Virginia is fighting to protect the voting rights of their citizens

TroglocratsRdumb

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Aug 11, 2017
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By Ashley Oliver
October 28, 2024

Virginia’s attorney general asked the Supreme Court on Monday to step in quickly and halt a recent order by a lower court, which forced the state to restore more than 1,600 possible noncitizens to its voter registration list.

Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, a Republican, argued in a petition to the high court that the lower court’s “election-eve injunction,” which was issued Friday and affirmed by the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, violated Virginia’s law and “common sense.”
The lower court had sided with the Department of Justice and liberal voting rights groups by ordering Virginia election officials Friday, less than two weeks out from the 2024 election, to stop a process of cross-checking Department of Motor Vehicles data against voter registration lists to check voters’ citizenship status.

Comment:
The Democrats are not protecting Voting Rights.
They are trying to make it easy for non-citizens to cancel-out the votes of citizens.
The Democrats a violating everyone's right to vote.
 
Possible non-citizens aren't proven non-citizens.

You guys have been tooting this "immigrants are voting" horn since Bush lost the popular vote in 2000.

And have provided very little evidence it is happening on any kind of a scale.
The Dirty Democrats have allowed 30 million people to illegally cross our border so that they will vote Democrat.
This is why the Democrats are opposed to voter ID laws.
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The Dirty Democrats have allowed 30 million people to illegally cross our border so that they will vote Democrat.
This is why the Democrats are opposed to voter ID laws.
View attachment 1032950View attachment 1032951

I had no problem getting alcohol if I wanted it before I was 21. Neither did anyone in our peer group. So your example is flawed.


I will go one further. I think the last time I was carded for Alcohol was in the 1990's, in my 30s. Except for when I travel through the People's Republic of Elk Grove Village, no one cards me anymore. (And I just avoid buying booze in EGV.
 
I had no problem getting alcohol if I wanted it before I was 21. Neither did anyone in our peer group. So your example is flawed.


I will go one further. I think the last time I was carded for Alcohol was in the 1990's, in my 30s. Except for when I travel through the People's Republic of Elk Grove Village, no one cards me anymore. (And I just avoid buying booze in EGV.
you proved my point
 
I had no problem getting alcohol if I wanted it before I was 21. Neither did anyone in our peer group. So your example is flawed.


I will go one further. I think the last time I was carded for Alcohol was in the 1990's, in my 30s. Except for when I travel through the People's Republic of Elk Grove Village, no one cards me anymore. (And I just avoid buying booze in EGV.

In Ontario many years ago, I don't know about now, if you didn't look at least 25, you had to get ID'ed. How they determine that is anyones guess but it was the law and they were strict.

I think its similar for cigarettes which is funny because I always went to the store to buy cigarettes for my parents and I think only once in the years I ran to the store them did I get refused, they told me "bring a note from your parents". I mean LOL.

So my parents would write me a note with the list basically saying "I give permission for my 9 year old to buy cigarettes for me".

I became a naturally strong kid from hauling 4L bags of milk and everything else my parents wanted.
 
you proved my point

No, guy, you missed the point. Carding people to buy alcohol is kind of a useless activity. And ironically, the only people who get carded are people who look like they are too young.

The purpose of voter ID is to keep minorities from voting. It's not about "election integrity". I can assure you, a white person is never going to be asked to show voter ID.
 
In Ontario many years ago, I don't know about now, if you didn't look at least 25, you had to get ID'ed. How they determine that is anyones guess but it was the law and they were strict.

I think its similar for cigarettes which is funny because I always went to the store to buy cigarettes for my parents and I think only once in the years I ran to the store them did I get refused, they told me "bring a note from your parents". I mean LOL.

So my parents would write me a note with the list basically saying "I give permission for my 9 year old to buy cigarettes for me".

I became a naturally strong kid from hauling 4L bags of milk and everything else my parents wanted.

was there an evil Chinese person at the store? Is that how you got traumatized?

My parents would also send me out to pick up smokes for them, no problem. Of course, the problem there was that the stores really WANTED teens to buy cigarettes. They wanted to get them addicted. Nobody starts smoking at 21, by then you have enough good sense to not do it.

But getting back to the voter ID thing. You admit that the only people who get "carded" are the ones who look too young. Probably because the clerk doesn't have time to card everyone.

So who is going to get carded at the polling place? You got it. "Those people". Minorities or anyone with an accent, even if they are citizens and have every right to vote.
 
was there an evil Chinese person at the store? Is that how you got traumatized?

My parents would also send me out to pick up smokes for them, no problem. Of course, the problem there was that the stores really WANTED teens to buy cigarettes. They wanted to get them addicted. Nobody starts smoking at 21, by then you have enough good sense to not do it.

But getting back to the voter ID thing. You admit that the only people who get "carded" are the ones who look too young. Probably because the clerk doesn't have time to card everyone.

So who is going to get carded at the polling place? You got it. "Those people". Minorities or anyone with an accent, even if they are citizens and have every right to vote.


A true story. I was a teen and my friend and I headed to the arcade. I'm old enough to have experienced those back in the day.

There was a new game called 'Street Fighter", the original not the more famous SF2 and it was the first time either of us had played this. This was probably the original incarnation of the game See the attached images, there was a red and a blue side in you punched pads for punch and kick, the harder you hit it the strongest you attack. Two pads for each player.

Anyways, as I was playing two young guys of Chinese descent walked up to the game and he put a quarter in. To my surprise some warning popped up that I was being challenged. I was taken aback. My quarter was at risk if I lost! He chose Ken as I was Ryu. I was nervous but determined to prevail!

Well, it was literally the first time I had played this but I had learned a cool move by accident, maybe the only advanced move I knew: when I rotated the joystick in a half circle and punched, Ryu would do his "Hadoken" or however it is pronounced.

Back then the games were a bit laggy when you threw the graphic intense moves but I just did this move over and over and he could hardly even muster a movement in the shaky, laggy graphics as his body was plowed mercilessly and repeatedly with my mighty but beautiful Hadoken. I beat him two rounds straight and stood silently as he aggressively placed another quarter in.

To his surprise I did the same thing over and over, "Hadoken, Hadoken" It was an cacophony of lovely sounding, barely discernible Japanese over the static ridden, blurred speakers of this old game. Again he lost the game, not even winning a round, just getting pounded by my wave fist move.

He and his taller friend stood for a moment, no more desire to try and unseat the new king of the mountain. He spoke in English to his friend, with a strong underlying Chinese accent but loud enough for me to hear: "all da boy can do is fire-ball". They stood there for another 10 seconds or so watching the new Street Fighter champ attack the computer players and then they slowly left, head hung in shame.

My friend and I laughed at the exchange. It was a comment we'd repeat to one another randomly for years "all da boy can is fire-ball"

I think perhaps if Freud were alive, he would look back at that moment and say emphatically in his Eureka moment "This is why! This is why!"
sf1.jpg


SF.jpg
 
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A true story. I was a teen and my friend and I headed to the arcade. I'm old enough to have experienced those back in the day.

There was a new game called 'Street Fighter", the original not the more famous SF2 and it was the first time either of us had played this. This was probably the original incarnation of the game See the attached images, there was a red and a blue side in you punched pads for punch and kick, the harder you hit it the strongest you attack. Two pads for each player.

Anyways, as I was playing two young guys of Chinese descent walked up to the game and he put a quarter in. To my surprise some warning popped up that I was being challenged. I was taken aback. My quarter was at risk if I lost! He chose Ken as I was Ryu. I was nervous but determined to prevail!

Well, it was literally the first time I had played this but I had learned a cool move by accident, maybe the only advanced move I knew: when I rotated the joystick in a half circle and punched, Ryu would do his "Hadoken" or however it is pronounced.

Back then the games were a bit laggy when you threw the graphic intense moves but I just did this move over and over and he could hardly even muster a movement in the shaky, laggy graphics as his body was plowed mercilessly and repeatedly with my mighty but beautiful Hadoken. I beat him two rounds straight and stood silently as he aggressively placed another quarter in.

To his surprise I did the same thing over and over, "Hadoken, Hadoken" It was an cacophony of lovely sounding, barely discernible Japanese over the static ridden, blurred speakers of this old game. Again he lost the game, not even winning a round, just getting pounded by my wave fist move.

He and his taller friend stood for a moment, no more desire to try and unseat the new king of the mountain. He spoke in English to his friend, with a strong underlying Chinese accent but loud enough for me to hear: "all da boy can do is fire-ball". They stood there for another 10 seconds or so watching the new Street Fighter champ attack the computer players and then they slowly left, head hung in shame.

My friend and I laughed at the exchange. It was a comment we'd repeat to one another randomly for years "all da boy can is fire-ball"

I think perhaps if Freud were alive, he would look back at that moment and say emphatically in his Eureka moment "This is why! This is why!"View attachment 1033183

View attachment 1033180
That story actually sounds kind of sad.

Probably because those two Chinese kids got better degrees than you did and are making a lot more money now despite their accents.
 
That story actually sounds kind of sad.

Probably because those two Chinese kids got better degrees than you did and are making a lot more money now despite their accents.

How do you know?

Typical of you though, all you ever do is fire-ball when you post a comment!
 
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Oh, I have a bunch of tactics, but frankly, when dealing with an anti-Chinese bigot like you, mockery is appropriate.


I am not anti-Chinese. I am anti-Communism. In fact, some of the most courageous people were from Hong Kong and those who stood in front of tanks.

Get your facts straight
 
I am not anti-Chinese. I am anti-Communism. In fact, some of the most courageous people were from Hong Kong and those who stood in front of tanks.

Get your facts straight
Oooh, the 1950s called, they want their McCarthyism back.

I think it would be a mistake to call China "Communist"; they are probably better capitalists than we are.
 

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