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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (1451783)4/12/2024 2:03:31 PM
From: i-node  Read Replies (1) of 1571405
 
>> In the case of Georgia, if you don't like the way they ran their elections, tough luck. Unless you can prove that fraud occurred, you'll have to accept that their rules are just as legit as the rules of any other state.

I do take issue with fraud being the standard. The reason is simple: Proving fraud is not possible but in the rarest instances. Because it goes to state of mind: It must be proved that the defendant had a specific intent to defraud, which is exceedingly hard to do. It is so hard, in fact, that typically, IRS is able to prove only a few thousand cases of tax fraud in a given year out of the millions of tax returns filed.

Fraud doesn't account for the cheating that Mark Zuckerberg did. Clearly, changing the outcome of the election by putting a half billion cash into selected voting precincts, buying the right to control the election process. That was huge. So much so, half the states have now, four years later, outlawed it -- of course, the blue states haven't because blue states mostly never saw a cheat they didn't approve of.

It is a problem that states have so much control over federal elections. I have long stated on these forums that I believe an interstate compact would be useful in the case of federal elections to create some stringent rules against cheating. But you would never get California or New York or other blue states to sign on to something like that.
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