French intelligence reports, Russian (Soviet era) intelligence, Jimmy Carter himself admitted that he heard many rumors about such a deal but that he was powerless to do anthing, and to top it off, the now-retired, former Iranian president candidly states that he did do the deal!
Now, for those that can't keep score, that's 2 rigged elections since 1972.
Add to that the 2000 election that George and Jeb Bush rigged...
That's how we got to that point. You're damned right we need international observers!!
Better still, we need new political parties -- one not dominated by undemocratic traitors and one complete with a spine (some others for variety might be nice too!).
Re:International observers to monitor US elections (Score:2)
The whole system is just *ripe* with potential for abuses.
Instead of the US trying to forcibly apply "democracy" to other countries, wouldn't it be interesting if it just tried demonstrating how well it could work, and let people institute it themselves?
Re:International observers to monitor US elections (Score:2)
I just cited 3 instances within the past 35 years that Republicans have cooked the presidential elections. Please give me 1 instance of Democrats doing the same.
Yes, there's no doubt that the Democrats have skeletons in their closet. They invented big-city "machine" politics, but that nasty trend hasn't been very strong since Richard Daley was the Chicago "boss" in the late 60s. And yes, Gerrymandering was invented by Democrats and is happily
Re:International observers to monitor US elections (Score:2)
With all due respect, I believe it is called laziness. If everyone who didn't vote decided to vote for a third party, a fictional character, themselves, etc., it would shake the two major parties to the core.
Why? Simple. If someone isn't going to vote, why would a politician give a damn what they think? Voting for someone, anyone, anything, would make the tw
Black Boxes Will Always be Tampered With (Score:4, Insightful)
Black box voting is going to be tampered with. Think about it. Lets say you take all the votes in the entire country, then taken six guys, put them behind closed doors with the votes, and they come out with the result a few hours later. Does this sound crazy to you? Six guys counting ALL the votes, behind closed doors! And yet this is EXACTLY what is being proposed. Six guys, roughly, count the votes by proxy, using the software they wrote. All the votes!
And government inspection? Would a few officials locked in the room with the guys make everyone feel better?
It's crazy. Most people I know are in favour of the idea. Probobly because they consider it more modern and sophisticated. Some tech heads I know even want to see voting over the internet! And these are supposedly educated people!
Instead of electronic voting, what about votes counted electronically. Paper votes are punched/marked very clearly and taken to an OPEN counting areana. The voted are then scanned by cameras, in front of onlookers, and the tally is updated in real time. This has the advantage of being open, secure and more accuate than present systems. In fact, you could set this up with a Linux, webcam, MySQL the approprate software. Could be a project.
At least people could see what is going on in real time rather than crowding around a box that proclaims the winner mysteriously after a sudden count.
Re:Black Boxes Will Always be Tampered With (Score:2)
This would provide significant pragmatic benefits, unlike e-voting. E-voting has no significant benefits to even out the problems with it.
eVoting and ATMs (Score:2, Interesting)
Seems to me that ATMs work flawlessly. Perhaps we should be inspired by the simple but powerful ATM.
If an ATM screws up, someone is probably out a lot of money.
If eVoting screws up, we get the wrong idiot in the Whitehouse, a erroneous war, and taxpayers are out a lot of money.
The same care that went into designing ATMS should be utilized in designing touch screen voting. Our voting systems should probably be built from the ground up with only one pu
I hope a trail is forced in other states... (Score:4, Interesting)
And closed source e-voting is even stupider. Public systems that are the basis of our freakin' democracy (or constitution-based federal republic; strong democratic tradition; whatever you want to call it) should be available for everyone to see.
What to ask the politicos (Score:5, Insightful)
When the politicians and the voting-machine makers start on their spiel about no paper trails, I think we need to ask them one question:
"Why exactly are you so dead-set against being able to verify the results without having to assume the results are right?"
Without an audit trail that's exactly what they're asking. We ought to be holding their feet to the fire on that question, making them answer it every time they try to say we don't need an audit trail.
And! (Score:2)
Seriously. I dont suppose you could drop your disdain for others that think different than you. It doesnt make them stupid, or unpatriotic or any other bad thing. There is room for differences without assuming ill intent.
But for the record, it *was*, as I understand it, a republican in charge of diebold (sp?) that "promised" ( yes, it is likely he was misunderstood, but Republicans have deliberatly "misunderstood" their share of things, so knock it off or dont co