And as has been pointed out, the states trying pass voter ID have multiple ID options in addition to many of them offering provisional voting with the ID to follow.
Yes. Here's a list of the options in Texas, for example.
Texas driver license issued by the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS)
Texas Election Identification Certificate issued by DPS
Texas personal identification card issued by DPS
Texas concealed handgun license issued by DPS
United States military identification card containing the person’s photograph
United States citizenship certificate containing the person’s photograph
United States passport
This is a much narrower list of options than those discussed for Canada earlier. Very few of the people who don't have a driver's license or a non-driver's ID issued by the DPS are going to have any of the other forms of ID on that list.
Provisional voting in Texas, meanwhile, provides no recourse to those without valid IDs under normal circumstances--it just gives you six days to present one.
It's simply the liberal excuse for their hidden belief that some races aren't smart enough to meet the requirements.
It's interesting that when you poll people about these laws, they enjoy widespread support...except among minorities. It's almost like "some races" have reason to believe that this is just another in a long, unhappy lineage of attempts at suppression and disenfranchisement of their votes.
I mean, if you ask me, I think most people are "smart enough" that they could come up with a $20 poll tax. I hardly think that's sufficient justification for a poll tax, however. If you can appreciate why being smart enough is not really the issue with poll taxes, you can appreciate why it's not really the issue here, too.
Yep that same non-existent problem that most other countries seem to be concerned with.
It's surprising that a skeptic would continue with this "everyone else thinks it's real, so it must be real" line of reasoning. Almost every other country has hate speech laws, so hate speech must be a problem worthy of legislation. Any hate speech legislation, even relatively restrictive hate speech legislation is therefore justified. Right?
The big problem, apart from the fact that this doesn't establish the existence of in-person voter impersonation fraud, is that the amorphous "most countries" you're looking to differ from the US in relevant ways. For example, many countries have a compulsory national ID, and undergo considerable pains to ensure that everyone has one. This would neatly dispose of the burdensome aspect of voter ID requirements.
The most sensible comparison here is to the other common law countries, which are historically and legally similar to the US, and like the US, have been reluctant to adopt national ID proposals. In those countries, it turns out, photo identification is not commonly required at the polls.