theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
I would hardly think that basic 1+1 counting is "statistical shenanigans". : rolleyes :
Kestrel isn't describing simple arithmetic. He literally proposed a statistical audit. "Rolleyes" indeed.
I would hardly think that basic 1+1 counting is "statistical shenanigans". : rolleyes :
Machines are acceptable iff there is a clearly printed paper ballot in addition, and this has precedence.
Mostly no to hell no but this is interesting and I've never heard someone suggest it before:Make Election Day a federal Holiday on the first Monday of November
Automatic registration of everyone over 18
Voting Machines that produce a paper receipt and are audited before and immediately after every election. And a few randomly selected during the election (I know that will slow some things down, but I'd say maintaining the integrity of the vote is worth it).
Recounts for any margin under 5%
Rank choice voting with automatic run off
No indication of party on the ballot. Randomly change the order candidates appear on each ballot so people just can't go straight down the ticket without knowing who they are selecting
No announcing totals until the polls have closed
Free BBQ for all
I kind of like it.No indication of party on the ballot. Randomly change the order candidates appear on each ballot so people just can't go straight down the ticket without knowing who they are selecting
Yes.Make Election Day a federal Holiday on the first Monday of November
No.Automatic registration of everyone over 18
Slow things down and increase cost, but I agree it's worth it.Voting Machines that produce a paper receipt and are audited before and immediately after every election. And a few randomly selected during the election (I know that will slow some things down, but I'd say maintaining the integrity of the vote is worth it).
Automatic recounts under a certain margin? Yes. That specific margin? Maybe.Recounts for any margin under 5%
No.Rank choice voting with automatic run off
No.No indication of party on the ballot.
No.Randomly change the order candidates appear on each ballot so people just can't go straight down the ticket without knowing who they are selecting
Yes.No announcing totals until the polls have closed
There's no such thing as "free". Figure out who's paying for it, and why, and then we'll talk.Free BBQ for all
Machines are acceptable iff there is a clearly printed paper ballot in addition, and this has precedence.
Double effort, double cost. Which kind of defeats the purpose.
This is commonly known as "building the world's most expensive pencil."
Make Election Day a federal Holiday on the first Monday of November.
No. Everyone will leave town for the long weekend and not vote.
No. Everyone will leave town for the long weekend and not vote.
Yes.
No.
Slow things down and increase cost, but I agree it's worth it.
Automatic recounts under a certain margin? Yes. That specific margin? Maybe.
No.
No.
No.
Yes.
There's no such thing as "free". Figure out who's paying for it, and why, and then we'll talk.
So an informed electorate with more choices is bad?
Nothing on that list has to do with increasing voter information. Maybe one thing on that list has anything to do with more choices.
And neither "informed electorate" nor "more choices" have anything to do with voting machine security, which is the actual topic of the thread.
Rule of So in full effect!
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ETA: I'm also switching my first "yes" to a "no". Instead of a Monday holiday, either a Tuesday holiday or a Saturday voting day.
Sortition: random representation.Random voting: 100 people are randomly selected by a computer, and they alone get to vote. A great saving of time and money.
How so?Except more voters makes vote rigging a more expensive and less efficient proposition.
A Tuesday holiday makes more sense. Or a Saturday voting day.
But I'm one of those people who thinks that it's a perfectly cromulent use of your voting privilege, to look at the situation and decide that abstention (and spending the day doing something more important) is sufficient.
More voters means you have to fake more votes to shift an election. Not really true if you can actually hack machines but still.How so?
The real problem with hackable voting machines is that you get what you pay for. No voting district is going to pay Diebold top-dollar for a truly secure voting machine. The way people talk about voting machines, they probably should be as secure as ATMs. But the fact is, they're not, because no voting district has the money to pay for ATM-tier voting machines.
How so?
I agree with the principle, but find the pejorative tone repugnant.Its occasionally your duty as citizen to not vote. If you are especially ignorant or unconcerned about the outcome, you shouldn't vote.
It depends if you're worried about a recount. If you can fake the vote counts without having to worry about the ballots, then flipping 100k votes is no more difficult than flipping 100 votes.More voters means you have to fake more votes to shift an election.
True.Not really true if you can actually hack machines but still.
So could I.Also, I could be convinced that a lottery would be the best way to pick representatives or maybe candidates.
Wasn't meant pejoratively, I have been especially ignorant and especially unconcerned with the outcome of elections in my life. Chose not to vote in several elections as a student entirely because I knew I wasn't going to be in the same town come graduation and just didn't care enough about the long term future of that particular city while also not really knowing enough about my former home to cast an informed vote.I agree with the principle, but find the pejorative tone repugnant.