Thursday, July 28, 2005

Brief vote notes

Since my mood is sour (personal reasons), I'll be concise today -- which should please my ladyfriend, who says I'm too verbose.

The story of the 2004 vote theft refuses to die. Two new mainstream pieces will bring the facts to new eyes.

The first comes to us by way of Matt Taibbi in the New York Press. Here's a taste:

The evidence for this theft has been there for everyone to see for five years now; few serious thinkers even dispute the matter anymore, just as few Democrats would even bother denying now that John Kennedy stole the 1960 election.

Yet, Bush remains president. And not only has he remained president, he hasn't even had the decency to act embarrassed about it.
Count me among the few Democrats who deny the JFK accusation. Nixon challenged the Hawaii vote, and not the Illinois vote, because Nixon was the one provably up to no good in Illinois.

In Harpers, Mark Crispen Miller writes what may stand as the major critique of the election: "None Dare Call It Stolen!" It's not on the net -- yet -- which makes the latest issue of Harpers worth your six bucks. (Or perhaps, worth reading while resting in one of those overstuffed chairs at Barnes & Noble, a pastime I've been known to favor.) Here's an excerpt, courtesy the good folks at Democratic Underground:

The press has had little to say about most of the strange details of the election -- except, that is, to ridicule all efforts to discuss them. This animus appeared soon after Nov 2, in a spate of caustic articles dismissing any critical discussion of the outcome as crazed speculation: 'Election paranoia surfaces: Conspiracy theorists call results rigged,' chuckled the BALTIMORE SUN on Nov 5. 'Internet Buzz on Vote Fraud is Dismissed,' proclaimed the BOSTON GLOBE on Nov 5. 'Latest Conspiracy Theory -- Kerry Won -- Hits the Ether,' the WASHINGTON POST chortled on Nov 11. The NEW YORK TIMES weighed in with 'Vote fraud Theories, Spread by Blogs, Are Quickly Buried' -- making mock not only of the 'post-election theorizing' but of cyberspace itself, the fins et origo of all such loony tunes, according to the Times.
As with the JFK assassination and Iran-contragate, the mainstream pooh-poohers will end up with pooh-pooh on their faces.

Arrested for observing democracy in action. Jim March, of Black Box Voting, was arrested when he attempted to observe a Diebold vote tabulator at work after the San Diego mayoral election. Whatever your views of BBV (and I remain as confused as ever by Bev Harris), this situation is outrageous.

Documentation. Solarbus will give you a free CD chock-filled with documents and other info proving the case for vote fraud. They'll give it to you gratis, but they'd like you make copies and pass the word along. Pay it forward! But how about distribution via Limewire...Kazaa...BitTorrent...?

A blessing on Arcata, California! They're the first town -- first among many to follow, I hope -- to adopt a "Voter Confidence Resolution"

"The Voter Confidence Resolution is a common sense statement saying privatized election machines and secret vote counting ensure inconclusive outcomes. Under these conditions we will never have unanimous agreement about election results," says Dave Berman, co-founder of the Voter Confidence Committee of Humboldt County, CA. "The Arcata City Council has demonstrated that our local government does hear the voice of the people, even when the federal government has stopped listening."
Whatever they're smoking up there in Humboldt County actually seems to be improving their brain cells.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well, I don't get it -- I mean, I'm a reasonably sane person and I'm outraged that this could have (and probably did) happen (and feel thoroughly powerless to do anything about it) -- I can't be the only person in the country to be outraged, what's up with everyone else? Why isn't anyone making a bigger stink about this? As the King of Siam used to say, is a puzzlement! If things don't change (wrt voting oversight) then Democrats will never win a national election again -- ever. Doesn't that bother anyone but me? What can be done about it?

Anonymous said...

What can be done? Get rid of the black box
voting machines that counted 35 million
votes in the 2004 election. Get rid of the
Diebold and ES&S tabulators that counted
another 60 million. Demand paper ballots
(and not those flimsy ATM receipts Diebold
is trying to pass off as paper ballots)!
Go to verifiedvoting.org and see if your
state has enacted legislation yet to require
paper ballots. If not, get to work.

Anonymous said...

the Republican controlled house and senate won't permit the electronic voting machines to be pulled since it means they would lose their majority rule should we ever hold honest elections again.

The situation with our current President and Republican controlled congress and senate has to get so bad that the white middleclass voters finally are inspired to do something about the loss of honest elections. But there will have to be alot of pain experienced before these voters do anything about it.

Yes it bothers the hell out of me. I live on a street in which a neighbor setup a Halloween display tombstones for "RIP" George Bush and "RIP" Dick Cheney dated Nov 2, 2004 and it was a black day in my 'hood when Kerry lost. some folks flew black flags.

Anonymous said...

"Count me among the few Democrats who deny the JFK accusation. Nixon challenged the Hawaii vote, and not the Illinois vote, because Nixon was the one provably up to no good in Illinois."

Okay. Not saying your wrong, the only formal reading I've done on what happened in 1960 was in Sy Hersh's "The Dark Side of Camelot," in which Hersh flat-out condemned the Kennedy's (Joe Sr, Ted, and John) of stealing the primaries, the nomination and the election for JFK. It's not like Hersh didn't document, but as a young anklebiter who has always seen voters alive in the era embrace a similar assessment of Kennedy's family's actions, I'd always wondered if anyone denied the election theft accusations. If you could say more about this subject at some point, Joseph, I would love it.

Anonymous said...

Anon #3 said "the Republican controlled
house and senate won't permit the electronic
voting machines to be pulled." It's not up
to Congress, it's up to the states and the
counties, Anon. And the wonderful thing is
that if we can make enough noise, a
paper-based election can be instituted at
any time right up to the election! All it
takes is a photocopy machine to make the
ballots and some volunteers to count them,
so they can't plead cost and complexity.

Anonymous said...

Everyone knows the 1960 election was very close, so close that dirty tricks can be given the credit for victory, as could other marginal factors.

However, taking the point of view that Kennedy stole the election,you also have to say that Nixon failed in his attempt to steal it.

Which is probably why the Democrats never bother with passionate denials.

Today its recieved knowledge that the Daley machine stole Chicago for Kennedy. However, there was an equally powerful, violent Republican machine in Southern Illinois that stole their part of the state for Nixon. At least both machines presented themselves as the decisive factor.This pattern was repeated throughout the country.

After the election, Democrats sued the Republicans over Southern Illinois. The Republicans sued the Democrats over Chicago. Both sides failed to prove their case. But it was plain the election had been very dirty and no one had any moral high ground.

If you want a picture of the times it there in those court records.

Anonymous said...

Another vote note via RawStory:

State rejects e-voting system
Counties scramble to replace Diebold machines
http://www.insidebayarea.com/dailyreview/localnews/ci_2898218

Interesting excerpt:

"There was a failure rate of about 10 percent, and that's not good enough for the voters of California and not good enough for me," said Secretary of State Bruce McPherson.

Isn't McPherson supposed to be the guy who was going to force Diebold on CA? What's going on here?

It's too hard for me to accept that he's actually doing his job in a non-partisan fashion. Could it be a feint or a red herring, throwing over Diebold for another, equally corrupt, voting machine company?

Eric

Anonymous said...

"the Republican controlled house and senate won't permit the electronic voting machines to be pulled since it means they would lose their majority rule should we ever hold honest elections again."
The ravings of a lunatic that can't face the fact they embrace a minority viewpoint. This must be one of those left wing hate blogs I've heard about.

Anonymous said...

First of all, there is little if any hate here. YOur comments are inspired by something other than reading the comments

Second, objections to 2004 based on probable election fraud are an inductive process for many of us. You examine the evidence, consider alternative arguments, and conclude the election was stolen (or the laws of mathematics were suspended on election day).

Go here http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0507/S00238.htm
and take a look. You'll reach the same conclusions.

autorank

Roberto Iza Valdés said...
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