You are here: Home > Message Board > News & Politics > Steve Bannon to speak in Berkerly next week
May 17 2024 8.35am

Steve Bannon to speak in Berkerly next week

Previous Topic | Next Topic


Page 18 of 24 < 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 >

 

nickgusset Flag Shizzlehurst 26 Sep 17 10.19pm

Originally posted by Ray in Houston


That's the plan. Which is why Republican governors up and down the country have enacted Voter ID laws which, when challenged in the courts, have been found to disenfranchise minority voters. [Link]

Similar to May's plan that people need a passport to vote.

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Quote this post in a reply
View Ray in Houston's Profile Ray in Houston Flag Houston 26 Sep 17 10.47pm Send a Private Message to Ray in Houston Add Ray in Houston as a friend

Originally posted by nickgusset

Similar to May's plan that people need a passport to vote.

The 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution:

The right of citizens of the United States to vote ... shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any state by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or other tax.

A passport (or drivers license or other forms of ID usually cited in Voter ID laws) cost money and, as a result, courts have held that only allowing such forms of ID as a valid for voting, is akin to a poll tax and thus unconstitutional. I'm not sure you have the same protection in the UK.

 


We don't do possession; we do defense and attack. Everything else is just wa**ing with a football.

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
View Jimenez's Profile Jimenez Flag SELHURSTPARKCHESTER,DA BRONX 26 Sep 17 10.53pm Send a Private Message to Jimenez Add Jimenez as a friend

Originally posted by Ray in Houston

The 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution:

The right of citizens of the United States to vote ... shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any state by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or other tax.

A passport (or drivers license or other forms of ID usually cited in Voter ID laws) cost money and, as a result, courts have held that only allowing such forms of ID as a valid for voting, is akin to a poll tax and thus unconstitutional. I'm not sure you have the same protection in the UK.

A non-driver ID card in NY state is $30.00 Hardly going to break the bank.

 


Pro USA & Israel

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
wordup Flag 26 Sep 17 11.33pm

Originally posted by Jimenez

A non-driver ID card in NY state is .00 Hardly going to break the bank.

On the surface I don't disagree, but really there is something of a data mining exercise going on. If you know that vast numbers of certain demographics tick a box, then that can be centered in on as an election strategy.

Let's say that you know that more poor people don't drive or travel abroad. Well then through that fact alone, that demographic are much less likely to have ID. In many states to even gain an ID card you need a birth certificate which also costs money should you not have one, and requires an in person appearance often during working hours. It's enough to put plenty of people off. Human nature.

Sure if someone desperately wants to vote, even if it isn't a formality for them to get one, they can, but then not everyone out voting falls into that category. Making some jump through hoops is designed to shave off a percentage of this demographic, or that demographic and it's reliable was achieving that aim. In person voting fraud is actually very rare and this additional hurdle is selectively designed to suppress the black vote.

From a recent study

"The study found that among households with an annual income below ,000, 21% were deterred from voting while among those above 0,000 only 2.7% were deterred. Broken down by race, 8% of the people deterred were white and 28% were black. If the goal of the law was to prevent poor and/or black people from voting without affecting rich and/or white people too much, it succeeded quite well."


"A study released Monday estimates 16,800 or more people in Dane and Milwaukee counties were deterred from casting ballots in November because of Wisconsin's voter ID law" Two counties... in a state that Trump won by just 23,000 votes. As a strategy it works, but thats what it is, a voter suppression strategy.

Edited by wordup (26 Sep 2017 11.34pm)

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Quote this post in a reply
View Jimenez's Profile Jimenez Flag SELHURSTPARKCHESTER,DA BRONX 27 Sep 17 12.28am Send a Private Message to Jimenez Add Jimenez as a friend

Originally posted by wordup

On the surface I don't disagree, but really there is something of a data mining exercise going on. If you know that vast numbers of certain demographics tick a box, then that can be centered in on as an election strategy.

Let's say that you know that more poor people don't drive or travel abroad. Well then through that fact alone, that demographic are much less likely to have ID. In many states to even gain an ID card you need a birth certificate which also costs money should you not have one, and requires an in person appearance often during working hours. It's enough to put plenty of people off. Human nature.

Sure if someone desperately wants to vote, even if it isn't a formality for them to get one, they can, but then not everyone out voting falls into that category. Making some jump through hoops is designed to shave off a percentage of this demographic, or that demographic and it's reliable was achieving that aim. In person voting fraud is actually very rare and this additional hurdle is selectively designed to suppress the black vote.

From a recent study

"The study found that among households with an annual income below ,000, 21% were deterred from voting while among those above 0,000 only 2.7% were deterred. Broken down by race, 8% of the people deterred were white and 28% were black. If the goal of the law was to prevent poor and/or black people from voting without affecting rich and/or white people too much, it succeeded quite well."


"A study released Monday estimates 16,800 or more people in Dane and Milwaukee counties were deterred from casting ballots in November because of Wisconsin's voter ID law" Two counties... in a state that Trump won by just 23,000 votes. As a strategy it works, but thats what it is, a voter suppression strategy.

Edited by wordup (26 Sep 2017 11.34pm)

Then again poor people need ID for WIC so nope ID is easy enough to get if not tedious...

 


Pro USA & Israel

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
View Penge Eagle's Profile Penge Eagle Flag Beckenham 27 Sep 17 12.49am Send a Private Message to Penge Eagle Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Penge Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by nickgusset

Similar to May's plan that people need a passport to vote.

What's wrong with that?

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post | Board Moderator Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
nickgusset Flag Shizzlehurst 27 Sep 17 12.51am

Originally posted by Penge Eagle

What's wrong with that?

Not everyone has a passport.

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Quote this post in a reply
View Penge Eagle's Profile Penge Eagle Flag Beckenham 27 Sep 17 12.52am Send a Private Message to Penge Eagle Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Penge Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by Ray in Houston

That's the plan. Which is why Republican governors up and down the country have enacted Voter ID laws which, when challenged in the courts, have been found to disenfranchise minority voters. [Link]

No! It's to stop illegal immigrants from voting, as what happened in the last election. The Democrats were bussing them in. That's why they want open borders – to get voted in and stay in power!

Edited by Penge Eagle (27 Sep 2017 12.53am)

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post | Board Moderator Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
View Penge Eagle's Profile Penge Eagle Flag Beckenham 27 Sep 17 12.53am Send a Private Message to Penge Eagle Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Penge Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by nickgusset

Not everyone has a passport.

If you value democracy that much, you'd get one.

Oh, and what's your solution to voter fraud?

Edited by Penge Eagle (27 Sep 2017 12.56am)

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post | Board Moderator Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
View Penge Eagle's Profile Penge Eagle Flag Beckenham 27 Sep 17 12.55am Send a Private Message to Penge Eagle Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Penge Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by Ray in Houston

The 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution:

The right of citizens of the United States to vote ... shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any state by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or other tax.

A passport (or drivers license or other forms of ID usually cited in Voter ID laws) cost money and, as a result, courts have held that only allowing such forms of ID as a valid for voting, is akin to a poll tax and thus unconstitutional. I'm not sure you have the same protection in the UK.

Just $29 in my state of California. It would be weird not to have one anyway!

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post | Board Moderator Edit this post Quote this post in a reply
nickgusset Flag Shizzlehurst 27 Sep 17 1.01am

Originally posted by Penge Eagle

If you value democracy that much, you'd get one.

Oh, and what's your solution to voter fraud?

Edited by Penge Eagle (27 Sep 2017 12.56am)

I think you need to think how high having a passport is on your agenda when you're working all hours but still brassic at the end of very week and the kids keep growing so you have to fork out for more shoes etc etc.

Have you no concept of what it's like to be poor?

Edited by nickgusset (27 Sep 2017 1.02am)

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post Quote this post in a reply
View Penge Eagle's Profile Penge Eagle Flag Beckenham 27 Sep 17 1.08am Send a Private Message to Penge Eagle Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Penge Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by nickgusset

I think you need to think how high having a passport is on your agenda when you're working all hours but still brassic at the end of very week and the kids keep growing so you have to fork out for more shoes etc etc.

Have you no concept of what it's like to be poor?

Edited by nickgusset (27 Sep 2017 1.02am)

f*** me, people don't work in Victorian workhouses with no days off.

Again, what is your solution to combat voter fraud?

 

Alert Alert a moderator to this post | Board Moderator Edit this post Quote this post in a reply

 

Page 18 of 24 < 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 >

Previous Topic | Next Topic

You are here: Home > Message Board > News & Politics > Steve Bannon to speak in Berkerly next week