I’ve read that piece already.
Even if accepted, it goes only to the issue of whether fear of voter fraud drives away legitimate voters in dissatisfaction.
I’ve read that piece already.
Even if accepted, it goes only to the issue of whether fear of voter fraud drives away legitimate voters in dissatisfaction.
http://www.freepress.org/columns/display/3/2004/983 This is voter fraud. It is not who votes but who counts them. That and how the ability to vote is denied .
Your constant harping about voter fraud is just pro-republican propaganda. If you really want to prove your case, cite Beck and Limbaugh. They are 100 percent behind you on this one. The Heritage Foundation will also back you since they are a conservative think tank.
But when Bush removed Atty. Generals for not prosecuting voter fraud, you should have learned something. Iglesius said he could not prosecute voter fraud ,because he could not find any. He got fired.
There are plenty of studies done by neutral studies that say it is minuscule. Give it up.
Which all things being equal, speaks to the possible magnitude of voter fraud. If it doesn’t discourage people, a fraudulent vote has a lower likelihood of being pivotal. If fraudsters estimate this, they won’t bother as much because there is some chance they will be caught. So while we don’t have a good nationwide count of the number of fraudsters, perhaps we can at least expect that the magnitude of the fraud would be consistent with basic optimization logic.
Of course, voting itself isn’t exactly compatible with basic optimization logic, so I don’t want to overstate my case here.
The problem is that when it becomes pivotal, it’s too late to fix.
Florida, 2000. The reality is that 1,000 extra votes would have made Al Gore president. Might there have been 1,000 right-wing Cubans, non-citizens, casting votes for Bush? Sure there might. But we’ll never know. Normally, when a state’s margin of victory is 60,000 votes, we can safely dismiss these concerns; we know with reasonable surety that there weren’t 60,000 fraudulent votes.
But when it happens, rarely to be sure, that the margin is razor thin… THAT is when we will most need to be able to point to solid confidence in each and every vote.
Does voter *suppression *just not worry you at all? :dubious: There’s plenty of evidence for it being a far, far larger problem.