REAL NEWS - REGISTERED VOTERS IN U.S.A.
OUTNUMBER ELIGIBLE VOTERS
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REGISTERED VOTERS IN U.S.A.
OUTNUMBER ELIGIBLE VOTERS
Reports of Dead Voters Understated

:By: Deroy Murdock, Scripps Howard News  February 17, 2012 
  
  Reports of dead voters are greatly understated.


  While Democrats dismiss voter fraud as a collective Republican
hallucination, a study released Tuesday by the Pew Center on the States
confirms the GOP's concerns.  The ghosts in America's voting machines may
be the least of our worries.

    Pew has discovered that 1.8 million dead Americans are registered to
vote.  Perhaps worse, 2.75 million Americans are enrolled in two states
each, while 68,725 are signed up in three.

    Indeed, Pew found, "24 million -- one of every eight -- active voter
registrations in the United States are no longer valid or are
significantly inaccurate."

    This is just what America needs in an election year.


    The U.S. boasts atomic weapons and an election apparatus worthy of
Laos.  More charitably, Pew states that America's electoral systems "are
plagued with errors and inefficiencies that waste taxpayer dollars,
undermine voter confidence, and fuel partisan disputes over the integrity
of our elections.

    "Voter registration in the United States largely reflects its
19th-century origins and has not kept pace with advancing technology and
a mobile society.  States' systems must be brought into the 21st century
to be more accurate, cost-effective and efficient."


    Americans are highly mobile, with civilians and GIs moving among
their parents' homes, college dorms, military bases and large houses in
boom times, and returning to modest dwellings when things go bust.


    Amid this tumult, some people vanish from the rolls while others wind
up registered in multiple locations.  While most are innocents in these
situations, this confusion also invites and facilitates abuse.


    Exacerbating this mess, Pew finds, America's "antiquated, paper-based
system remains costly and inefficient."  Oregon and Wyoming spend about
$4 to register and manage each active voter.  Canada, in contrast, uses
modern, private-sector name-matching techniques to process registrations.
Cost: 35 cents each.


    For its part, President Barack Obama's Justice Department exacerbates
these matters.


    As former federal prosecutor J. Christian Adams explains in his
superb 2011 book, "Injustice", Section 8 of the legislation popularly
known as the Motor Voter Act "requires voter rolls to be kept free of
dead and ineligible voters."


    As Justice attorneys were poised to investigate eight states rife
with non-living and otherwise unqualified voters, top Obama appointees
balked.


    Adams heard Deputy Assistant Attorney General Julie Fernandes tell
headquarters staffers in November 2009: "We have no interest in enforcing
this provision of the law.  It has nothing to do with increasing turnout,
and we are just not going to do it."


    The U.S. Election Assistance Commission reported in June 2009 that in
North Dakota, registered voters totaled 101.6 percent of the voting-age
population.


    In Michigan, that figure was 101.9 percent; in Alaska, 102.2 percent;
and in Maine, 103.9 percent.  Alarms should wail when there are more
registered voters in a jurisdiction than eligible adults.  Instead,
Justice's snooze buttons are busier than ever.


    South Carolina's attorney general determined last month that 953
people "were deceased at the time of their participation in recent
elections."


    Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler compared voter rolls and
driver's license records.  Last March 8, he determined that "it is likely
that many of the 4,947 voters were not citizens when they cast their vote
in 2010."

    These problems vindicate efforts, primarily by Republicans, to
require photo ID at the polls.

    Such rules will slow or stop those who try to cast ballots on behalf
of deceased-Americans.  Citizens who lack ID cards should get them for
free.  Such a requirement will be far less inconvenient than another
presidential recount fiasco fueled by posthumous voters.

    Another solution: A company called Catalist assisted Pew's research.
Catalist, Pew notes, "applies a complex matching process to combine and
analyze data to verify or update records of voters."  States should hire
Catalist to update and oversee their election procedures.

    As voters choose this nation's leaders this year, America deserves
better than an electoral system reminiscent of the McKinley
administration.

--Deroy Murdock is a media fellow with the Hoover Institution on War,
Revolution and Peace at Stanford University.  E-mail him at
[email protected].
------------------------------------------------------------------------ 


CONTROVERSIAL VOTER REGISTRATION

    Many County Supervisors of Elections don't seem to be concerned about
illegals registering to vote.  They claim it would be very serious
perjury to sign a Voter Registration Application form falsely stating to
be a citizen of the United States.  So doesn't this happen anyway?

    Since learning to read and write English is a requirement to become a
naturalized citizen, why must Election Ballots be printed using so many
other languages, and why must poll workers assist voters with poor
English skills unless this is to enable illegals to vote.

    Does Chicago still vote the grave yards?  Remember when their Mayor
Richard Daily, Sr. used to wait to send his voter results in  last after
he found out how many more votes his candidates needed?
 
Ed note: The Daley machine would wait for the rest of the state to report their 
totals
and then they would report enough votes to win. In 1959, JFK lost the subrb and
Downstate vote and Daley came up with enough to overcome the Republican 
Candidate. The Illinois victory was thought NOT to be enough to give JFK the 
victory.
Only Hawaii and Alaska had not reported. Hawaii was expected to be in the 
DemocRAT Column and Alaska in the GOP. The Republican Party was ready to go
to court over the Illinois count. 
 
As it truned out, both Hawaii and Alaska voted for JFK. The GOP dropped their
challenge in court because an Illinois victory would leave the GOP short by 2 
votes.
Rich Martin



 
Pocketbook Constitution available
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Send to a friend, give to a co-worker.
 
Contact Your Govt
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Is the Constitution the Supreme Law of the Land or not?  
  
I GUESS THE SCOTUS HAS ANSWERED THAT QUESTION
   
Patriot Freedom
http://www.patriotfreedom.org/battlefield.php
  
If a link above does not work, cut-and-paste to your browser. 
 
Did you ever wonder to what Rev Al Sharpton was referring to when he said, 
“Barack Obama didn't have any slave blood"?
http://aconservativelesbian.com/2009/07/13/obamas-kenyan-ancestors-sold-slaves/

  
We the People
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JVAhr4hZDJE
  
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I'M MAD, AND I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE IT ANY MORE
 
http://bighollywood.breitbart.com/bprelutsky/2009/07/05/im-mad-as-hell/
 
 
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