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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (628472)9/20/2004 9:02:18 AM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
How Democrats try to steal a country:

How to steal an election
By Jeff Jacoby, Globe Columnist
September 16, 2004

A RECENT story that didn't get nearly the attention it deserved was the
New York Daily News report that 46,000 registered New York City voters
are also registered to vote in Florida. Nearly 1,700 of them have had
absentee ballots mailed to their home in the other state, and as many as
1,000 have voted twice in the same election. Can 1,000 fraudulent votes
change an election? Well, George W. Bush won Florida in 2000 by just 537
votes.

It is illegal to register to vote simultaneously in different
jurisdictions, but scofflaws have little to worry about. As the Daily
News noted, "efforts to prevent people from registering and voting in
more than one state rely mostly on the honor system." Those who break
the law rarely face prosecution or serious punishment. It's easy -- and
painless -- to cheat.

I learned this firsthand in 1996, when I registered my wife's cat as a
voter in Cook County, Ill., Norfolk County, Mass., and Cuyahoga County,
Ohio, and then requested absentee ballots from all three venues. My
purpose wasn't to cast illegal multiple votes but to demonstrate how
vulnerable to manipulation America's election system has become.

It was a simple scam to pull off. "Under the National Voter Registration
Act -- the `Motor Voter Law' -- states are required to accept voter
registrations by mail," I wrote at the time. "No longer can citizens be
asked to make a trip to town hall or the county office. No longer do
they have to provide proof of residence or citizenship. In fact, they
don't have to exist. Motor Voter obliges election officials to add to
the voter list any name mailed in on a properly filled-out registration
form. Anyone so registered can then request an absentee ballot -- by
mail, of course. The system is not only open to manipulation, it invites
it."

As journalist John Fund shows in an alarming new book, "Stealing
Elections: How Voter Fraud Threatens Our Democracy," the United States
has an elections system that would be an embarrassment in Honduras or
Ghana. It is so unpoliced, he writes, that at least eight of the 9/11
hijackers "were actually able to register to vote in either Virginia or
Florida while they made their deadly preparations."

How fouled up are the voter rolls? So fouled up that in some cities
there are more registered voters than there are adults. So fouled up
that when the Indianapolis Star investigated Indiana's records a few
years ago, it discovered that hundreds of thousands of names -- as many
as one-fifth of the total -- were "bogus" since the individuals named
had moved, died, or gone to prison. So fouled up that when a Louisiana
paper filed 25 phony voter registration forms signed only with an "X,"
21 were approved and added to the voter list.
Illegal aliens have been registered, too, since under Motor Voter, any
recipient of government benefits can sign up to vote, no questions
asked. Did that wide-open door to fraud cost former GOP Congressman
Robert Dornan his seat in Congress? An investigation by the Immigration
and Naturalization Service following Dornan's 1996 defeat by Democrat
Loretta Sanchez found that 4,023 noncitizens may have cast ballots in
that election. Dornan lost by 984 votes.

It shouldn't take a degree in rocket science to fix a system this sloppy
and chaotic. But not everyone wants to fix it. Some operatives don't
mind cheating if it brings more of "their" voters to the polls. Fund
cites the findings of Wall Street Journal reporter Glenn Simpson and
political scientist Larry Sabato, co-authors of a recent book on
corruption in American politics. Some liberal activists they interviewed
go so far as to justify voter fraud on the grounds that such
"extraordinary measures" compensate for the weaker political clout of
minorities and the poor.

One simple fix -- requiring every voter to show ID when registering and
voting -- would seem to be a no-brainer. Opinion polls show that the
vast majority of Americans favor such a reform. After all, ID is
required when boarding an airplane or buying liquor. Why not when
voting?

Yet, incredibly, powerful political interests have long fought to block
an ID requirement. The NAACP and La Raza liken it to the poll tax that
Southern states once used to keep blacks from voting. A Democratic Party
official says that "ballot security" and "preventing voter fraud" are
simply code for voter suppression. That willingness to play the race
card is not merely dishonorable; it is undemocratic. For as Fund notes,
"when voters are disenfranchised by the counting of improperly cast
ballots, their civil rights are violated just as surely as if they were
prevented from voting."

The drift toward Third World-caliber elections in the most advanced
democracy in the world is scandalous. Then again, if Americans can't be
bothered to scrub the voting rolls or to make sure that voters are
properly ID'd, maybe they've got the election system they deserve.

Jeff Jacoby's e-mail address is jacoby@globe.com.

C Copyright 2004 Globe Newspaper Company.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (628472)9/20/2004 9:05:52 AM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
Yes Kenneth E. Phillipps, PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH rejected your latest proffered "False choice"

Looks to be a great week of watching dan the dummy be all the vacant liberal minded lefty loon he can be.