WA Governor Recount Ends With 42-Vote Difference 159
Republican Dino Rossi came out on top of the gubernatorial recount in Washington state, beating Democrat Christine Gregoire by 42 votes. He had won the initial count by 261 votes. King County (where Seattle is) gave Gregoire a 245-vote swing. It's expected that the Democrats will call for a partial hand recount, which they would have to pay for (25 cents per vote), unless they end up winning the recount.
The should learn from Ukraine (Score:2, Funny)
No need for recount (Score:3, Funny)
Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's the same crap that was pulled in Florida that got the US Supreme court involved in the mess.
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:4, Informative)
In the Kennedy/Nixon election, Richard Nixon lost the vote under extremely suspect circumstances. He made the deliberate decision not to pursue because of the harm it would do to the nation. In fact, he made a personal phone call to the journalist who was beginning to uncover massive election fraud (in the hopes of winning a Pulitzer), and specifically requested the journalist stop investigating the matter.
In a senate race in Missouri a few years ago, the challenger, lost by a slim sympathy vote when the incumbent died during the race and his wife took his place. The wife replacing the husband in the middle of the race was probably illegal under Missouir law, but the Republican decided not to pursue the matter, citing that it would not be good for the state of Missouri to have the election process dragged through the mud.
The facts would seem to argue against your position that "they all do it."
That was then, this is now. (Score:3, Informative)
Great. But that was then. Try looking at what is happening NOW.
The Washingtong State Republican Party Chairman Chris Vance says: "If Dino Rossi is ahead at the end of the day, he is the governor-elect, this is over, and she (Gregoire) needs to do the righ
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Informative)
In the Kenney/Nixon election, there actually were lawsuits over alleged illegal practices, those lawsuits were lost, though some Republicans claim it was because of politically motivated judi
Not this urban myth again (Score:3, Informative)
Republicans persued (fruitless) recounts in about a dozen different states and dragged (fruitless) investigations in Illinois out for a year.
Nixon presented a public front of not challenging for the "good of the nation"(which you've obviously swallowed hook, line and sinker) but did everything in his power to challeng
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
> thing if they were down by 40-odd votes?
If they ever do, they'll lose the respect of half their core demographic.
Conservatives (well, many of us anyhow) fundamentally don't think that way.
We think in terms of what's the right thing to do, *not* in terms of what
thing can we do that will obtain the outcome we want. (Philosophers call
these two ways of thinking about ethics "deontological" versus "teleological"
theories of obligation
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
for a candidate to deliberately undermine the election process just to get
himself elected.
Does this mean that conservatives are opposed to Jeb Bush's systematic disenfranchising of minority voters in Florida? And to the "challengers" the GOP paid to prevent Ohio residents from voting if they looked like they were likely to vote Democrat? And to Kenneth Blackwell making sure that heavily Democratic areas of Ohio don't have enough vo
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2, Insightful)
Again with this bullshit charge of Florida minorities being "disenfranchised." What is it with you people? There have been numberous investigations and calls for these supposed legions of disenfranchised voters to come forward and you know what the results have been every single time? Not one damned person steps forward. There have been no systematic "disenfranchising" of minorities. It's
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2, Insightful)
> disenfranchising of minority voters in Florida?
We would be, very much so, if it had happened, or if there was any reason to
believe it had happened. However, it's been well-documented (and demonstrated
clearly in the last gubernatorial election) that Florida in general and
minority voters in Florida in particular have, since the 2000 election, leaned
to the right. The minority voters turned out for Bush in Florida. (This is
not q
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:5, Interesting)
All elections, unless statistcally impossible, should have a hand recount after the fact, to be finished before the election day. Computer count(secure terminals, obviously, what a REQUIRED paper trail) and what not are fine, they give media the fast count. But those numbers arn't stuck until
1. the thought-to-be losing candidate drops out, or
2. the hand recount confirms the count
if there is any reasonable doubt about the process, the losing candidate(s) can petition a judge that says "X happened, that could have changed how votes were counted, please recount them after fixing this" the judge rules on wether it is reasonable for a recount(not in terms of winning/losing, but in terms of fraud or miscalculation) and then is so ordered.
HOWEVER, true common sense would say:hey, this system (two party, PDC, Diebold-esque voting flaws) we have is bullshit, we need to fix it. Personally IRV looks like the best fix, with electionic machines certified as safe with peer/government reviewed code and testing with a federally mandatory paper trail... and/or hand ballots.
But I am open to ideas
They are ignorant/stupid or too partisan (Score:2)
Even though a hand recount could have less precision (e.g. 100 times less precise), it may be more accurate esp if representatives from the affected parties and independent(?) observers are there to witness each count (this is how vote counts are done in my country btw). And anyway even if it is all a show, rational and reasonable voters should b
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Interesting)
happens when the counter loses count?
A human makes random mistakes, if they are to miscount X%, it is likely that that X% is even distributed amongst the candidates. A computer doesn't, it tends to make non-random errors... Such as the case where a computer was counting ballots that voted all-democrat and tallying them for the Libertarian party... This actually swung the election to the wrong candidate.
Besides which, the human recount can be, obviously re-recounte
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
A computer when it malfunctions normally does so in
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is where the problem lies. What you're doing doesn't make any sense. You're using a ruler to count a discrete value: the number of pens and pencils.
Counting votes is like counting pens and pencils. There are differences between the counts because errors can occur. Once a recount is requested, there's much more scrutiny and the vast majority of counting errors are eliminated.
You've stated that you believe we can accurately count three votes (2 pens
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
No--this is an independent example. I am counting the length of the ruler by counting ticks on a ruler.
I put forth two different measurements requiring you to count to highlight differences.
Possibly counting several millions of pens or pencils of different sizes and shapes and colors. Probably with a few o
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
Yes, there is error. No, it is not statistical error. This is not about statistics. If there are three pencils in front of me and someone asks me how many there are, and I say four, that is not statistical error. It's just error. There is no margin of error, there is no sampling. It's just bad counting.
And making it 2.8m pencils instead of 3 does not make any difference, unless you are actually doing sampling instead of counting, which would be illegal.
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
If the machine error between the two counts is greater than three times the current official margin t
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
Even the King County elections people today said a hand recount is more likely to produce error.
On machine counts, still, the more often you do it, the more likely error is to be introduced, at some point (as ballots become damaged from handling). I don't think a third time should be a serious problem, but with the race this tight
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
If a machine is rigged, proper hand recounts could show the problem even if it's not as accurate as a nonrigged machine. It's like the diff between machine recount: Candidate A has 87.4432% of the votes and hand recount: Candidate A has 56% of the votes. Sure the result is the same: Candidate A wins. BUT you learn that something fishy likely happened.
That said I get the impression that the typical US voter of the winning party wouldn't care, especially given suffi
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
Yes, it could, but if the machine is NOT rigged, the end result will probably be LESS accurate. Maybe they could do a hand recount just to check for significant difference, but use the machine results?
Over here in my country, when they count the votes, the various different party representatives can be (and usually are) there to observe each vote as it is counted (and dispute if necessary).
They do that here too.
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
EVEN if the machines are more accurate, if they aren't significantly more accurate, a multi-witnessed count result might be treated with more respect.
Note that with some style of votes, the voters may screw up the ballot sheet so that it is may actually be hard to figure out what the voter was voting for, or whether the vote should be regarded as spoilt. So actual accuracy might be almost subjective...
Also given such a scenario IF the party
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
I wouldn't bet on it. Most people on both sides of the aisle in WA seem to want Gregoire to concede now (I am not one of them).
Anyway, if the less accurate hand recount swings the vote to Gregoire *incorrectly*, doesn't that do a disservice to the voters?
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:3, Insightful)
As I mentioned sometimes the ballots could be vague and subject to interpretation (to make voting less prone to such situations one has to be careful not to push the problem elsewhere or create a bigger problem (ala Diebold)).
If you have very slim margins deciding whether a vot
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
I guess this is only a problem in countries that are S-M-R-T.
If you're thinking "But there are more than 100 ballots!", add "Repeat as Necessary" to above instructions.
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
How do you know that a hand recount is more prone to error? It seems to me that a hand recount would be more prone to random error, i.e., humans simply making mistakes. But those mistakes could cancel each other out. On the other hand, if there is a systematic error in the machine recounting process (e.g., not processing damaged ballots correctly, software errors, whatever), then this could influence the outcome
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:2)
So what is the price of getting the right result in terms of time and money?
The "right result" is whatever the actual result is once the legal process has been completed, so I don't really understand the question. Perhaps you mean "most accurate" resul
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:5, Insightful)
"But with the recount still favoring Rossi yesterday, Vance (State Republican party chairman) said the Democrats would only be dragging the state into a political quagmire. 'That's wrong,' Vance said. 'If Dino Rossi is ahead at the end of the day tomorrow, he is the governor-elect, this is over, and she (Gregoire) needs to do the right thing, the gracious thing and the honorable thing and concede.'
But if Gregoire is ahead, 'That's fundamentally different,' Vance said."
So, apparently, the line is drawn such that if a Democrat calls for a recount, it's political quagmire, but if a Republican calls for a recount, it's just... different.
Re:Here is what I don't get... (Score:4, Informative)
What outcome? (Score:2)
What result? Until the machine recount was finished last week, there was no result. No winner was certified.
Re:What outcome? (Score:2)
What part don't you get?
This is how it works (Score:2)
The line's drawn in the law. The machine recount was automatic because of the close margin. (A manual recount would've been done if the margin were 100 votes closer initially)
Now that a winner has finally be certified. A manual recount can be requested. Once/If it's done, that's it.
This it how it works:
Gregoire can request a manual recount of certain or all countie
Predictable (Score:2, Funny)
See? We told you recounts would have no affect on the results. Move along.
Sincerely,
D. Ashcroft
Re:Predictable (Score:2)
And who is "D. Ashcroft"? Do you mean John? And what did John Ashcroft ever say about recounts?
You appear to be uninteresting.
Re:Predictable (Score:2)
Re:Predictable (Score:2)
Funny? (Score:2)
Margin of Error (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh well--I really do think that this reflects the will of WA voters (and I am one). We didn't have a strong preference. Approximately 50,000 (2% or 1000x the margin of victory for Dino Rossi) more people voted for president than voted for our governor. Our divided state house & senat also bears out how moderate we are.
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
Not a "margin of error," but yes, that is precisely what does and did happen. The difference was less than 2,000 votes and under
Oh well--I really do think that this reflects the will of WA voters (and I am one).
Well, in fact, it does. There's no getting around it. It's not a matter of opinion. It's a fact.
Re:Margin of Error (Score:3, Insightful)
I was actually thinking that such a number shouldn't be arbitrarily chosen & that it should have consequences for the Governor's term in office (other than the implicit hard time he'll have getting any partisan issues steam-rolled through). Furthermore, this is a particularly interesting case. The initial spread of
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
If we can't count the votes with enough certainty, then decisions can be made by chance. That isn't democracy.
The error of any count is at least 219 votes. If the election is decided by only 42 votes, then that is below the error! I realize the law behi
Re:Margin of Error (Score:4, Insightful)
No it isn't. I again pose the question: If you can't trust the counting of the votes, how can you say that it is the will of the people?
Since you can't wrap your head around simple statistics, let's simpify it. There are 11 voters. 6 want to vote for A and 5 for B. If 2 of those votes aren't counted, how can you say the will of the people is followed. Candiate A will not win if both votes that weren't counted happened to be for him. Candiate B would win 5 to 4. But that doesn't reflect the will of the people.
Fortunately, we don't have errors of 2 in 11. But the same kinds of problems exist when you scale up the number of voters. Not only do people not win by margins of 1 in 11 and not only are some votes not counted, but some are counted more than once. Some valid votes are lost or destroyed. Some votes that are counted shouldn't be--some are cast by people who aren't state residents, some people manage to vote more than once, it is a real mess.
We need to do as much as we can to make sure that that mess is small enough that it won't change the results of an election. We aren't there yet.
In my world, close elections remind us that we need to be as careful as possile to lower errors in the voting and counting processes. We can make laws that minimize the errors and can encourage candidates to both seek votes from as many people as possible and have an election which are as fair as possible. We have few such laws.
No. They counted the same votes twice & got different numbers. This was the difference in the two spreads. That's error. If there was no error, the counts would be exactly the same.
What about the law behind recounts as it stands have I gotten wrong? Saying that the law should be some way is different than saying the law is that way. I think I've been clear with which I'm talking about. How does the recount law account for statistical errors? It is mute on error. It says if there is a spread of an arbitrary percentage or number of votes that there will be an automatic recount and that that the results from that recount will be legally certified. We don't report election results the way that people report pulls. We don't say so-and-so won with 53+/-1 %.
Fine. The spread is most likely not statistically significant. Election laws don't account for statistics--they don't care about them. Dino won. That doesn't mean that statistics don't exist or that you can't apply them to this case--it just means that the state doesn't choose to do this when they put someone in office. This is why who is put in office isn't always what eh will of the people would have otherwise had. The will isn't perfectly communicated through the counting of votes.
Show me a law that says the governor will be the one who the people want. There is none. It says that it will be the candidate who has the greatest number of votes in the final count. Given that counts aren't perfect, there is a difference here.
I don't hate democracy. I love democracy so much that I want the will of the people to ring loudly and clearly over and above the din and noise of fraud and mistakes. Look--the spread changed by 219 votes between two counts. That is gr
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
If the vote can be trusted completely, there would never be a need for a recount. Mistakes are real & few deny that. I see no circular reasoning on my part & only you avoiding the legitimate and logical question of what if the outcomes change due to these errors.
I didn't make them up. T
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
By throwing out the initial count in certified totals, we aren't being as accurate as possible.
I said can, but of course we don't. Duh. I know what we do now. That doesn't mean what we do now is right. How is the law of counting again and using the latest tally b
Re:dude, let me save you a lot of typing by... (Score:2)
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
This is what is done, as much as possible. So you agree with the status quo, nice
(2)Infer the remaining errors of our voting process by performing many recounts.
That's not possible. You can only uncover actual errors,
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
This isn't done as much as possible. The fact that you think it is & don't even defend that thesis shows the idiocy of your quote-unquote arguments. You are an ostrich who has stuck his head into the sand of the way things are currently done & (worse) the PR of those currently doing it. Doing this doesn't make the real world go away.
If it were done as much as possible, the first count would be trusted as much as the
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
Objection: assumption of facts not in evidence. What you say is only true if it is possible to do it significantly better than it is done, and yet you have offered no evidence to support this assumption.
We'd already have voter-verifiable audit trails
Those are coming; they did not get them in time for this election. So what? We had less percentage of erro
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
Do you have any evidence that it isn't possile to do it significantly better? We can both play the lack-of-evidence game. It is a great game to play as far as I'm concerned because the answer to it would be: we both admit it isn't perfect. Where's the objection to sponsoring significant studies to determ
Summary (Score:2)
In summary, though, we mostly (perhaps begrudgingly) agree that:
Re:Summary (Score:2)
I was just responding to your post using the same maturity you offered. I was just more succinct.
There should be a study conducted of how much votes swing with recounts. This may also help us find (and therefore compare) the errors in elections.
We should do whatever it takes to uncover and fix errors, yes.
There is no guarantee we will have a voter-verifiable audit trail. Most think it is a good idea, so we will hopefully have one.
Yes.
The handling
Re:Summary (Score:2)
In that case, I apologize for the childishness & am sorry it trumped supporting evidence and references I presented.
OK. Sorry for misunderstanding your reply of "the handling of them is defined by federal
Re:Margin of Error (Score:2)
It's not over & comment regarding plurality (Score:2)
Does anyone think the plurality system is partly responsible for such a close race?
Re:It's not over & comment regarding plurality (Score:2)
I agree it is well below the margin of error. But that doesn't matter. Scientists have a number, an error, and a unit. Everyone else (including politicians who write the laws) doesn't use "error" and often neglects "units."
Re:It's not over & comment regarding plurality (Score:2)
Re:It's not over & comment regarding plurality (Score:2)
What you mean to say is that there is some amount of error in the counting, which is necessarily true. But that is a very different thing from margin of error. Further, we have absolutely no idea how much error there is.
To say the results are "within the margin of error" is quite meaningless.
Re:It's not over & comment regarding plurality (Score:2)
It tastes like...burning?
No, I kid, it actually tastes like purple.
Margin of error (Score:2)
Provisional ballots that weren't originally counted
Ballots that were spit out and set aside
Diebold optical machines wrongly counting the bubbled in sheet
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
A limit in a condition or process, beyond or below which something is no longer possible or acceptable: the margin of reality; has crossed the margin of civilized behavior.
An amount allowed beyond what is needed: a small margin of safety. See Synonyms at room.
A measure, quantity, or degree of difference: a margin of 500 votes.
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
If you need the definition for "margin" of error, these might help
A measure, quantity, or degree of difference: a margin of 500 votes. [reference.com]
5 : measure or degree of difference [webster.com]
http://www.google.com/search?num=50&hl=en&lr=&as_q dr=all&q=%22margin+of+error%22+votes [google.com] should explain a lot more
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Yes, I have used those words.
If you need the definition for "margin" of error, these might help
I know you know the meaning of the words. But you do not know the meaning of the phrase. For example, the phrase "cult of personality" takes on a new meaning if you define it by its discrete components.
And yes, Google shows many people using this phrase incorrectly. You expect me to be surprised? Although gratefully, most of them are not using i
Re:Margin of error (Score:2)
Re:It's not over & comment regarding plurality (Score:2)
While I agree that there is a scientific concept of margin of error, it isn't legally recognized in an election.
Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
Re:Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
Did not read the article, nor do I care who wins... but one recount is all we should really need. I'm so sick of both parties gaming the election with legal loopholes. Just because you can, does not mean you should...
Re:Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
The Ceremony is to indicate the importance the public considers the event.
EVEN if it's all a show (and the relevant votes have already been Diebolded), you have to make it seem like a good show. Go through the _proper_ motions.
Just try telling a kid a story, and skipping everything except for "And they all lived happily ever after".
I suppose maybe nowadays they are content wi
Re:Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
I think we are on the same page. Way I read it (did go back and read the article) is they have a process - if the vote was within a certain threshold they order a automatic machine based recount. If it was even closer, they do a hand based recount. They did the machine recount and it is real close, but one party had a majority. Respect the process...
What scares me is either side will look to do what a bad D&D player who has every modul
Re:Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
So given that the change in the vote between the original count and the recount is 5924% of the new margin of victory, it may be worthwhile to use a different system to make sure any systemic unreliability or bias is removed.
Of course the fact that the total change was more than 60 t
Re:Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
Re:Rossi with 261 lead drops to 42 lead (Score:2)
I said the change in the *vote* not the change in the margin of victory. Running the ballots through the machine a second time increased the number of votes by 2428 which is almost 60 times the margin of victory.
All this recount has done is tell us that, ignoring instrument bias, it is statistically probable the correct margin of victory lies between 2297 votes for the currently loosing candidate and 2558 votes f
Voting on a large scale subject to fraud (Score:5, Insightful)
Why don't we just have electors for the governor's seat? We can send one elector from each legislative district, and then have them choose the governor. This way, a recount would only be warranted in districts that are close. (Districts in WA are about 100,000 people). Since the voting is much more local, it is much less subject to fraud and thus the unwarranted accusation of fraud.
Re:Voting on a large scale subject to fraud (Score:2)
No recount would have found half a million extra votes for Bush in 2000, or 3 million extra votes for Kerry in 2004. But when the whole election depends on just one state and that state is close, everyone will (rightly) demand that the votes be counted and recounted until they get an accurate number.
Re:Voting on a large scale subject to fraud (Score:2)
Given that the 2004 election led bush by 34 votes, which single state decided the election? a hcnage of 17 votes would tie the outcome? So, which state? Florida, Ohio or Texas? How many other elections could have been changed by one state? Any election with a difference less than 55. That goes back a long time.
The Ultimate Question (Score:3, Funny)
"By how many votes will Dino Rossi win the 2004 Washington State gubernatorial election recount?"
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:4, Insightful)
Why did you change from "I" to "we". If it's so fsking important to you, you defend that right at any cost, but don't ask "me" to. I don't remember ever signing up for that.
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
Don't tell *us* (i.e., me and the grandparent poster) what's important to *us*. We believe in the right to life among persons, but don't believe that a mere fertilized egg is a person, any more than we believe all the skin cells we scratch off our arms whenever we scratch an itch constitute living human persons, despite the fact that they are all living human *tissue*.
And
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
Except, at one point in your life, you were a fetilized egg. "Were" is the past tense of "to be". A fertilized egg is, by definition, a
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
Actually, everyone was also at one point an unfertilized egg and a sperm cell. Should we consider all sperm and all unfertilized eggs to be people too?
Actually a skin cell or potentially a cancer cell
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:4, Interesting)
Humans are not the only social species. Many animals live in herds and hunt/shelter together. Many of them also eat their young if they're weak and sick and leave the old or wounded to die. Many human cultures do/used to do that too... protecting the weak goes against nature's "design". I'm not saying we should kill off the weak and diseased or anything like that... but just because we interract with others of our own species doesn't mean we need to interract in ways you approve of. You can make other arguments, but don't make broad claims about "characteristics of species" because nature is cruel at times and nature doesn't care about individuals.
Moreover, I happen to believe that there's more to life than having a pulse. If I were vegetative, I would much rather die with dignity than have air and blood bt pumped through my body by someone like you claiming to be "alive".
You are entitled to your beliefs and you're entitled to try and convince other people of your beliefs, but get off your high horse. There's more than one way to look at things, and to claim that you're right and everyone who disagrees with you isn't is intellectually dishonest.
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
When did you stop beating your mother?
Hey, I'm not the one who's being hypocritical, claiming to be pro-life and then refusing to do everything possible to reduce abortion.
Actually, you have done precisely that. By your own standard, you are certainly hypocritical.
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
When I was born- it was a lot harder to do it from the OUTSIDE!
Actually, you have done precisely that.
How so? I give as much as I possibly can to Fr. Taft- and his homes for unwed mothers.
By your own standard, you are certainly hypocritical.
Really? Once again, how so? Making something illegal doesn't reduce a practice- it only turns the people that do that into
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
Did that a long time ago- what computers I own that are worth selling (not every computer has value anymore- the majority of mine are homebrews from scrounged parts that nobody would WANT to buy- that in fact, they paid me for hauling off). The one I'm typing on right now I don't own.
Re:Tell Michael Mooron to change his electoral map (Score:2)
Re:just fix the system (Score:2)
Ah yes! The hand recount! Such modern technology we've been using it for a meezley 3,000 years! (at least)