Democracy, for; or against?
Oct. 22nd, 2004 02:14 pmI am (though you may find it hard to believe) a registered Republican. I used to be fairly centrist, these days most people call me liberal. I happen to know I've not changed all that much, becuase I started writing political pieces when I was 16, for my high school paper, which means I have more than 20 years of recorded opinions, out where memory can't gloss them to be then, what they are now.
I didn't really agree with the Gulf War, but I didn't have any real problems with it, becuase Bush Pere did it right. All the ducks were in a row.
The War in Iraq is not why I oppose Bush Fils' candicacy. Rather it is the way in which he tramples the traditions of the nation. The ways in which he lies. He says Kerry was, "gutting," intel. It's not true. Kerry was proposing a 1 percent reduction, and a reduction, of about the same size was passed, that same day; from an amendment written by Arlen Spector (R-Pa). Why did he propose it? Because the intel community had socked away about a billion dollars in a slush fund. It was an accountabilty measure.
Even that I'm willing to tolerate (not forgive) such lies are, sadly, part and parcel of the process and I am too jaded now to keep my umbrage; as I did in my youth.
No, my disquietude hearkens back to Florida, in 2000. The Republican Party conspired to suppress the vote. They staged riots, and then said Bush had to be allowed to win, even with a stain, to keep the peace.
That's enough right there... it strike to my very being, to my vocation, because I swore an oath (and have repeated it, twice) to uphold and defend the Constitution, against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
Had it ended there, I'd be willing to forgive, (but not forget) this thing I cannot tolerate.
But it hasn't.
The Republican Party has been engaging in a systematic attempt, and for years, to suppress the vote of it's opposition. Two years ago, in New Hampshire, a Republican team swamped the phones of the Democratic party's get out the vote effort. "Charles McGee, the former executive director of the New Hampshire Republican State Committee, and Allen Raymond, a GOP consultant, pleaded guilty to federal charges stemming from their involvement in the jamming of telephones on Election Day, Nov. 5, 2002. Democrats' computer-generated calls to get out the vote were blocked and thus voters did not receive the intended message due to illegal action by some in the Republican Party."
And the man who was responible... Jim Tobin, he was named a few days later. What was he doing when his name came out? He was the head of Bush's re-election campaign... in the same area.
But the DOJ... They've been very busy dragging their feet on this matter (as in so many matters which touch the White House). Questions for Justice
When Tobin stepped down (because his name came out) there was evidence that it was not a local freak, but rather had some Party sanction In late October 2002, the defendant, Allen Raymond, then the president of Virginia-based political consulting company GOP Marketplace, LLC, received a call from a former colleague who was then an official in a national political organization. The official indicated that he had been approached by an employee of the New Hampshire Republican State Committee with an idea that might give New Hampshire Republican candidates an edge over New Hampshire democratic (sic) candidates in the upcoming election.
That's from the court documents, the plea agreement. Look at last part again, where a, "national political organization" official, was approached. They knew about it, and did nothing.
Now, in Nevada, and Oregon,people people have been selectively removing people's ability to vote, by the simple expedient of lieing to them. Taking their registrations, and throwing them away. That way they can't vote. Cheaper than advertising, and more effective. You know that person plans to vote, or they'd not have gone to the effort, and you know they aren't likely to vote for your guy; because they made the point of registering out his party.
A bit of shredding and a host of votes (in what promises to be a close election) are gone, with no risk that a hanging chad might go the wrong way.
The man who has been doing this... he's been paid a lot of money, and by whom? Yep... the Republicans. Sproul and Associates has been paid about $500,000 this year. RNC to Sproul
In South Dakota there is an investigation of some other shenanigans. The head of Republican Victory (the regional Get Out The Vote drive)stepped down, six of his fellows were indicted. Where did he go? Ohio. Why? To head the Republican get out the vote efforts there.
Also, in Ohio, the Secratary of State tried to invalidate the registration forms of who knows how many, because they weren't on heavy enough paper. If, however, one downloads the federal form, it has to be taken no matter what.
He has also been playing games with the federally required (because of Florida) provisional ballots, "A federal judge ripped Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell yesterday for failing to comply with a court order regarding provisional ballots and for "failure to do his duty.''
U.S. District Judge James G. Carr in Toledo also suggested that Blackwell risked denying large numbers of Ohioans the right to vote on Nov. 2 and "apparently seeks to accomplish the same result in Ohio in 2004 that occurred in Florida in 2000.''
While an appeals court decides the legal dispute over provisional ballots in Ohio, Carr wants Blackwell to give county election officials alternative instructions for the possible outcomes in the case so no time is lost once there's a ruling.
The judge even offered his own language for those guidelines, saying Blackwell can't be trusted to do so.
"I cannot be confident . . . that Blackwell will, indeed, fulfill his obligation to this court, Ohio's election officials, and Ohio's voters,'' the judge wrote."
Columbus Dispatch
In Philadelphia people tried, at a late date, to move the polling places in neighborhoods likely to vote for Kerry. It was 63 precints they tried to move Philly.com The argument was it made the voter safer.
A federal judge has handed down a ruling which makes it very hard to challenge any voting statute passed by a state decision pdf / briefs pdfs
Not that Posner, of the Seventh Circut ought to surprise anyone with the ruling, he after all praised the decision in Bush v Gore for its pragmatism, a pragmatism founded in the thinking I mentioned above, since civil unrest was possible (because the Republicans were causing it) the Court did the right thing in giving Bush the White House.
That's caving in to thugs, and it's being upheld as a virtue. Neville Chamberlain did that. We don't think well of him today.
But today, today was the icing on the cake, the straw that broke the camels back... the thing which moved me to resigned desperation, which makes me want to see the Party not merely defeated, but ripped out, root and branch.
Person, or persons unknown have been stealing completed ballots. Posing as election officials they are going to the houses of people who have ordered absentee ballots and collected them. Sweet. Better, almost, than eradicating a registration form, because some of them might manage to get a provisional ballot and vote anyway. No, this take the completed ballot and tosses it. One vote gone, unless of course it's for the guy he likes.
Warning
Has this been happening in Bush counties... no, of course not.
Even if I thought him the better candidate, that his Party is doing such things, makes him undeserving of votes. It is not only undemocratic, it is anti-democratic. It is evil, and where will this disregard of the people lead?
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed
Those are important words, but they lead to...
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness
Which brings to mind...
Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security
We can still do that at the ballot box.
That, at least, is my hope and prayer.
I didn't really agree with the Gulf War, but I didn't have any real problems with it, becuase Bush Pere did it right. All the ducks were in a row.
The War in Iraq is not why I oppose Bush Fils' candicacy. Rather it is the way in which he tramples the traditions of the nation. The ways in which he lies. He says Kerry was, "gutting," intel. It's not true. Kerry was proposing a 1 percent reduction, and a reduction, of about the same size was passed, that same day; from an amendment written by Arlen Spector (R-Pa). Why did he propose it? Because the intel community had socked away about a billion dollars in a slush fund. It was an accountabilty measure.
Even that I'm willing to tolerate (not forgive) such lies are, sadly, part and parcel of the process and I am too jaded now to keep my umbrage; as I did in my youth.
No, my disquietude hearkens back to Florida, in 2000. The Republican Party conspired to suppress the vote. They staged riots, and then said Bush had to be allowed to win, even with a stain, to keep the peace.
That's enough right there... it strike to my very being, to my vocation, because I swore an oath (and have repeated it, twice) to uphold and defend the Constitution, against all enemies, foreign and domestic.
Had it ended there, I'd be willing to forgive, (but not forget) this thing I cannot tolerate.
But it hasn't.
The Republican Party has been engaging in a systematic attempt, and for years, to suppress the vote of it's opposition. Two years ago, in New Hampshire, a Republican team swamped the phones of the Democratic party's get out the vote effort. "Charles McGee, the former executive director of the New Hampshire Republican State Committee, and Allen Raymond, a GOP consultant, pleaded guilty to federal charges stemming from their involvement in the jamming of telephones on Election Day, Nov. 5, 2002. Democrats' computer-generated calls to get out the vote were blocked and thus voters did not receive the intended message due to illegal action by some in the Republican Party."
And the man who was responible... Jim Tobin, he was named a few days later. What was he doing when his name came out? He was the head of Bush's re-election campaign... in the same area.
But the DOJ... They've been very busy dragging their feet on this matter (as in so many matters which touch the White House). Questions for Justice
When Tobin stepped down (because his name came out) there was evidence that it was not a local freak, but rather had some Party sanction In late October 2002, the defendant, Allen Raymond, then the president of Virginia-based political consulting company GOP Marketplace, LLC, received a call from a former colleague who was then an official in a national political organization. The official indicated that he had been approached by an employee of the New Hampshire Republican State Committee with an idea that might give New Hampshire Republican candidates an edge over New Hampshire democratic (sic) candidates in the upcoming election.
That's from the court documents, the plea agreement. Look at last part again, where a, "national political organization" official, was approached. They knew about it, and did nothing.
Now, in Nevada, and Oregon,people people have been selectively removing people's ability to vote, by the simple expedient of lieing to them. Taking their registrations, and throwing them away. That way they can't vote. Cheaper than advertising, and more effective. You know that person plans to vote, or they'd not have gone to the effort, and you know they aren't likely to vote for your guy; because they made the point of registering out his party.
A bit of shredding and a host of votes (in what promises to be a close election) are gone, with no risk that a hanging chad might go the wrong way.
The man who has been doing this... he's been paid a lot of money, and by whom? Yep... the Republicans. Sproul and Associates has been paid about $500,000 this year. RNC to Sproul
In South Dakota there is an investigation of some other shenanigans. The head of Republican Victory (the regional Get Out The Vote drive)stepped down, six of his fellows were indicted. Where did he go? Ohio. Why? To head the Republican get out the vote efforts there.
Also, in Ohio, the Secratary of State tried to invalidate the registration forms of who knows how many, because they weren't on heavy enough paper. If, however, one downloads the federal form, it has to be taken no matter what.
He has also been playing games with the federally required (because of Florida) provisional ballots, "A federal judge ripped Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell yesterday for failing to comply with a court order regarding provisional ballots and for "failure to do his duty.''
U.S. District Judge James G. Carr in Toledo also suggested that Blackwell risked denying large numbers of Ohioans the right to vote on Nov. 2 and "apparently seeks to accomplish the same result in Ohio in 2004 that occurred in Florida in 2000.''
While an appeals court decides the legal dispute over provisional ballots in Ohio, Carr wants Blackwell to give county election officials alternative instructions for the possible outcomes in the case so no time is lost once there's a ruling.
The judge even offered his own language for those guidelines, saying Blackwell can't be trusted to do so.
"I cannot be confident . . . that Blackwell will, indeed, fulfill his obligation to this court, Ohio's election officials, and Ohio's voters,'' the judge wrote."
Columbus Dispatch
In Philadelphia people tried, at a late date, to move the polling places in neighborhoods likely to vote for Kerry. It was 63 precints they tried to move Philly.com The argument was it made the voter safer.
A federal judge has handed down a ruling which makes it very hard to challenge any voting statute passed by a state decision pdf / briefs pdfs
Not that Posner, of the Seventh Circut ought to surprise anyone with the ruling, he after all praised the decision in Bush v Gore for its pragmatism, a pragmatism founded in the thinking I mentioned above, since civil unrest was possible (because the Republicans were causing it) the Court did the right thing in giving Bush the White House.
That's caving in to thugs, and it's being upheld as a virtue. Neville Chamberlain did that. We don't think well of him today.
But today, today was the icing on the cake, the straw that broke the camels back... the thing which moved me to resigned desperation, which makes me want to see the Party not merely defeated, but ripped out, root and branch.
Person, or persons unknown have been stealing completed ballots. Posing as election officials they are going to the houses of people who have ordered absentee ballots and collected them. Sweet. Better, almost, than eradicating a registration form, because some of them might manage to get a provisional ballot and vote anyway. No, this take the completed ballot and tosses it. One vote gone, unless of course it's for the guy he likes.
Warning
Has this been happening in Bush counties... no, of course not.
Even if I thought him the better candidate, that his Party is doing such things, makes him undeserving of votes. It is not only undemocratic, it is anti-democratic. It is evil, and where will this disregard of the people lead?
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed
Those are important words, but they lead to...
That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness
Which brings to mind...
Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security
We can still do that at the ballot box.
That, at least, is my hope and prayer.
no subject
Date: 2004-10-23 12:04 am (UTC)Racism still exists.