For example:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3666259
Why do you think mail-in ballots are secure? What security features do you think they have that make them secure?
If you don't know it's up to you to investigate.
For example:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3666259
Why do you think mail-in ballots are secure? What security features do you think they have that make them secure?
Blame won't fix that problem or many others, but in order to fix a problem you have to find it. Although it's true that there's a difference between what happens and what might happen, we might at least consider that when a thing consistently does not happen despite warnings that it might,
I don't have faith in god but that does not mean I ought to be allowed to burn down churches.
Again, you can keep blaming whoever you want to blame, but blame won't fix the problem.
Income inequality is growing at a staggering rate and more and more formerly secure people are sliding into poverty. The social safety net is being gutted and public infrastructure is allowed to rot. Meanwhile the wealthiest and most privileged among us are only becoming more powerful. The the wealthy few increasingly wield power over the powerless masses, it is becoming increasingly clear that these political systems are just not working.
How would you know it didn't happen? Because few people were caught? When there are few mechanisms available to catch people who cheat, that isn't actually strong evidence that there was little cheating.
Who's arguing for burning down churches? Making our elections more secure, in ways that many other developed nations already do, is hardly the equivalent of burning down a church.
Thread title “Trump Claims Millions of Illegal Votes Cast” and the context is you defending Republican voter suppression tactics in response to a Trump conspiracy theory, not you making serious or good faith arguments about election security.
Since you just changed, any advice about how to reach them?
It is easy to dismiss them as stupid or loony. I should know, I do that often, though it is more out of laziness than sincere thought they are literally mentally deficient. In all seriousness I am sure it is only very small minority of them that are truly basket cases.
But for the rest... there are questions, why they believe what they believe and how to convince them they are mistaken.
This is only chance to end it all more or less peacefully.
You keep saying the same things, but when you say there are few mechanisms to catch people who cheat, what mechanisms do you propose that do not exist, and in what way are the usual mechanisms falling short?
If there's a practical thing that other nations are doing that we should be doing without compromising our democracy, let's hear some specifics.
Of course you're not advocating burning down churches, but you're apparently excusing the violent anger of those whose unsubstantiated doubts about election security led them to unprecedented attacks against the government and the election that occurred, based on a vague and unsubstantiated presumption that an election can be stolen through fraud.
I remember years ago in this forum there were some threads about e-voting and it was mostly agreed that it wasn't secure enough. The more knowledge the posters had about computers, the less they trusted these systems. The fact that it is not allowed in the great majority of countries should mean that its lack of sufficient security is incontrovertible. I know it may not be the best moment to talk about it because it gets mixed with Trump's CT about having won by a landslide (yeah, right...)but it is nevertheless a real issue.
For an example of mechanisms falling short, voter rolls are not kept up. When people move away or die, they are frequently not taken off the list. Voter registration requirements in the first place are wholly inadequate, and ineligible voters can and do often register to vote.
Voter ID might be administered fairly, IF a larger variety of IDs were accepted and IF they were cheap and easy to obtain. But when examined closely, you will find that states that imposed new requirements that voters present current state-issued IDs to vote also took steps like closing DMV offices to make them harder to get.Voter ID is a pretty damn common requirement. Every serious objection to them is actually pretty easy to remedy, if one is interested in doing so.
What I'm hearing about election fraud:
Bigfoot will be caught because he's obviously there, we just haven't figured out the right kind of trap to use yet.
Support your claim. Where is there any evidence that any substantial numbers of people are voting in districts where they don't live, or that others are voting in the names of the deceased, or that people are registering to vote who aren't eligible to do so?
Voter ID might be administered fairly, IF a larger variety of IDs were accepted and IF they were cheap and easy to obtain.
I repeat, five states conduct elections entirely by mail. Where is there any evidence of fraud, even by losing candidates?
Why do you think mail-in ballots are secure? What security features do you think they have that make them secure?
I provided exactly what you asked for, and now you're claiming it doesn't count because reasons.
You never asked in good faith. You only asked because you didn't think I would bother. You have proven your fundamental dishonesty, and you're trying to lecture me about good faith arguments? Yeah, no. We're done here.
You are trying to move the goalpost for me. I'm not talking about how many people have done this. I'm saying there are inadequate protections against it. But we know all that stuff happens on some level, because sometimes people get caught doing it. Maybe not that many people do it right now. But that isn't good enough.
Those are tractable problems. In fact, states with voter ID requirements have to provide those ID's for free. If Democrats got on board with voter ID requirements, they would be able to do a lot to set the agenda of how those requirements are rolled out.
If you haven't heard about duplicate ballots, ballots sent to the wrong address, failed signature checks (see my link above for an example of that), etc., then you haven't been paying attention. Again, it doesn't suffice to say that it made no difference this time (but even there, how would you know when the system isn't secure?). The system must be SEEN to be secure. And there's just a crap ton of problems with it right now.
A Trump administration official claiming mail-in ballots aren’t secure in the lead-up to the 2020 election when Republicans were openly campaigning against mail-in ballots. Yes, that’s very compelling.
Because we just had a national election using a significant amount of mail-in ballots that was very secure.
Yes indeed. I find gerrymanderintg particularly obscene, how can that be a thing? Such a blatant cheat... as for voter suppresion, I don´t know much about the issue. Of course voting should be facilitated, but I find it hard to wrap my mind around how requiring ID for voting can be an issue when here in Europe it´s just a given.Yup,
And voter suppression and gerrymandering.
But only one of those two things is actually the responsibility of government to address. Care to guess which one?