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Smartypants
09-14-2004, 08:08 PM
I wanted you all to know about ElectionProtection.org (http://www.workingforchange.com/electionprotection/), and the work it's doing to help assure that everyone who has the right to vote in November gets to exercise that right.

If anyone's interested and has the time (and travel money, if appicable), this is a great organization.

They're looking for volunteers (especially lawyers and Spanish speakers) to go to states that have demonstrated problems by negating the votes or otherwise disenfranchising many minority, poor, and elderly voters during past elections.

Volunteers will be trained prior to November and again upon arrival in the places they're sent, to canvass neighborhoods to educate people about their right to have their votes counted, and to monitor the conduct and integrity of the polling places and help ensure that no eligible voter is turned away or discouraged from voting on November 2.

Vounteers are needed all over (AZ, NM, MO, OH, WI, FL...) I'm going to Ft Lauderdale. Obviously Florida is an especially problematic state. The punch ballots that were part of the great 2000 election controversy there have been replaced for 2004, in some places with touch-screen machines that offer no paper trail to allow recounts in the case of dispute..

Many election officials in the state of Florida have been working to thin the voter rolls by dropping legitimately registered citizens who happen to have the same birthdates or names as others -- not just in Florida, but in other states as well--who have been convicted of felonies.

For those that think that each vote isn't of vital importance and that this is an inconsequential problem, remember that the last election was decided by a margin of less that 600 votes in the state of Florida, and the outcome of the presidential race might have been quite different if all who had wanted to vote, and had the right to, had been allowed and had had their vote properly counted.

Every vote DOES count.

(BTW electionprotection.org is a nonpartisan organization. It was not created to support any candidate or political ideology -- only to assure that every legal vote is counted.)

-----------

And don't forget to cast your OWN vote on Nov. 2! Are YOU registered?

:D

sparticle
09-14-2004, 10:29 PM
Cool link, cool concept -- thanks a bunch, Mr. Smartypants! :D

nycwriters
09-14-2004, 10:50 PM
I hate that I can't vote. :(

Avalon
09-14-2004, 10:57 PM
Are you allowed dual citizenship? Would you be allowed to vote if you did?

Coffee
09-14-2004, 10:58 PM
Defect from Canada...ask for political asylum...well, you'd belong in an asylum if you wanted to be a US citizen right now just so you could vote...so that could actually work.

:D

Smartypants
09-15-2004, 12:20 AM
Originally posted by Coffee
Defect from Canada...ask for political asylum...well, you'd belong in an asylum if you wanted to be a US citizen right now just so you could vote...so that could actually work.

:D

LOL! I would have just ended that after "...right now." but still I must agree!
:p

zenbabe
09-15-2004, 01:06 AM
just assume an identity man! Duh!

Smartypants
09-15-2004, 01:28 AM
That's right. And once you have one, remember come election day to vote early and often!

madasacutsnake
09-15-2004, 01:45 AM
Originally posted by nycwriters
I hate that I can't vote. :(

Tha pisses me off too.

melissa
09-15-2004, 02:17 AM
I vote in every election and am amazed and stunned when my friends tell me they don't vote.

priceyfatprude
09-15-2004, 02:24 AM
I voted today.

I got a sticker.

I wore it all day.

melissa
09-15-2004, 02:57 AM
Good for you, sweetie!! I can't wait to vote.

sparticle
09-15-2004, 03:02 AM
People who are eligible to vote and are well and healthy and just won't get off their lazy asses and do it infuriate me, especially if they dismiss it with some lame crap about it not making any difference or with a bunch of nonsense about the electoral college making it all moot. I have never missed an election in which I was eligible to vote. If nothing else, I think it fosters personal integrity and maintains an activist spirit.

madasacutsnake
09-15-2004, 06:52 AM
Originally posted by sparticle
People who are eligible to vote and are well and healthy and just won't get off their lazy asses and do it infuriate me, especially if they dismiss it with some lame crap about it not making any difference or with a bunch of nonsense about the electoral college making it all moot. I have never missed an election in which I was eligible to vote. If nothing else, I think it fosters personal integrity and maintains an activist spirit.

It's not too much of a stretch to say that the people who didn't vote last time fvcked up the world.

joppa.gal
09-15-2004, 10:42 AM
I voted. But prob. in the opposite way this board likes. I'm pretty conservative.

So blaaaaa. :p

daverbee
09-15-2004, 11:24 AM
Originally posted by sparticle
People who are eligible to vote and are well and healthy and just won't get off their lazy asses and do it infuriate me, especially if they dismiss it with some lame crap about it not making any difference or with a bunch of nonsense about the electoral college making it all moot. I have never missed an election in which I was eligible to vote. If nothing else, I think it fosters personal integrity and maintains an activist spirit. The ones that piss me off are the ones who don't vote and then complain about the government.

America: Love It or Leave It
should be
America: Change It or Lose It

Smartypants
09-15-2004, 05:50 PM
Originally posted by joppa.gal
I voted. But prob. in the opposite way this board likes. I'm pretty conservative.

So blaaaaa. :p

Well, the conservatives are the ones who consistently show up and vote, that's for sure.

I hereby personally step up to cancel out joppa.gal's vote with mine.

(btw joppa, I'm so happy for you that you earn over $200K, are well insured, have enough tucked away for a comfortable retirement, your elderly parents will never need any prescription drugs, and your kids are neither in public school nor the military. That's terrific! You go, girl!!)

Smartypants
09-15-2004, 06:24 PM
Just in case anyone missed this...

Building a bridge to the 18th century. (http://www.comedycentral.com/mp/play.php?player=realplayer&type=v&quality=high&reposid=/multimedia/tds/headlines/9028.html)

dinzdale
09-15-2004, 06:41 PM
Originally posted by daverbee
The ones that piss me off are the ones who don't vote and then complain about the government.


/o\ /o\ /o\ *clap*clap*clap*/o\/o\

Spicy Jack
09-15-2004, 06:54 PM
Originally posted by dinzdale
\o/ [o] [o/ /o\ *clap*clap*clap*

village people?

dinzdale
09-15-2004, 06:55 PM
Yep, they're missing their idiot since you left.

sparticle
09-15-2004, 07:00 PM
Originally posted by joppa.gal
I voted. But prob. in the opposite way this board likes. I'm pretty conservative.

So blaaaaa. :p

Hey -- at least you voted!

sparticle
09-15-2004, 07:02 PM
Originally posted by madasacutsnake
It's not too much of a stretch to say that the people who didn't vote last time fvcked up the world.


Yep -- them and the maroons who voted for Nader. I wish Ralph Nader would sit down and shut up. He has effectively tarnished what should have been his rightly honored place in history by making a buffoon and a shill of himself.

sparticle
09-15-2004, 07:06 PM
Originally posted by daverbee
The ones that piss me off are the ones who don't vote and then complain about the government.



They're almost as "admirable" as the shitheads who vote for some complete fascist because they are uneducated and can't be bothered to research the issues. Then they backpedal when everything goes tumbling into Hell, with a whiny "Well, the Democrats just didn't have a strong enough candidate...."

Feh. Are you people happy NOW? ARE YOU? ARE YOU???!?!?!?!!

*reaching for soothing glass of iced Earl Grey and a cool cloth to put over my eyes -- PMS and politics don't mix*