Can you produce actual evidence of 'broken-ness', bbauska?
bbauska wrote:I think we have shown election fraud before. I can show both sides committing fraud again if you so desire.
Fraud is one aspect of broken-ness. But on the other hand there is whether there are obstacles to voting that stop people from exercising their democratic rights. In a perfect world, we could eliminate both. In the real world, we can't, and they will be inter-related issues.bbauska wrote:Danivon, does fraud constitute broken-ness to you? That might be the disagreement we are finding ourselves in.
What I mean is that if you are going to insist upon voter ID, if the state is going to impose that rule, then the state should ensure that everyone who is eligible to vote will get the ID required.We are talking about is voter ID cards, and you were saying that if the government would purchase them and provide them, then that would be ok.
No, i was responding to DF's assertion that Voter ID was required in "Europe" with no problems. It is an incorrect assertion.Now I infer that you are not saying that with your comments on other countries.
Recognised, yes. Perhaps investigated, and quantified / qualified. Then based on that... addressed if need be, but with a mind on other issues.Do you agree that fraud is a problem that must be addressed?
I don't know. Depends on how easy it would be to create a forged ID cards, and whether there might be an incentive to do so over and above just voting.Although the ID card would not solve all fraud, do you think that fraud would be reduced?
In other words, you are 'fine' to pay for it as long as you don't actually pay for it. Waste in government should be tackled for it's own sake, and not used as some kind of trade-off for your pet policy.I am fine with the cost of the ID cards being taken out of the general fund w/o raising taxes. Perhaps we can go without these 10 examples to cover the cost:
danivon wrote:What I mean is that if you are going to insist upon voter ID, if the state is going to impose that rule, then the state should ensure that everyone who is eligible to vote will get the ID required.We are talking about is voter ID cards, and you were saying that if the government would purchase them and provide them, then that would be ok.
No, i was responding to DF's assertion that Voter ID was required in "Europe" with no problems. It is an incorrect assertion.Now I infer that you are not saying that with your comments on other countries.
In Canada, by contrast, voter ID laws have always been on the books and no one seems to care. In fact, back in 2007, a bill to toughen them up passed the House of Commons unanimously -- a rare feat in those minority parliament days. And now, the Fair Elections Act aims to make them tougher still, removing the so-called "vouching exception" that previously allowed some ID-less Canadians to cast ballots so long as they had a friend on hand.
Recognised, yes. Perhaps investigated, and quantified / qualified. Then based on that... addressed if need be, but with a mind on other issues.Do you agree that fraud is a problem that must be addressed?
I don't know. Depends on how easy it would be to create a forged ID cards, and whether there might be an incentive to do so over and above just voting.Although the ID card would not solve all fraud, do you think that fraud would be reduced?
Waste in government should be tackled for it's own sake, and not used as some kind of trade-off for your pet policy.
Depends. Should someone with severe motor disabilities be made to go and get it from the State? Just who is master and who is servant here?Doctor Fate wrote:danivon wrote:What I mean is that if you are going to insist upon voter ID, if the state is going to impose that rule, then the state should ensure that everyone who is eligible to vote will get the ID required.We are talking about is voter ID cards, and you were saying that if the government would purchase them and provide them, then that would be ok.
To what length is the State required to go? Must they go to the person's home at their request?
I was registered in two places at once when I was a student. And entitled to vote in both for local elections but not for national ones. Not sure if they could or would have checked for double-voting in a General Election or EU Parliamentary election on my part (I didn't anyway).danivon wrote:No, i was responding to DF's assertion that Voter ID was required in "Europe" with no problems. It is an incorrect assertion.bbauska wrote:Now I infer that you are not saying that with your comments on other countries.
Right. A few do.
Then again, I'm not sure how big an issue multiple registrations (being registered to vote in two different jurisdictions--e.g. Florida and New York) are in Europe.
I don't disagree. The rest?Recognised, yes. Perhaps investigated, and quantified / qualified. Then based on that... addressed if need be, but with a mind on other issues.Do you agree that fraud is a problem that must be addressed?
It has been "recognized." We have voter fraud.
Surely then, any measures that stop a single legitimate vote equally important, on the exact same justification?To me, one fraudulent vote is too much because it negates a legitimate vote.
Indeed, although it would be hard to stop people using them for other means (such as ID checking for private purposes, like age-related purchases or credit checks). Amending the Constitution is an interesting idea, perhaps that is the cure for all kinds of government snooping, such as the recent NSA and CIA sweeps. Perhaps not.I don't know. Depends on how easy it would be to create a forged ID cards, and whether there might be an incentive to do so over and above just voting.Although the ID card would not solve all fraud, do you think that fraud would be reduced?
And yet, when I've brought up how easy it is to get a fraudulent Social Security card in these forums, I recall a remarkable skepticism from some (not saying it was Danivon). I'm all for a tamper-proof, biometric national ID card. It would be used for determining welfare benefits, employment eligibility, and voter ID. We would probably have to amend the Constitution so that its use could be limited to ONLY the intended means.
[/quote]I accept that I erred on my apostrophe - mea maxima culpa. Quite often I have typos as I use my phone rather than laptop to post and it's hard to spot and correct errors and easy to make them.Waste in government should be tackled for it's own sake, and not used as some kind of trade-off for your pet policy.
I highlight that only to show we ALL make mistakes from time to time, even the great Danivon.
I was registered in two places at once when I was a student. And entitled to vote in both for local elections but not for national ones. Not sure if they could or would have checked for double-voting in a General Election or EU Parliamentary election on my part (I didn't anyway).
danivon wrote:Depends. Should someone with severe motor disabilities be made to go and get it from the State? Just who is master and who is servant here?Doctor Fate wrote:danivon wrote:What I mean is that if you are going to insist upon voter ID, if the state is going to impose that rule, then the state should ensure that everyone who is eligible to vote will get the ID required.We are talking about is voter ID cards, and you were saying that if the government would purchase them and provide them, then that would be ok.
To what length is the State required to go? Must they go to the person's home at their request?
I was registered in two places at once when I was a student. And entitled to vote in both for local elections but not for national ones. Not sure if they could or would have checked for double-voting in a General Election or EU Parliamentary election on my part (I didn't anyway).
Surely then, any measures that stop a single legitimate vote equally important, on the exact same justification?To me, one fraudulent vote is too much because it negates a legitimate vote.
As I say, in reality you can't completely eliminate either, let alone both, and measures to drive down one could make the other worse. It needs careful thought, not simplistic one-eyed 'solutions' that only fix one side of the problem.
Indeed, although it would be hard to stop people using them for other means (such as ID checking for private purposes, like age-related purchases or credit checks).
Amending the Constitution is an interesting idea, perhaps that is the cure for all kinds of government snooping, such as the recent NSA and CIA sweeps. Perhaps not.
Such cards would be harder to forge but as a result cost a lot more and be more hassle to create and obtain the data for.
Quite often I have typos as I use my phone rather than laptop to post and it's hard to spot and correct errors and easy to make them.
I assume that you otherwise accept and agree with the sentence (when I point out errors of grammar, I also accompany it with a comment on the salient point as well, which is more important than any pedantry, surely).
I know that I am no longer registered at my parent's address, but don't know for sure that I have properly been taken off any other previous addresses (except those I can get hold of the electoral roll for as a political candidate) - I have to assume that the councils have done it properly.Sassenach wrote:In fact, I believe that I may still be registered at my parents address even though I haven't lived there for about 20 years. I suppose they may have gotten around to letting the authorities know that I'm no longer living there but there's no obvious reason to think that they'd have bothered since it doesn't affect them, so it's quite possible I'll still be getting sent a polling card to their address which I could theoretically use to vote twice. I know for a fact that this continued to happen for several years after I moved out so unless they've taken active steps to stop it then it could conceivably still be going on.
Which of course means that ID presentation is not going to stop it at all, as one cannot present ID by post.It's not a big deal really. Most voter fraud is done through postal voting.
No, I quite clearly point out that it is the same problem - if a fraudulent vote is bad because it nullifies a genuine vote, then surely so is anything else that has the effect of nullifying a vote.Doctor Fate wrote:That aside, liberals consistently look for the "what if a person is mentally capable of voting, but they're physically disabled, live on an island, and have no one willing to transport them" situations. In other words, a law must solve the one-in-a-trillion problem in order to be legitimate. Okay. Meanwhile, there are people eligible to vote in multiple precincts, dead people who vote, etc. But, that's "not a big problem."
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And as amusing as you may have found your little digression into highlighting the failures of government (with the usual partisan blinkers on), it is not really about the point I was making, and so not about my logic at all.I know, I know. I "put words in (your) mouth." Actually, no, I just made fun of your logic.
I was registered in two places at once when I was a student. And entitled to vote in both for local elections but not for national ones. Not sure if they could or would have checked for double-voting in a General Election or EU Parliamentary election on my part (I didn't anyway).
Surely then, any measures that stop a single legitimate vote equally important, on the exact same justification?To me, one fraudulent vote is too much because it negates a legitimate vote.
Except that:Every citizen of the US gets a Social Security card. If that can be done, it is UNREASONABLE to assume a voting ID card cannot be issued.
Oh, well, if there are laws then I guess that solves it. It's not like anyone ever breaks a law and gets away with it (especially one that doesn't even have a 'victim' to report it).Indeed, although it would be hard to stop people using them for other means (such as ID checking for private purposes, like age-related purchases or credit checks).
I believe there are laws now to prohibit SS cards from being used for some of those purposes. Credit checks, of course, require Social Security numbers.
I think the real issue is that written laws, even the Constitution itself, are not sufficient on their own to stop people breaking them. Even 'small government types' are capable of bending laws to their own benefit sometimes.Amending the Constitution is an interesting idea, perhaps that is the cure for all kinds of government snooping, such as the recent NSA and CIA sweeps. Perhaps not.
One would suppose the Fourth would stop the NSA nonsense, but the Constitution is malleable for big government types.
Perhaps. I think it wold be nice to see some real evidence on the cost-benefit analysis first.Such cards would be harder to forge but as a result cost a lot more and be more hassle to create and obtain the data for.
Given all the money we lose to fraud, all the people employed using fake cards, and all the ID theft that would be inhibited by this, I think it's a net gain.
Yes, although it is easier said than done to eradicate waste, and I say that as someone who has seen it my entire time in companies rather than government. I also think it is not really the issue at hand - the question is what cost is reasonable to ensure that voter ID is implemented and works to yours and bbauska's satisfaction while not causing adverse impact to the rights of legitimate voters. Making people pay a fee for mandatory state ID is close to being a poll tax (indeed, linking it to voting seems even close to a poll tax), so unless you repeal the 24th Amendment, that means that the Federal government (or State governments) cannot legally charge for ID required to vote, and so would have to pay for it.2. All waste in government should be eradicated.
danivon wrote:My logic is this:
Assuming that Lincoln's view of the government is correct, and that the government of the people should also be 'by' the people and 'for' the people, then that means that while there is a government, the people are sovereign, not the state itself.
And so, if we are talking about rules that concern the government, we should be wary of setting things up so that the people become the subjects of such rules (because it's monarchies that have 'subjects', not democratic republics - those have 'citizens'). The US Constitution seems to be quite clear that it is about limiting the powers of the Federal state to restrict the rights of the constituent states and (in my view more importantly) of the people.
So, if you are going to be supporting measures that place extra burdens on people in order to be able to vote (and voting is one major way that government becomes 'by' the people as well as just 'of' and 'for'), you need to be careful. Just as conservatives and libertarians are often concerned about slippery slopes and unintended consequences of government policies, it would seem to me to behoove them to check for the same for the ones they advocate. Especially where participative democracy comes in.
There is clearly evidence of people who want to vote not being able to, and it being found later that they should have been able to (incorrect lists of those with felonies, being given the wrong polling place as a destination, etc). There is clear evidence of people's votes being nullified due to 'technicalities' or hanging chads etc.
Except that:Every citizen of the US gets a Social Security card. If that can be done, it is UNREASONABLE to assume a voting ID card cannot be issued.
1) I did not 'assume' that a voting ID card cannot be issued, I am asking how it is done in an accurate way that also includes the kind of information that you want on it (as a SS card only has the name and number on it (and then they sign it).
2) Mistakes still get made - mainly where the name is misspelled, probably either because the applicant / parent wrote it badly or someone transcribed it incorrectly
Oh, well, if there are laws then I guess that solves it. It's not like anyone ever breaks a law and gets away with it (especially one that doesn't even have a 'victim' to report it).
Making people pay a fee for mandatory state ID is close to being a poll tax (indeed, linking it to voting seems even close to a poll tax), so unless you repeal the 24th Amendment, that means that the Federal government (or State governments) cannot legally charge for ID required to vote, and so would have to pay for it.
How much would it be reasonable for the US to spend, at a federal or aggregate federal and state level, on ensuring everyone who is entitled to it has their mandatory ID?
However, if the new ID card were treated as seriously as a passport,