Jim11
Footballguy
That's not an excellent analogy; it's an excuse to continue fraud. Why are Democrats in favor of fraud?Re-read this excellent analogy from Matthias - that's common sense?Yeah, it's too bad we don't have several systems in place to issue government, photo ID cards which could easily be subsidized to also issue free, photo ID cards for voting purposes only.Think of the jobs we can create if we started a new government department devoted to issuing ID cards to everyone in the country.Any county office could issue a card and send in a simple request for reimbursement.I want anyone who wants to vote to be able to vote, but I'd like to know we actually care that every vote is actually from a living, registered voter, and actually the person they say they are. I really don't care if this is an epidemic, small problem, or no problem at all. It's just common sense to me.
'Matthias said:Or let's put some numbers on this.There's about 220mm eligible voters in the US.Say half the people without gov't IDs (11%) get them after it being required. So 5% lack it.Say 30% of them would have voted. That's about the average.1.5% of the 220mm voters who would have voted wouldn't.That's 3.3 million voters.On the other hand, say there's 1,000 cases of genuine voter fraud in an election. That would be an extraordinarily high number. When they litigated this at the Supreme Court, the states had to drag out voting fraud cases from the 1800s to try and make this appear like a problem.So take those numbers.A guy asks you if you want insurance on your $1,000 motorbike. You ask him how much it would cost. He tells you the insurance will be $3.3 million. What's the common sense answer?
Any county office could issue a card and send in a simple request for reimbursement.I want anyone who wants to vote to be able to vote, but I'd like to know we actually care that every vote is actually from a living, registered voter, and actually the person they say they are. I really don't care if this is an epidemic, small problem, or no problem at all. It's just common sense to me.
So when their political life is on the line for the "extremely small price to pay" they tuck tail and decide to drop the bomb on the poor instead. Great.
I'm not a Texas Republican.
7% of the voters still wouldn't have an ID, right? That's the issue/problem we are talking about right? Why wouldn't the problem/issue still exist if it went from 11 to 7%?
And it goes back to my question earlier that wasn't touched. If this "expense" is a real issue, what happens to the government if these people decide to go out and get a driver's license?