Democrats don't support voter fraud; they just worry about disenfranchising the deceased
Democrats don't support voter fraud
notes
Benny Huang wryly;
they just worry about disenfranchising the deceased.
Who says there’s no such thing as life after death? If voting rolls
are any indicator, dead people these days are living very active
lifestyles. According to an investigative report by CBS2, Los Angeles’s CBS affiliate, some dead people continue to vote years after meeting their maker.
The investigation revealed that 265 dead voters across five counties
in southern California voted in recent elections, 215 of them in Los
Angeles County. Some of the deceased cast ballots in multiple elections.
Thirty-two of those deceased voters were found to have voted eight
times since kicking the bucket. One woman who died in 1988 managed to
vote in 2014.
I can think of only two explanations—either the Zombie Apocalypse is
upon us or someone’s been cheatin’. I lean toward the latter.
Don’t let anyone tell you that voter fraud is a victimless crime.
Every ballot illegitimately cast cancels out someone else’s vote. It’s
no different than reaching into the ballot box and removing a ballot.
It’s a suckerpunch to the democratic process and should be punished
severely.
Oddly enough, some people seem to react to voter fraud and voter
suppression very differently, as if they’re different phenomena meriting
different responses. Voter suppression is considered such a heinous
crime that no incident of it will be tolerated—unless perpetrated by billy-club wielding black racists,
of course—while voter fraud is considered regrettable but ultimately
immaterial. After all, what’s a few votes here and there? Is it really
going to tip an election one way or the other? The answer, in some
instances, is yes; though that’s not really the point. There’s a
principle at stake here and the principle applies whether the margin of
victory is a handful of votes or a million.
Any attempt to root out corruption in the electoral process is bound
to meet stiff resistance from so-called “civil rights” groups that will
invariably stir up racial fears. Voter ID laws, the reformers’ tool of
choice for combatting voter fraud, have been painted as an attempt to
resurrect Jim Crow. Minority voters lack suitable forms of
identification, they say, and making them obtain an ID amounts to an
unconstitutional poll tax. It’s a weak argument made even weaker by the
fact that some states provide IDs for free.
Some notable “civil rights” organizations continue to oppose voter
ID, grasping at increasingly ephemeral straws to justify their position.
Nothing will satisfy them except anarchy at the polling stations—no
controls, no verification, and no integrity in the final tally. That’s
the way they like it.
Cleaning up voter rolls, however, is not the same as voter ID. What
objection could there possibly be? You guess it—cleaning up voter rolls
is raaaaacist!
Or at least that’s the contention of the corrupt, disreputable NAACP. A
recent attempt by Florida Governor Rick Scott, a Republican, to weed
out noncitizens and other people who have no legal right to vote has
been challenged by the NAACP and members of the opposition party.
Florida House Minority Leader Mark Pattford weighed in: “[Governor
Scott] can probably find more reports of UFOs and space aliens in
Florida than there are reports of fraudulent voting in the state.”
Pattford surely knows that Miami, which is about an hour south of his
district in West Palm Beach, was rocked with one of the biggest voter
fraud cases in American history less than twenty years ago. The city’s
Democratic mayor, Xavier Suarez, was removed from office in 1998 when it
was discovered that his campaign had won the previous year’s primary by
tampering with absentee ballots. Among the 895 ballots examined, 197
were found to be suspicious. Some were cast by, you guessed it, dead people.
… The argument against cleaning up voter rolls seems to be that any
attempt to purge ineligible voters will, either by happenstance or
design, purge eligible voters too—and minorities disproportionately. So
just to be on the safe side, let’s not purge any.
Here we are back at the flawed premise that no one is harmed when
voter fraud is tolerated. Let’s examine for a moment the dead voters
discovered in the CBS2 investigation to see just how wrongheaded that
notion is. According to their investigation, 32 dead voters voted in at
least eight elections; that’s 256 illegally cast ballots. We also know
that the other 233 dead voters voted at least once. By combining the two
we know that 489 ballots were illegally cast and the same number of
voters were disenfranchised. Again, that’s a minimum. But rather than
doing something about it some people prefer not to see a problem and
compare the whole affair to UFO sightings.
The states’ voting rolls are saturated with names that don’t belong
there—noncitizens, the deceased, people who have moved away, and in some
cases, fictitious people.
… This is the stuff of banana republics.
Related:
Voting rights, voting wrongs:
To take another (far worse) crime, how prevalent is murder? Not very, if
you take the statistics in percentage (something like 0.0048 %). Well,
no matter how rare murder is, you still need to criminalize it as much
for justice
— to bring perpetrators (however rare they may be) to justice — as for
prevention — to prevent people from being tempted to use it.
The last I heard, one needs some sort of poll card to cast a ballot in
Britain, as indeed one does in every other democracy on this planet.
Due to the Democrats' hysterical race-baiting, we have been subjected to
the (absurd) spectacle of being the only country where having this
(common-sense) requirement can only be viewed as vile, outrageous
prejudice. Well, if it is racist to require voter ID in America, then
Britain and every other democracy on the planet (including, of course,
in Africa) can only qualify as racist as well.