Comparing The Red State 2014 Fluke: What? GOP No Chance For 2016 CA Senate?

I guess I wasn't as clear as you needed me to be.

I said honest and credible proof.

Got a link to your accusations? Or is it from some stupid far right wing source who is lying through their teeth?

Oh and just because a person is still listed as a voter even though their dead, having the name listed isn't voting. You'll have to come up with a link to credible sources to back up your accusations.

Yes there have been a few instances that people were registered in two places and voted in both. ann coulter did it. So did denish de sousa and bruce fleming. There could be some democrats doing it too and if they are they should face the same consequences that ann coulter, bruce fleming and denish de sousa faced. Which wasn't any real sort of consequence. They didn't spend one minute in prison or jail.

You'll no doubt dispute this but here are the articlew about the 2012 presidential election in OHIO.
Non-citizens caught voting in 2012 presidential election in key swing state Fox News

Study 1.8 Million Dead People Still Registered To Vote NPR

Dead people voting - Ballotpedia

Florida. 53K dead people on voter rolls - MJ Lee - POLITICO.com

Here just a few you lazy bastard. If you want more...google 'em yourself. You're going to deny this shit happens anyway, just like fucking democrats always do.
 
Porker Poster likely kept drawing pay during the recent foreclosure crisis, knowing the cause to be found in Matthew 25:14-30, the matter of fixed percentage usury, income increases. Savings and Bond rates, Dividends and COLA's, bonuses and pay boosts, all tend to the usury model, shown in the New Testament passage. An inverse usury remedy is found in the Obama-Biden Stimulus, the Make-Work-Pay Refundable Income Tax credit, $400.00 per filer, even if no refund was due. That source is Matthew 20:1-16, ignored by Mohammed the Prophet, Adam Smith the Presbyterian, Karl Marx the Atheist, and Lord Keynes the gay, velocity of money proponent. The source problem was the educated man from Egypt, with delusions of a deity. Deuteronomy 23:19-20, essentially restates the Command: "Be Fruitful, Multiply, Fill All The Earth. . . .And Screw 'Em!" Anyone sees the deity concept, applied(?). Also, the Republicans took the Jesus Christ remedy away, themselves, in 2010--to be compared with the mentioned of history. Milton Friedman seemed to like the Moses method, best.

Senator McCain simply went to Vietnam, found his way to get behind the lines, and sit the whole thing out. 55,000 died, all victims of what all participants in such adventures, in all of history, intended.

Voter fraud, by comparison, is actually rare! If Porker Poster had bothered to read any of the links, then more or less this is what it looks like:
_________________________________________
Some recent examples of elections in which actual fraudulent votes were cast on behalf of dead people include a 2005 state senate election in Tennessee that was decided by fewer than 20 votes; in this case, a post-election verification process established that two fraudulent votes were cast on behalf of dead people. Three election workers were indicted, and the results of the election were voided. The mayoral election in Miami in 1997 was nullified by a judge because of widespread fraud, including a number of established cases of fraudulent votes cast in the name of dead people. Election inspectors looking at the 1982 gubernatorial election in Illinois estimated that as many as 1 in 10 ballots cast during the election were fraudulent, including votes by the dead.

When the Poughkeepsie Journal in New York did a 2006 analysis of how names of deceased people were still on New York's official list of registered voters, it conducted the assessment by matching "the names, dates of birth and ZIP codes of all listed voters in New York's database of 11.7 million voter registration records against the same information in the Social Security Administration's "Death Master File," a database of 77 million records of deaths dating to 1937." That study resulted in a final estimate of as many as 77,000 dead people on its rolls, and that as many as 2,600 of them had cast votes from the grave.
___________________________________________

In a few years, a few instances are found. There is no even pretense at a widespread, minority movement or majority movement.

Day to day business, by comparison, happens daily. War happens daily, except that the Pentagon now relies, hardly any names of dead in Iraq and Afghanistan at all, which seems to Make Republicans cringe. Ted Cruz and others tend to be critical of that turn of events, the Mideast policy.

It is not likely that Republican values, like McCain's and the Cruz family values--Fidelistas or not--will much sway the 2016 elections. Voter fraud will likely not sway the 2016 elections.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Young Brave speed with lightening flash, on great steed of warrior capability--some things likely swaying, or at least being swayed--and even au natural!)
 
The City of St. Louis, Missouri. You Democrat SoBs explain this article....from the L.A. Times. (The St. Louis Post-Dispatch is a democrat rag).

In St. Louis Dead Are Causing Lively Debate With Their Votes - Los Angeles Times


National Perspective | POLITICS
In St. Louis, Dead Are Causing Lively Debate With Their Votes
February 28, 2001|STEPHANIE SIMON | TIMES STAFF WRITER


ST. LOUIS — The dearly departed seem to have quite a constituency around here.

At least three dead aldermen registered to vote in Tuesday's mayoral primary. So did one alderman's deceased mother.

And a dead man was listed as the chief plaintiff in a lawsuit filed on election day in November. He was having trouble voting, the suit said, due to long lines at his polling station. So he petitioned a judge--successfully--to keep city ballot boxes open late.

Over at the dingy county election board headquarters, harried staffers now are reviewing thousands of registration cards--and finding ever more curiosities: addresses that turn out to be vacant lots, civic leaders double-registered at bogus addresses, convicted felons illegally seeking ballots and, always, more deceased voters.

"We find more every day," said election director Kevin Coan.

Not surprisingly, accusations of fraud are flying. And so are calls for top-to-bottom reform.

"Our election system in St. Louis is like Ft. Knox without locks on it," said Alderman James Shrewsbury, whose mother was posthumously registered. "There needs to be a housecleaning."


The most urgent mop-up job concerns 3,800 registration cards dropped off just before the deadline to vote in the primary. Election workers became suspicious when they found the name of Albert "Red" Villa, an alderman who died in 1990, on one card. At least a third of the registrations turned out to be fraudulent, Coan said.

The question, of course, is who submitted them--and why.

The skulduggery scenario runs like this: One of the mayoral campaigns cooked up the phony registrations to steal the election. (Campaign workers could do this by requesting absentee ballots for the fake voters and marking them for their man.) An even more sinister suggestion: The cards could be a dirty trick, planted by one candidate to make it look as though a rival were gearing up to rig the vote.

Some of the candidates have dropped hints that such a conspiracy would not be beyond their foes. But political observers find it hard to believe any contender would stoop to such clumsy fraud. "It's so blatant," said James Buford, president of the Urban League of Metro St. Louis. "I don't see any of them taking that kind of risk or being that stupid."

Which leads to the third possibility: laziness. Democrats have been conducting a registration drive unaffiliated with any candidate. Some workers may have found it easier to fabricate cards using old phone books than to walk door-to-door seeking real voters.

A grand jury is investigating the fake-card fiasco--and considering criminal charges. Meanwhile, election officials have been working seven days a week to figure out who is eligible to vote Tuesday.

The chaos only amplifies an already tense atmosphere that has lingered since November's presidential election.

Democrats maintain that the election board disenfranchised countless voters, mainly African Americans, by unfairly striking them from the active-voter list. (The board says it only removed people who had failed to notify them of a new address.) They further contend that polling places in many black neighborhoods were so crowded that many voters left rather than wait hours.

To Republicans, the trouble was not that too few people could vote, but that too many could.

Judges permitted at least 135 unregistered voters to cast ballots based on written affidavits declaring such reasons as: "I want a Dem. president," or "Found out about Gore from my mother."

And as many as 100 voters cast ballots after the polls were supposed to close.

The lawsuit that won extended voting hours was filed on behalf of a Robert D. Odom. It indicated that he "has not been able to vote and fears he will not be able to vote" because of crowding at his polling place. It later emerged that Odom had died a year earlier. The lawyer who filed the suit explained the mix-up by saying he had intended the plaintiff to be Robert M. "Mark" Odom, an aide to a Democratic candidate for Congress. Yet that Odom had voted, without a wait, by the time the suit was filed.


Citing such screw-ups, Republicans recently filed a 250-page report with the U.S. attorney, accusing Democrats of "an organized effort to commit vote fraud."

Local prosecutors plan to send 22 observers to the polls Tuesday. The secretary of state and his staff will be here too. With their help, Buford said, "I think we can have a clean election."
 
St. Louis Sees Specter of Vote Fraud - NYTimes.com

Geesus...even the N.Y. Times weighed in.

St. Louis Sees Specter of Vote Fraud
By B. DRUMMOND AYRES Jr.
Published: March 4, 2001

ST. LOUIS, March 3 — When it comes to American cities with a notorious history of election fraud, St. Louis can hold its own. Its political past is replete with instances in which people no longer alive got to vote, not to mention people who never lived.

In last November's presidential election, some voters filed a lawsuit midway through Election Day demanding that voting hours be extended. They said that election officials had permitted polling places to become chaotically crowded, possibly in a deliberate effort to depress the city's heavy black vote.

The hours were extended, then it was discovered that the chief plaintiff in the lawsuit had been dead the better part of a year.

Come Tuesday, the people of St. Louis will head to the polls again, this time to nominate candidates for the April 3 mayoral election. And once again the integrity of the city's voting system is as much at issue as what the various candidates have to say about the city's economic and social problems. Once again, there are bold headlines and live-at-6 broadcasts about scores of bogus registrations, secret grand jury investigations and accusations of blatant race-based disenfranchisement.

"It's the same old never-ending St. Louis story," said James Shrewsbury, a city alderman and veteran of the city's political wars. "It's what happens when you have an old city that insists on hanging on to the bad old political ways. I know. At one point, somebody out there reregistered my long-dead mother."

None of Tuesday's mayoral candidates have been accused of wrongdoing. But there is no shortage of whispering — unsubstantiated — that some of them have supporters who would not hesitate to write down a bogus name or address. There also is plenty of talk — unsubstantiated — that Republican election officials are intent on making it difficult for blacks to vote, while Democratic election officials are intent on making it too easy for blacks to vote.

And, some election officials and political professionals say, there is always the real possibility that some of the fraud and disenfranchisement exists only in the imagination of those who want to make an opponent or another party look bad. Likewise, it is said that some of the most egregious fraud, like registering dead aldermen, may well have been perpetrated by people hired to sign up new voters and paid on a per- person basis.

Whatever the case, this much is certain:

A grand jury is investigating a report by election officials that hundreds of fraudulent names and nonexistent addresses were found on about 3,800 voter registration cards turned in last month just hours before the deadline for signing up for Tuesday's election.

"It's just incredible what we've uncovered," Kevin Coan, an election official, said. "Would you believe the names of three dead aldermen? Of course you would. This is St. Louis."

A coalition of civic and church groups, Citizens Concerned with African-American Voter Disenfranchisement, says that although voting fraud is a problem in St. Louis, the city's election officials have gone overboard on tightening voting regulations. The group is contemplating legal action if election officials do not take steps to make it easier for St. Louis residents to vote, particularly blacks, who account for half of the city's 333,960 residents.

"We're not charging specific fraud or specific partisan politics or specific racism, though we aren't naïve," Richard Gaines, a coalition official, said. "What we are charging is that it is not easy to vote in this town if you are black. There's always another form to fill out or another official to see or another office to visit. That has to change."

The city prosecutor, Jennifer Joyce, and state election officials say they are so concerned about voting irregularities that they will send poll observers on Tuesday to keep an eye on things. "We're going to make sure that the process is not tainted in any way," Ms. Joyce promised a few days ago.

And the United States attorney general, John Ashcroft, a Missourian, says he will send in several Justice Department "monitors" and take "appropriate action" should there be any violations of voting rights or instances of voter fraud.

The mayoral candidates seeking nomination on Tuesday — four Democrats and two Republicans — are saying little about voting irregularities other than to call for a clean election. Instead, they are trying to keep the focus on improving the sometimes marginal quality of health care, schooling and economic opportunity in the city.

St. Louis is one of the country's most heavily Democratic cities. So only the Democratic primary is being watched carefully, since winning it is tantamount to winning office. And that primary, if the polls have it right, seems most likely to end up as a down-to-the-wire race between a former mayor, Freeman Bosley Jr., and the president of the city's Board of Aldermen, Francis Slay.

The incumbent mayor, Clarence Harmon, has disappointed many voters over the past four years and appears to have little chance of being re-elected.

Mr. Bosley, who is black, has the support of one of the city's most influential blacks, Representative William Lacy Clay Jr., and probably will get most of the black vote.

Mr. Slay is white and probably will get most of the white vote.

Mr. Harmon, who is black, captured the mayor's job four years ago by unseating Mr. Bosley. He did it with the help of white votes. Where the now disenchanted Harmon supporters go on Tuesday — blacks and whites — could decide the race.

The other Democratic candidate is Bill Hass, a school board member. The Republican candidates are Michael Chance and Francis Wildhaber.
 
Dead Man Voting Riverfront Times

This is a NINE (9) pages look at St. Louis' fixed elections...have fun denying this shit democrats.

Dead Man Voting
St. Louis elections are a national joke. Trouble is, it's not funny anymore.
Comments (0)By Bruce Rushton Wednesday, Apr 24 2002

Though he came closer than any Republican mayoral candidate in more than a generation, Jerry Wamser wasn't exactly surprised when he lost in 1981 to Vince Schoemehl Jr.
St. Louis long had been as solidly Democratic as it was culturally conservative, but Wamser doubted that ideology was the only influence on elections. He believed that the system was rigged against challengers, and he wasn't alone. Even some Democrats agreed with Wamser, but proof was another matter. Investigation after investigation into voter fraud had fizzled, including a probe by then-Circuit Attorney George Peach, who came up with nothing just one year before Wamser lost.

No indictments didn't mean no problems. Prompted by concerns on the part of politicos such as Peach and Wamser, the city's morning daily, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, exposed a disgusting pattern of fraud in city elections just one month after the 1982 primary. Then-Gov. Christopher "Kit" Bond heaped praise on the newspaper, but Bond was a Republican and the Globe-Democrat -- well, the conservative Globe-Democrathad a reputation for using its news pages to advance political causes. So when Wamser -- a defeated GOP candidate, appointed to the St. Louis Board of Election Commissioners by a Republican governor -- complained about vote fraud, surely sour grapes and his political persuasion made him prone to hyperbole. After all, he was claiming that fraud was so widespread and safeguards so lax, he could probably register his dog Exeter P. Wamser to vote.


Jennifer Silverberg



Comptroller Darlene Green has testified before a federal grand jury.
Exeter was never registered, but a dozen years later, a different dog did make it onto voting rolls.

Ritzy was trotted out by Bond, now the state's senior senator, last year during the latest investigations into voter fraud. Registered during a 1994 voter-registration drive paid for by gambling interests, Ritzy never voted. After receiving a perfunctory registration notice from the election board, Ritzy's owners, who had used their pet's name instead of their own in the telephone book, did the right thing and told the board that this new voter wasn't a yellow-dog Democrat, just a dog.

But Ritzy showed what could have happened in a one-party town where politics are bruising, the number of registered voters surpasses the voting-age population and the election board can't be trusted to run an election.

On Nov. 7, 2000, when every vote really did matter, indifference and incompetence finally caught up with St. Louis. The city became a national laughingstock thanks to an election board built on patronage and politicians who had long countenanced a system that did just one thing well: keep the powers that be in place.

Hundreds of legitimate voters weren't allowed to cast ballots because their names were on the city's list of inactive voters -- they had moved without notifying the election board or the board had botched paperwork. City circuit judges compounded the crisis by keeping the polls open late and signing hundreds of court orders allowing unregistered voters to cast ballots. By day's end, police were dispersing crowds of would-be voters from board headquarters while Bond pounded a podium and accused Democrats of stealing the election. "An outrage!" he thundered.

Here was a fiasco too big to ignore --even in St. Louis.

The FBI was soon poking around while Bond played point man for federal election reforms aimed at preventing fraud. The heat had never been so high. But, this being St. Louis, it wasn't altogether surprising when more than 3,000 suspect voter-registration cards arrived at election-board headquarters less than four months later, on the registration deadline for the 2001 primary. Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce, whose mother, Nellene Joyce, was among the dead political figures whose names appeared on the bogus cards, immediately launched a criminal investigation, which is pending more than a year later.

Whether someone is pulling strings in an elaborate attempt to steal elections today is anybody's guess, but it's happened before. The city's election board bumbled as badly as ever in the first election of the 21st century, and the city has a history of politicians who exploit every crack.

So far, Joyce has netted just three small fish, each charged last month with submitting phony registration cards. But several election-board officials and at least one elected city official, Comptroller Darlene Green, have been called before a federal grand jury that has recently concluded the investigation that's now back in Joyce's lap.

Meanwhile, U.S. Department of Justice attorneys based in Washington, D.C., still are digging into the 2000 election.

Given the city's history, anything could happen.

Over the past 20 years, mob bosses, drug kingpins, street-corner thugs and even a few politicians have been implicated in vote-fraud schemes. But underlying problems that are the petri dishes for electoral corruption have remained unsolved.

At least someone smells change.

"This is the first time this is being taken seriously," Wamser says.

"Prior to Jennifer Joyce, it was hard to sustain interest by the local prosecutor in serious instances of election fraud."



No one knows just how many bogus votes may have been cast in 2000, nor does anyone know how many legitimate voters were denied the right to cast ballots. But the chaos was perfect for stealing an election.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 All Next Page »

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ACORN and voter registration fraud - Ballotpedia

ACORN and voter registration fraud
Voter registration drives conducted by ACORN and affiliated entities have led to controversy and allegations of vote fraud.
The organization has been accused of different types of misbehavior with regard to voter registration drives:

  • Failing to adequately monitor and supervise its employees to the point where the organization should be held responsible for what the employees did.
  • Turning in "massive numbers" of duplicate registration cards.
  • Turning in registration cards for fictional characters.
  • Turning in registration cards filled out by children.
  • Turning in registration cards where the signatures had been forged.
Timeline
2009
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Latoya Lewis pled guilty on October 12, 2009 on charges of voter registration fraud. Lewis, who was working for ACORN when she committed the acts in 2008 that led to her guilty plea, said she was trying to "meet her quota as a paid registrar."[1]
2008
  • In Orange County, Florida, ACORN staffers submitted multiple, duplicate registrations on behalf of six separate voters over this summer. One individual had 21 duplicate applications. Election Supervisor Bill Cowles and his staff protested, noting in a June memo that ACORN had been submitting sloppy forms as well.[2]
  • In Lake County, Indiana, election officials discovered "dozens of ACORN-delivered registration forms they believe contain inaccurate voter information, including one in which a dead man from Gary was listed as the applicant." The applications were not processed.[4]
  • In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Sean Cairncross, the Republican Party's chief lawyer said that ACORN is "engaged in systematic fraud and attempts to undermine our electoral system." This was in the wake of a report that had hired at least seven felons as voter registration workers in the city. As of early October, Milwaukee election officials have referred to the Milwaukee County district attorney’s office 49 cases of people who submitted potentially fraudulent registration cards.[5]
  • An ACORN employee in West Reading, Pennsylvania, was sentenced to up to 23 months in prison for identity theft and tampering with records. A second ACORN worker pleaded not guilty to the same charges and is free on $10,000 bail.[6]
2007
  • In Washington, five Washington state ACORN workers were sentenced to jail time.[7] ACORN agreed to pay King County $25,000 for its investigative costs and acknowledged that the national organization could be subject to criminal prosecution if fraud occurs again. According to King County Prosecuting Attorney Dan Satterberg, the misconduct was done "as an easy way to get paid [by ACORN], not as an attempt to influence the outcome of elections."[8][9]
  • In Reynoldsburg, Ohio, Claudel Gilbert was indicted on two felony counts of illegal voting and false registration, after being registered by ACORN to vote in two separate counties. He pled guilty to the illegal voting charges, his lawyer claiming voter confusion rather than criminal intent. The charges of false registration were dropped by the Franklin County prosecutor's office. Common Pleas Judge Richard A. Frye sentenced Gilbert to probation for one year and fined him $500 but suspended a six-month prison sentence[10]
  • In Missouri, four ACORN employees were indicted in Kansas City for charges including identity theft and filing false registrations during the 2006 election.
2006
  • On November 1, 2006, four part-time ACORN employees were indicted in Kansas City, Missouri for voter registration fraud. Prosecutors said the indictments are part of a national investigation.[11] ACORN said in a press release that it is in part responsible in these individuals being caught, fired them, and cooperated and publicly supported efforts to look into the validity of the allegations.[12]
  • ACORN was investigated in 2006 for submitting false voter registrations in St. Louis, Missouri. 1,492 fraudulent voter registrations were identified.[13][14]
  • The Richland County (South Carolina) Voter Registration Office in October 2006 heard from a person who had received a new voter registration card without applying for it. On investigation, the office discovered the application had been turned in by an ACORN worker. The State Law Enforcement Division investigated the situation. They discovered that ACORN had recruited four Benedict College students to register new voters. The group's political advisor found some had questionable entries, eventually firing all four workers. Two of the students were charged with election law violations for false swearing in applying for registration. In 2009, the case was settled and no penalties that may have been assessed against the students, who were minors at the time of the irregularities, were announced in public.[15]
2005
  • In Colorado in January 2005, two Colorado ACORN workers were sentenced to community service for submitting false voter registrations.[16]ACORN's regional director said, "we find it abhorrent and do everything we can to prevent it from happening."[17]
  • In Virginia, the State Board of Elections admonished Project Vote and ACORN for turning in a significant number of faulty voter registrations. An audit revealed that 83% of sampled registrations that were rejected for carrying false or questionable information were submitted by Project Vote. Many of these registrations carried social security numbers that exist for other people, listed non-existent or commercial addresses, or were for convicted felons in violation of state and federal election law. In a letter to ACORN, the State Board of Elections reported that 56% of the voter registration applications ACORN turned in were ineligible. Further, a full 35% were not submitted in a timely manner, as required by law. The State Board of Elections also commented on what appeared to be evidence of intentional voter fraud. "Additionally,” they wrote, “information appears to have been altered on some applications where information given by the applicant in one color ink has been scratched through and re-entered in another color ink. Any alteration of a voter registration application is a Class 5 Felony in accordance with § 24.2-1009 of the Code of Virginia."
2004
  • In Ohio in 2004, four ACORN employees were indicted by a federal grand jury for submitting false voter registration forms.[18]
  • In Texas, ACORN turned in the voter registration form of David Young, who told reporters “The signature is not my signature. It’s not even close.” His social security number and date of birth were also incorrect.
  • In Pennsylvania, the director of elections in Reading reported receiving calls from numerous individuals complaining that ACORN employees deliberately put inaccurate information on their voter registration forms. The Berks County director of elections said voter fraud was “absolutely out of hand,” and added: “Not only do we have unintentional duplication of voter registration but we have blatant duplicate voter registrations.” The Berks County deputy director of elections added that ACORN was under investigation by the Department of Justice.
  • In Michigan, The Detroit Free Press reported that “overzealous or unscrupulous campaign workers in several Michigan counties are under investigation for voter-registration fraud, suspected of attempting to register nonexistent people or forging applications for already-registered voters.” ACORN-affiliate Project Vote was one of two groups suspected of turning in the documents.
  • In Florida, a Florida Department of Law Enforcement spokesman said ACORN was “singled out” among suspected voter registration groups for a 2004 wage initiative because it was “the common thread” in the agency’s fraud investigations.
External links
References
  1. Jump up↑ WKOW-TV, "Milwaukee woman gets probation for ACORN voter registration," October 12, 2009
  2. Jump up↑ Miami Herald, "Republicans, ACORN feud over suspicious voter cards," September 25, 2008 (dead link)
  3. Jump up↑ Detroit Free Press, "Bad voter applications found," September 14, 2008
  4. Jump up↑ Post-Tribune, "Lack of oversight blamed for fraudulent voter registration applications," October 3, 2008 (dead link)
  5. Jump up↑ Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, "GOP says voter registration groups employed felons," October 2, 2008
  6. Jump up↑ Rotten Acorn
  7. Jump up↑ FOX News, "Voter Fraud Watch: Could ACORN Scandal in Washington Have Been Avoided With Photo ID?," May 2, 2008
  8. Jump up↑ Seattle Times, "Felony charges filed against 7 in state's biggest case of voter-registration fraud," July 28, 2007
  9. Jump up↑ Seattle Post-Intelligencer, "Reform group turned in 2000 suspicious voter registrations," February 23, 2007
  10. Jump up↑ Columbus Post Dispatch, Man gets fine, probation for voting twice in '06 election," August 6, 2007
  11. Jump up↑ KMBC-TV, "ACORN Workers Indicted For Alleged Voter Fraud," November 1, 2006
  12. Jump up↑ PubDef, "4 ACORN Workers Indicted in KC," November 1, 2006
  13. Jump up↑ Voter registration workers admit fraud (dead link)
  14. Jump up↑ KSDK-TV, "St. Louis Election Board Investigating Voter Fraud," October 11, 2006
  15. Jump up↑ Post and Courier, "Voting fraud case ends," September 23, 2009
  16. Jump up↑ Rocky Mountain News, "Briefing," January 4, 2005
  17. Jump up↑ Boston Globe, "Accused of fraud in voter registration," October 28, 2004
  18. Jump up↑ New York Times, "The Acorn Indictments: A union-backed outfit faces charges of election fraud," November 3, 2006
 
So of 95,000 State and local governments in the United States, law-supportive Porker poster actually finds instances of voter fraud, in the less than dozens(?). Likely anyone can count the number of elections, and the contests, for themselves. The Census bureau keeps track of the number of jurisdictions, show in the link below.
Census Bureau Reports There Are 89 004 Local Governments in the United States - Governments - Newsroom - U.S. Census Bureau

More famously, Ronald Reagan took what deficit there was, and sent it off to the already prosperous: Defense Contractors, instead. More famously, Barack Obama took what federal deficit there was, and sent it off to the already prosperous: Public school teachers and bureaucrats instead. Those are in the tens of thousands of jurisdictions, plus the school districts.

Famously, Even Senator Ted Cruz has noted how the 1% have profited mostly, from all the federal deficit, and spending largesse. Under the basis Christian message and law, with source of the educated man from Imperial Egypt, the deity-definer, Moses: There is no basis fraud in that. It is legal. Reagan, Obama, the 1% and the public school teachers and the bureaucrats, are all lawful and legal--and apparently supported in the concept, "deity," of Western Civilization. The Prophet Mohammed, understood a deity concept. The Presbyter, Adam Smith understood a deity concept. Karl Marx understood a deity concept, rejected it, and still screwed up. Lord Keynes, famously gay, understood that "Public Works Spending," at least, was required to revive economies. Faulting the interest-rate, "velocity of money," was not to be noted, however. Keynes would be said to have helped to. . . .screw it(?), possibly understanding the deity concept, best of all(?). Milton Friedman would be content with just letting the Moses concept.. . .screw it. Original interest rates--a payment of four bags of barley for a loan of three, likely helped get civilization fed, and started. The Educated Man of Imperial Egypt, would regard that evil, and prohibit even that in Israel.

And so there is law--impacting billions worldwide. Then Porker, the poster, finds a few instance of legal fraud in contrast.

Senator Cruz will continue the Conservative mantra, of the "good old days," before federal spending, and debt. That would actually be pre-ratification, of the U. S. Constitution. Anyone notices that toilets are not on the Conservative agenda, whereas liberal San Francisco, puts at least on every street corner it can find, in the fog.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred"
(Ancient White Eyes, understood their "Thinker Position," and carved it into stone!)
 
Public School Teachers "Prosperous"?!?!?!?! LOL, are you absolutely crazy????
 
In recent years, it is noted that people moving from non-teaching to teaching jobs gain about 9% in income, not including the various benefits, time-off, and other luxury benefits, such as tenure. No one calls that criminal. Senator McCain, at one time, could slip behind the lines, sit out the war, participant in the killing of 55,000, now on a wall in Washington, D. C. No one calls that criminal. People who lived through it can even now expect federal largesse, participant in the killing of all on all sides. No one calls that criminal. People drawing pay likely all call it wonderful, like was lawful in the Foreclosure Crisis, in Germany during the Holocaust. No one calls the pay-drawing criminal, all supportive of the law.

Assessing the Compensation Salary and Wages of Public School Teachers

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(White Eyes Not Take Seriously, "The Thinker," unless they . . . maybe, do. . .too. . . or Number Two(?)!)
 
What was amusing is that soooo many Democrats thought they had a chance in Red states, Remember Texas, Kansas, Kentucky and so on? Hell, they lost in a lot of Blue states too.
 
Actually, the way school-teachers are inclined: Especially in the Senate races, somehow the Democrats were unable to field candidates who could correctly identify the President of the United States. The better stated explanation is that the Democrats failed to nationalize the election, making the progress that had been made look credible. Now events are making the progress has been made look credible. There is a lot less dissatisfaction, in the electorate, about the direction that has been taken, having been lead there, in the first two years.

In the last four years, mainly the Republicans have been trying to overturn the national health plan, which now has 10 million new enrolled. These people make a quarter of a million dollars a year and more, in pay and perks, and mostly what they do is vote once a month to repeal national health care.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Many White Eyes Fear for solvency of Social Security. Lands of Many Nations not overly concerned, not living long enough to collect any benefits at any rate!)
 

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