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Politics : Bush-The Mastermind behind 9/11? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sidney Reilly who wrote (3687)11/1/2003 1:34:15 AM
From: AK2004  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20039
 
re: Stupidity is as abundant as water on this planet

and you're evidence of that



To: Sidney Reilly who wrote (3687)11/1/2003 10:57:34 AM
From: MSI  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 20039
 
Exactly. No investigation - where are the damn Democrats?

In spite of stage-mangaged displays of "dissent", all the GOP are in lockstep.
Vote-managing is part of the reason they all agree in the back rooms - apparently they can make the votes come out any way they wish. Any Democrat who questions the confidentiality of the vote-counting can be removed:

"If much of the worry about vote-tampering is directed at the Republicans, it is largely because the big three touchscreen companies are all big Republican donors, pouring hundreds of thousands of dollars into party coffers in the past few years. The ownership issue is, of course, compounded by the lack of transparency. Or, as Dr Mercuri puts it: "If the machines were independently verifiable, who would give a crap who owns them?" As it is, fears that US democracy is being hijacked by corporate interests are being fueled by links between the big three and broader business interests, as well as extremist organizations. Two of the early backers of American Information Systems, a company later merged into ES&S, are also prominent supporters of the Chalcedon Foundation, an organization that espouses theocratic governance according to a literal reading of the Bible and advocates capital punishment for blasphemy and homosexuality.

The chief executive of American Information Systems in the early Nineties was Chuck Hagel, who went on to run for elective office and became the first Republican in 24 years to be elected to the Senate from Nebraska, cheered on by the Omaha World-Herald newspaper which also happens to be a big investor in ES&S. In yet another clamorous conflict of interest, 80 per cent of Mr Hagel's winning votes - both in 1996 and again in 2002 - were counted, under the usual terms of confidentiality, by his own company.

commondreams.org