'Matthias said:
'Matthias said:
It's not clever, it's stupid and it's the end result when you take the current position of the democrats (not thinking it's necessary to identify people) all the way to it's full conclusion. It's stupid that we are exposing ourselves here and it's stupid that we expose ourselves on election day. You could have a completely secure system void of 99% of all these scenarios if we just took the time to do it. Then we wouldn't have to worry about all the one off scenarios
Again, it always comes back to the cost. You can always improve something. But the question is: is it worth it?We know that people commit tax fraud. They get convicted of it every year. And I'm absolutely positive that some people do it without getting caught. I'm fairly certain that if we made everybody file their taxes, in person, at the IRS and go through all of their return we would cut down on fraud. Should we do this? It looks like: no. The cost of doing it this way isn't worth the benefit of cutting down on the fraud.
And a
completely secure system? GTFO. No system is ever completely secure and the current gaping holes in the voting system would not be plugged by a voter ID requirement.
To YOU it's about cost and it's a convenient rock to hide behind. To me, there is no "expense" to insure the bedrock process of our country is sound and secure. 99% should have been a clue that "completely secure" wasn't a literal term, but again....I forgot I was here in the FFA.
Did you also mean the 99% or was that something else not to take literally? Because in the scheme of voter fraud, the variety which would be prevented by a Voter ID is the < 1%, not the 99%+. Or was that just another figure of speech.Also, hint: not all costs are monetary costs. Some costs are in terms of the exact harm you're trying to prevent, i.e., a qualified voter having their preference thwarted.
This is such a load of crap. Do you REALLY believe that this country can't take say $50 million dollars and create a voting system that doesn't "thwart" us citizens? Read what I said....I said the WHOLE SYSTEM has to be ditched and redone. If done correctly, it would solve 99% of the problems/potential problems we have/could have. This "cost" nonsense is just that...nonsense. It's a fear tactic much like the "if you vote for a GOPer, they'll overturn Roe v Wade or if you vote for a Dem, you're voting for socialism.I'll say one last time.....I am not, nor have I ever suggested that the voter fraud problem would be solved by IDs alone. It IS a potential problem and I personally believe the "well, no one is exploiting it so it's not a problem" shtick is just lazy.
The fact remains, it takes more for me to get into my YMCA or my neighborhood pool than it does to vote. If you don't think that's a problem, we'll agree to disagree. I think it's mind boggling stupid.
There's no way this would only cost us $50 million. We can't even buy voting machines that are secure. I'd say we need a national standard and voting machines that are more tamper proof.
What would the largest expense be? Computers? Agree on voting machines...no need for them. They are inflated POS machines. Even if it were $500 million, I'd be fine with it. That's what...5-6 fighter jets' postponed creation for one year?
Ummmmm..... no.Congress has already given over $3billion to the states under the Help America Vote Act in 2000 and we still have the conditions that we have. The problem which you're ignoring is that there's millions of voting locations. So if you want to adopt something standard and universal, then you have to implement it everywhere.
The other problem you have is that Congress can't adopt something standard and universal. It's not up to them. There's various things that states are prohibited from doing (say discriminating against their voters or holding Presidential elections on December 1st) but the way in which they conduct their elections is up to them. So any system would have to be opt-in at the state level.
The last obvious problem you have is that there is no thing such as a fraud-free system. I don't know what kind of system you were envisioning, or if you were envisioning anything other than just throwing money at the problem and hoping magic happens, but there is no system which is fraud-free. Voter registrations can (and have) been thrown away. Bags of ballots have been found in the trash can. In a pure electronic voting system, machines can be hacked to report false totals. People proctoring an election could stuff the ballot box voting for people who didn't show up that day. That's just 30 seconds off of the top of my head. And that's not in addition to the problems of people who are confused by a ballot or mark it incorrectly or incorrectly follow some procedure, getting their vote thrown out.
There's more to things than just saying we should spend more money.