CrusaderFrank
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- May 20, 2009
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Requiring a picture ID in order to vote isn't excessive or punitive...it's the common sense way to prevent voter fraud. If liberals would put half as much effort into getting ID's for their idiot bretheren who are for some unknown reason incapable of doing so for themselves then there would be no "disenfranchisment".
Requiring a picture ID in order to vote isn't excessive or punitive...it's the common sense way to prevent voter fraud. If liberals would put half as much effort into getting ID's for their idiot bretheren who are for some unknown reason incapable of doing so for themselves then there would be no "disenfranchisment".
What was the founding fathers' opinion on photo ID? For all you constitutionalists.
Requiring a picture ID in order to vote isn't excessive or punitive...it's the common sense way to prevent voter fraud. If liberals would put half as much effort into getting ID's for their idiot bretheren who are for some unknown reason incapable of doing so for themselves then there would be no "disenfranchisment".
What was the founding fathers' opinion on photo ID? For all you constitutionalists.
Requiring a picture ID in order to vote isn't excessive or punitive...it's the common sense way to prevent voter fraud. If liberals would put half as much effort into getting ID's for their idiot bretheren who are for some unknown reason incapable of doing so for themselves then there would be no "disenfranchisment".
What was the founding fathers' opinion on photo ID? For all you constitutionalists.
I'm sure they would have been baffled by the inability of their fellow citizens to accomplish something as simple as aquiring a photo ID. The Founding Fathers weren't known for "whining" about something being hard...especially when it isn't.
By Ari Berman, August 30, 2011
No one has done more to stir up fears about the manufactured threat of voter fraud than Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, a top adviser in the Bush Justice Department who has become a rising star in the GOP. "We need a Kris Kobach in every state," declared Michelle Malkin, the conservative pundit. This year, Kobach successfully fought for a law requiring every Kansan to show proof of citizenship in order to vote even though the state prosecuted only one case of voter fraud in the past five years. The new restriction fused anti-immigrant hysteria with voter-fraud paranoia. "In Kansas, the illegal registration of alien voters has become pervasive," Kobach claimed, offering no substantiating evidence.
Kobach also asserted that dead people were casting ballots, singling out a deceased Kansan named Alfred K. Brewer as one such zombie voter. There was only one problem: Brewer was still very much alive. The Wichita Eagle found him working in his front yard. "I don't think this is heaven," Brewer told the paper. "Not when I'm raking leaves."
I'm sure they would have been baffled by the inability of their fellow citizens to accomplish something as simple as aquiring a photo ID. The Founding Fathers weren't known for "whining" about something being hard...especially when it isn't.
Does anyone have any "proof" of dead people voting?
I'm sure they would have been baffled by the inability of their fellow citizens to accomplish something as simple as aquiring a photo ID. The Founding Fathers weren't known for "whining" about something being hard...especially when it isn't.
The Framers would have certainly had an issue with the necessity, however; given the fact there is no evidence to justify the ID requirement in the first place.
Does anyone have any "proof" of dead people voting?
No.
Nor does the right have any proof of an election result altered by voter fraud or any proof of a significant number of convictions. And of those convicted, an ID requirement wouldnt have stopped the fraud.
The rights not going to let this go, theyre going to try to keep this myth alive as long as possible, using irrelevant, unsubstantiated, antidotal evidence in support.
Thousands of dead Floridians are registered to vote and some in Central Florida had ballots cast in their names long after their deaths.
"That is scary," said Jim Branch.
Branch's mother Marjorie died in 2004 but someone voted for her in 2006. Branch had tried to get his mother removed from the voter rolls.
she was convicted of filling out absentee ballots falsely.
ID laws would not have prevented this.
BTW it was a primary election.