I am not sure how to fix that, either.
Paper only. In person, except for absentee voting with all the restrictions around it. Voting only 1 day and all votes counted in each precinct that day.
I would be very leary of some national-level requirements
Those requirements are unconstutional on their face.
because we both know the current
administration would have all the states allowing all sorts of stupid stuff.
As well as Blue states.
You should be able to sort the little cards from 0-X and see if someone's missing or duplicated. You should be able to sort the ballots from 0-(Y+Z) an
see if a ballot is missing. And, of course X should equal Y.
Oh, but math is racist.
Mike Powell wrote to Dr. What <=-
They were stuffing paper ballots, so how does that help? There are
areas where they cheated long before COVID and multiple day voting.
I agree, none of the electronic touch-screen machines, but those old tabulating machines we used to use (pull lever) worked here great, and were a lot faster than the touch-screens.
Also, some folks seem to think "paper only and hand counting only" will fix it. There is no way they'd get them all counted "that day" that
way,
and there is no way you'd convince someone like me that someone hand-counting it will somehow be less biased than a machine. After
all, the machine is biased because of how a *person* programmed it.
In person is good. One vote per person is good. Each ballot only able
to be counted once is good. The only way you can enforce those last
two, especially the last one, is if a machine counts them.
I would go as far as to say the ballot should expire after X amount of time. That way it cannot easily leave the polling location and come
back later, and it cannot be pulled back out from under a table and rescanned later.
Part of the reason I like the idea of multiple days is that it keeps places like Leftistexcrementholeville from claiming that people don't
have enough time to vote and trying to keep the polls open past 6pm on Election night. They used to complain all the time.
Our paper ballots go into a locked machine. I don't know if it
tabulates it or not at that moment, but it tells us that our ballot has been accepted.
I would rather them not tabulate, or at least not be able to tell
anyone what was tabulated, until after 6pm Election night. On the
other hand, it could be handy if it gave the voter a receipt that told them what their ballot was counted as... although I see a lot of
confusion and people claiming it was wrong when it really wasn't if it could do that.
and there is no way you'd convince someone like me that someone hand-counting it will somehow be less biased than a machine. After
all, the machine is biased because of how a *person* programmed it.
The problem is that it's easy to produce a bunch of machines to cheat. It's much harder to produce a bunch of people who will cheat.
In person is good. One vote per person is good. Each ballot only able to be counted once is good. The only way you can enforce those last two, especially the last one, is if a machine counts them.
Only if the code is open source, vetted as correct, and the machines are completely disconnected from any ability to change after loaded with the software. Hm.... I just realized that we do almost all of this with electronic payment devices that stores use to read your credit card.
I would go as far as to say the ballot should expire after X amount of time. That way it cannot easily leave the polling location and come back later, and it cannot be pulled back out from under a table and rescanned later.
But this is how the machines were designed. They were designed to allow for cheating.
Currently, I do not trust **any** current machine to tabulate ballots.
Part of the reason I like the idea of multiple days is that it keeps places like Leftistexcrementholeville from claiming that people don't have enough time to vote and trying to keep the polls open past 6pm on Election night. They used to complain all the time.
Does anyone listen to those ignorants? They are the same ones who keep pushin
the false Narrative that "Blacks can't get IDs to vote."
Polls are open long enough for nearly everyone to be able to vote in person. For the outliars, we have mail in voting.
Our paper ballots go into a locked machine. I don't know if it tabulates it or not at that moment, but it tells us that our ballot has been accepted.
In my area, it's a locked box. About the only thing it does it verify that th
ballot is not spoiled (i.e. you voted for 2 candidates when you were only allowed to vote for 1).
There's no perfect solution to this. About all we can do is make voter fraud not worth the effort.
Mike Powell wrote to Dr. What <=-
I don't think so. For local elections, yes, but you honestly don't
think they could find plenty of Never-Trumpers in electoral-vote rich states?
I don't know that they were designed to allow for it specifically,
You can honestly mis-map a screen, but I would expect then that all choices of Y would also turn into votes for X. I have never heard of
that happening. Have you?
I like mail-in even less than multilple day in-person.
I like mail-in even less than multilple day in-person.
When I say "mail in voting", I'm talking about the process that's been in plac
for a long time. I show up at the city office and explain my need (i.e. I wil
be out of state that day), then show my ID, and I am given a ballot that I can
fill out and mail in.
Again, much harder to cheat. And if you have an Elitist run state (like Michigan), the Sec of State will ignore the law and set her own election rules
and the AG will not prosecute the people who broke the laws.
Sysop: | deepend |
---|---|
Location: | Calgary, Alberta |
Users: | 266 |
Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
Uptime: | 19:38:48 |
Calls: | 2,089 |
Calls today: | 1 |
Files: | 4,444 |
D/L today: |
36 files (13,496K bytes) |
Messages: | 412,833 |