Home » An arrest in Florida indicates possible election fraud

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An arrest in Florida indicates possible election fraud — 8 Comments

  1. Libertarians will say that the problem is that the government is so large and spends so much money that the solution is to shrink government down drastically. Then there would be less money at stake and the incentives to cheat would be less.

    That’s fine. In theory. But we don’t live in a theoretical world. By the way, the same libertarians also insist that the problem of 3rd world immigration would go away if we just got rid of the welfare state. But that’s not going away anytime within the lifetime of anyone reading this blog.

    So what do we do? I think the penalties for election fraud are probably too lenient. Depending on the severity of the offense and whether or not the accused is a repeat offender, then punishment up to and including what was handed out to Bernie Madoff seems appropriate to me. And along with stiffening up the penalties for election fraud it probably would not hurt to do the same for public corruption involving stuff like insider trading by members of Congress. Tell me with a straight face that the Pelosi family fortune was acquired 100% open, above board, and in compliance with all ethical and legal boundaries.

  2. The claim that ‘there’s nothing to see here folks, move along now’ is a direct indication that there is a lot to see and that the side saying it is full of it. Which begs the question; is not organized voter fraud… treason?

  3. Libertarians will say that the problem is that the government is so large and spends so much money that the solution is to shrink government down drastically. Then there would be less money at stake and the incentives to cheat would be less.
    ==
    There’s masses of chicken sh*t you could haul away, but the chicken sh*t is a modest share of total public expenditure. You’re not going to ‘radically shrink down government’ without being derelict with regard to supplying the military and the police, without defaulting on debt service, and without generating a social crisis in re to income for the elderly and disabled, and in re financing medical care, ltc, and schooling.
    ==
    We need better elections administration. Babbling about other policy initiatives in lieu of repairing defects in elections administration is stupid.

  4. The Left thinks they have control. The ” all of the sudden” will be a shock.

  5. Appeal, have a do over, and protect the voting. Will it happen? No, not even in FL.

  6. Which reminds me that Demo election hanky-panky in Florida changed me from a Third Party (none of the above) voter to a yellow dog Republican. I refer to the 2000 election. Demos told us that the high number of disqualified voter ballots in Broward County were because voters got confused, and the disqualified ballots should be counted as votes for Democrat candidates.

    The problem I had with that assertion is that Democrats controlled Broward County, which meant that Democrats designed the ballots. Which meant that Democrats were responsible for the confusing ballot design.

    Those ballots should have been tested by sample groups before being released for use in the election. That shortcoming in ballot design was the responsibility of the Democrats.

  7. It seems it’s easier now to pinpoint what isn’t corrupt rather than what is, which appears to be most everything.

  8. @ Gringo ” The problem I had with that assertion is that Democrats controlled Broward County, which meant that Democrats designed the ballots. Which meant that Democrats were responsible for the confusing ballot design.

    Those ballots should have been tested by sample groups before being released for use in the election. That shortcoming in ballot design was the responsibility of the Democrats.”

    In all the reporting about the error-prone ballot system (the hanging chads IIRC), I never saw anyone make that connection, which leads to the obvious inference: the confusing design was on purpose.
    Maybe that was an early tryout for other vote tampering ideas?
    Losing the election after all must have added to the Democrats’ natural distaste for Bush II and the Republicans, and increased their search for other means.

    However, Dubya’s actions since 2016 show that they really do object to anyone in government deviating from their preferences by a single iota (as Senator Fetterman explained recently), because since then he has revealed himself as just one of the club.
    And we’re not in it.

    Posted by Barry a few days ago:
    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/john-fetterman-reveals-whos-really-leader-his-party

    “The last two professional candidates for the Democratic Party all agreed that we can never allow Iran to acquire nuclear bombs, and that’s made that possible now. I think we can say, ‘Hey, that’s a great thing. That makes the world more safe, more secure and holds Iran accountable,’” he told Fox News’s Sean Hannity earlier this month, after 53 House Democrats voted against a resolution declaring that Iran is a state sponsor of terrorism — something which isn’t remotely in doubt. “That’s almost 25% of Democrats in the House that can’t just call Iran the world’s biggest terrorism underwriter,” Fetterman added.

    “Virtually every Democrat that I’m aware of says we can never allow Iran to acquire a nuclear bomb, and they were a significant risk to America,” Fetterman continued. “I know why they [Democrats] don’t say that now because I’m aware that it is very damaging as a Democrat to just happen to agree with the president on anything. But, for me, that’s easy — country over party.”

    This week, veteran Democratic strategist James Carville blasted Fetterman, accusing him of always being wrong.

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