Old Rocks
Diamond Member
Until the water and sewage system that serves their home fails.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Group says it found 30,000 dead North Carolinians registered to vote | CharlotteObserver.com
Mainly, what were concerned about is the potential [for fraud], said project director Jay DeLancy. Since there is no voter ID law in North Carolina, anybody can walk in and claim to be anyone else.
Read more here: Group says it found 30,000 dead North Carolinians registered to vote | CharlotteObserver.com
And this is a conspiracy, or were these folks legitimately registered and then they died?
Apparently to the 'nuts, it's voter fraud if you don't anticipate your demise and go un-register ahead of time.
Know what prevents me from getting dead people off the rolls? Personnel shortages. Back when there were four people doing my job instead of just one, we would actually go through the obits.
We do get a list of people who have died in the county every couple of weeks from the office of Vital Statistics. We try to get these updated before an election, but going back to those personnel shortages, it isn't always possible. Voter Registration takes priority over cancellation.
You'll notice that I stressed the "in the county" part...that's because if the person dies outside the county, we usually aren't notified. People just don't think to call the Registrar when someone passes. It usually takes getting a Jury notice or election material in the mail.
Keep throttling your local governments of money...
BTW, North Carolina DOES have voter ID laws already, for registrants and 1st time voters.
They allow the following as ID:
VOTER REGISTRATION ID REQUIREMENTS
FIRST‐TIME VOTERS
Individuals who have registered
to vote and have not previously
voted in an election and have not
provided verifiable ID, must show
one of the following types of ID
to an election official the first
time they present to vote.
Current and valid photo ID
NC driver license or identification card
U.S. Military ID
U.S. Passport
Other government‐issued photo ID
Student photo ID
Certified Naturalization Document
Current document showing name and
address of the voter
Utility bill: telephone; mobile phone;
electric or gas ; cable television; water
or sewage
Bank statement or bank‐issued credit
card statement
Government paycheck, invoice, letter,
or any other document from a local,
state, or U.S. government agency
Property tax bill
License to hunt, fish, own a gun, etc.
Automotive registration
Public housing or Social Service Agency
document
Paycheck or paycheck stub from an
employer or a W‐2 statement
Birth certificate
So I guess if the OP is so agitated by this non-issue, he should advocate for North Carolina to require every voter who shows up to bring at least one of the above.
BTW, North Carolina DOES have voter ID laws already, for registrants and 1st time voters.
They allow the following as ID:
VOTER REGISTRATION ID REQUIREMENTS
FIRST‐TIME VOTERS
Individuals who have registered
to vote and have not previously
voted in an election and have not
provided verifiable ID, must show
one of the following types of ID
to an election official the first
time they present to vote.
Current and valid photo ID
NC driver license or identification card
U.S. Military ID
U.S. Passport
Other government‐issued photo ID
Student photo ID
Certified Naturalization Document
Current document showing name and
address of the voter
Utility bill: telephone; mobile phone;
electric or gas ; cable television; water
or sewage
Bank statement or bank‐issued credit
card statement
Government paycheck, invoice, letter,
or any other document from a local,
state, or U.S. government agency
Property tax bill
License to hunt, fish, own a gun, etc.
Automotive registration
Public housing or Social Service Agency
document
Paycheck or paycheck stub from an
employer or a W‐2 statement
Birth certificate
So I guess if the OP is so agitated by this non-issue, he should advocate for North Carolina to require every voter who shows up to bring at least one of the above.
Know what prevents me from getting dead people off the rolls? Personnel shortages. Back when there were four people doing my job instead of just one, we would actually go through the obits.
We do get a list of people who have died in the county every couple of weeks from the office of Vital Statistics. We try to get these updated before an election, but going back to those personnel shortages, it isn't always possible. Voter Registration takes priority over cancellation.
You'll notice that I stressed the "in the county" part...that's because if the person dies outside the county, we usually aren't notified. People just don't think to call the Registrar when someone passes. It usually takes getting a Jury notice or election material in the mail.
Keep throttling your local governments of money...
It should be a state vital statistics job to send election offices the list. It amazes me that the scumbag Republicans refuse to go after the real low hanging fruit. It's yet another indication that their purpose isn't to prevent illegal voting, and just another Jim Crow attempt to suppress turnout among the poor, the young, the disabled, and minorities.
BTW, North Carolina DOES have voter ID laws already, for registrants and 1st time voters.
They allow the following as ID:
VOTER REGISTRATION ID REQUIREMENTS
FIRST‐TIME VOTERS
Individuals who have registered
to vote and have not previously
voted in an election and have not
provided verifiable ID, must show
one of the following types of ID
to an election official the first
time they present to vote.
Current and valid photo ID
NC driver license or identification card
U.S. Military ID
U.S. Passport
Other government‐issued photo ID
Student photo ID
Certified Naturalization Document
Current document showing name and
address of the voter
Utility bill: telephone; mobile phone;
electric or gas ; cable television; water
or sewage
Bank statement or bank‐issued credit
card statement
Government paycheck, invoice, letter,
or any other document from a local,
state, or U.S. government agency
Property tax bill
License to hunt, fish, own a gun, etc.
Automotive registration
Public housing or Social Service Agency
document
Paycheck or paycheck stub from an
employer or a W‐2 statement
Birth certificate
So I guess if the OP is so agitated by this non-issue, he should advocate for North Carolina to require every voter who shows up to bring at least one of the above.
How do you vote? Do you flash the pollster a Food Stamp? Is that your ID?
Know what prevents me from getting dead people off the rolls? Personnel shortages. Back when there were four people doing my job instead of just one, we would actually go through the obits.
We do get a list of people who have died in the county every couple of weeks from the office of Vital Statistics. We try to get these updated before an election, but going back to those personnel shortages, it isn't always possible. Voter Registration takes priority over cancellation.
You'll notice that I stressed the "in the county" part...that's because if the person dies outside the county, we usually aren't notified. People just don't think to call the Registrar when someone passes. It usually takes getting a Jury notice or election material in the mail.
Keep throttling your local governments of money...
It should be a state vital statistics job to send election offices the list. It amazes me that the scumbag Republicans refuse to go after the real low hanging fruit. It's yet another indication that their purpose isn't to prevent illegal voting, and just another Jim Crow attempt to suppress turnout among the poor, the young, the disabled, and minorities.
They want democracy dead
Voter Integrity Project has no evidence of any ballots cast in their names.
Apparently to the 'nuts, it's voter fraud if you don't anticipate your demise and go un-register ahead of time.
I actually had a guy call me to do just that. He was putting together a package for when he passed away so his family wouldn't have to deal with it. I'm sure his family will appreciate his forethought. I certainly do.
BTW, North Carolina DOES have voter ID laws already, for registrants and 1st time voters.
They allow the following as ID:
VOTER REGISTRATION ID REQUIREMENTS
FIRST‐TIME VOTERS
Individuals who have registered
to vote and have not previously
voted in an election and have not
provided verifiable ID, must show
one of the following types of ID
to an election official the first
time they present to vote.
Current and valid photo ID
NC driver license or identification card
U.S. Military ID
U.S. Passport
Other government‐issued photo ID
Student photo ID
Certified Naturalization Document
Current document showing name and
address of the voter
Utility bill: telephone; mobile phone;
electric or gas ; cable television; water
or sewage
Bank statement or bank‐issued credit
card statement
Government paycheck, invoice, letter,
or any other document from a local,
state, or U.S. government agency
Property tax bill
License to hunt, fish, own a gun, etc.
Automotive registration
Public housing or Social Service Agency
document
Paycheck or paycheck stub from an
employer or a W‐2 statement
Birth certificate
So I guess if the OP is so agitated by this non-issue, he should advocate for North Carolina to require every voter who shows up to bring at least one of the above.
How do you vote? Do you flash the pollster a Food Stamp? Is that your ID?
I am sure your poll watcher enjoys you insulting them, but in person you probably are a nice guy, this PC thug persona gets old here.
I'll bet more of them are Republicans than Democrats.
Problems arise when the names on the death certificates do not match the names on the voting records, which often happens after women get married, Board of Elections General Counsel Don Wright said Friday. Addresses are also often listed with slight differences, Wright said. An address on West Millbrook Road and Millbrook Road might be the same house, but computers wont always catch it. Unless there is an exact match, we do not remove people from the voter rolls, Wright said.
Read more here: Group says it found 30,000 dead North Carolinians registered to vote | CharlotteObserver.com
headline is totally misleading.....read the entire article....it explains why dead people are still on the rolls....
but good way to try to make something out of nothing there great
Something out of nothing? We live in the digital age. We should be able to purge records in r/t. Perhaps if Dems weren't so interested in voter fraud, we could make this a reality.