General Discussion Undecided where to post - do it here. |
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#1 |
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#2 |
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#4 |
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I (and probably everybody else in the US) need to show proof of citizenship for employment - there's a long list of acceptable documents, but the only part of the list I remember is that your passport is proof of citizenship, or else your driver's license plus your social security card is proof of citizenship.
So what's the problem with all these voter ID checks, then? |
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#5 |
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#6 |
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#7 |
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So what's the problem with all these voter ID checks, then? That said, I wouldn't be opposed to, say, putting your thumbprint next to your ballot(or on the voter scanner machine). This would create a pretty much ironclad defense against voter fraud and wouldn't require ID other than your voter registration card. People wouldn't go for it thought because OMFG BIG BROTHER MARK OF THE BEAST. |
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#8 |
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There are districts in Philadelphia with routinely greater than 100% turnout. In Virginia quite recently a DC-based nonprofit tried to register a bunch of pets, children, dead people, and felons. It was in a copy of the Washington Post sitting in the Fed's lunch room. You mean the one that the VA SBE gave a pass on anyway, since there would be a bit of a sticking point when invalid(or missing) SSNs tried to get registered to vote? You do realize that this means the system is already working well to prevent voter fraud, right? And that there's a difference between attempted voter fraud and actual? |
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#9 |
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Cite please, because even the GOP government of Pennsylvania thinks that voter fraud risk is so low that it would not be materially affected by a voter ID law. http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/201...op-complaints/ |
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#10 |
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#14 |
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I love how Lonestar asked for a cite and I provided it and he's said nothing since. I'll help you out: The GOP complaints couldn't even come up with a specific example, at and least some of the "high voting percentage turnout" districts that the city commissioners have studied have been traced right back to machine error. Given the complete cluster electronic voting has been(printed receipts? Poppycock!) this is unsurprising. And now, in August, the PA GOP has actually admitted that if voter fraud does exist on a wide scale in PA, voter ID wouldn't solve it. |
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#15 |
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The problem comes in when: |
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#16 |
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#17 |
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Proof beyond reasonable doubt is required. But to answer the first question, you really can't. That's why the whole voter ID thing disenfranchising people is so ludicrous. You need an ID to get a job, to drive a car, and to fly on airplanes. You also need one to buy alcohol, tobacco, guns, certain types of knives (in many states), and ammunition. In some states even buying spray paint or any kind of aerosol requires an ID. I guess if you're riding buses everywhere for your transportation and living on welfare you might not need one. You need ID to buy Sudafed. ![]() |
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#18 |
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#19 |
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Proof beyond reasonable doubt is required. But to answer the first question, you really can't. That's why the whole voter ID thing disenfranchising people is so ludicrous. You need an ID to get a job, to drive a car, and to fly on airplanes. You also need one to buy alcohol, tobacco, guns, certain types of knives (in many states), and ammunition. In some states even buying spray paint or any kind of aerosol requires an ID. I guess if you're riding buses everywhere for your transportation and living on welfare you might not need one. EDIT: Oh, tubes hit that one. |
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#20 |
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If someone stopped me on the street right now and demanded that I prove that I'm an American citizen, I couldn't do it -- and neither could most Americans. The only document that can reliably be used to prove American citizenship is a passport; it's the only document that contains BOTH a confirmation of citizenship AND a photo ID. Citizenship is not required to obtain a driver's license -- the only form of ID most Americans carry, myself included. Beyond that, there's very little. Citizenship can be inferred from a birth certificate, but it would take a second ID to show the birth certificate with the person showing it (and even that wouldn't be sufficient for someone with a common name). A passport is really the only such document -- and fewer that 20% of Americans have passports.
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