yet you continue to goad me into being a better reader. What an absolute madlad, dedication to the bitter endThen read and comprehend. I'm not your damn nanny.
yet you continue to goad me into being a better reader. What an absolute madlad, dedication to the bitter endThen read and comprehend. I'm not your damn nanny.
Should be noted, the information for a license replacement constitutes a full identity theft, at which point someone has something far more valuable than one ballotYou have to sign it. You have to provide accurate information that you would need to provide for a drivers license.
Thus information to verify against.
All included in the link provided to the Oregon Elections Website. You know. Education and reading comprehension and all that.
Are we just gonna keep going round and round like this? Because I'm failing to see a point being made here. If so, we're done.
If you aren't registered to vote, then you don't get a ballot. How is this hard for you?There are states here breaking the law either knowingly or not, in the case of Illinois they refused to disclose voter roll data. Database cleanup is also a part of a federal law from 1993. The states can't keep up.
You can vote by mail when you're registered, request it and have an address. You can get the ballot, fill it out, sign it and mail it out. I read that the signature is compared to your DMV signature. The issue in the second part is that reportedly (by a hacker named 4chan) ballots can be reported as spoiled online, thus invalidating someone's vote.
Open question - what happens when you are not registered in the DMV and there is no signature for the people counting the votes to compare to when they get your ballot?
There are over 100% of people registered to vote in some counties and they get a ballot. How is this hard for you?If you aren't registered to vote, then you don't get a ballot. How is this hard for you?
You can check it out yourself in the site. It's back up. Please report back after your investigationAh, ok, so I’m seeing a lot of people saying you have to have an ID to actually turn these in so it probably won’t be the issue it’s presumed to be. You’d also have to do it one ballot at a time, so it’s not the mass fraud it’s being presented as where you can change your vote with a couple clicks.
From what it looks like you can change registration status with just a license number which is actually quite bad (that’s definitely less than identity theft, license numbers are not secret in any way), but that mostly affects primaries. You could re-register to send the ballot to a new location then fill it out, but doing so at scale will of course cause massive issues. Sketchy but not election invalidating.You can check it out yourself in the site. It's back up. Please report back after your investigation
The changed vote bit is also related cancelling votes - you can declare your ballot was spoiled and ask for a new one, thus cancelling the vote.
I know this was intended to be said unironically, but this is the first time you've said something genuinely funny. Congratulations.The proof... is provided by the hacker known as 4chan.
I suspect it may not be the topic that's being difficult.If you aren't registered to vote, then you don't get a ballot. How is this hard for you?
The part where approximately 6 people a year think this is as easy as you say, get caught, and spend a few years behind bars.There are over 100% of people registered to vote in some counties and they get a ballot. How is this hard for you?
I believe this question arose in 2008 when Barack Obama's grandmother died shortly before the election, after she'd sent in her mail-in ballot in favour of her grandson. Apparently the answer is yes, dead people's votes are counted along with the rest. Probably because in practice, it would be more trouble than it's worth to track them down and remove them.Just a question about mail in bailouts
If you die after you sent your ballot in, is it counted?
Can your spouse get in trouble?
If one takes the idea that someone votes at 10am on the day of election and then dies at 2pm, should their vote be counted? One would assume yes. This would suggest a basic principle that once voting starts, votes are legitimate even if the voter dies between the polls opening and the count.I believe this question arose in 2008 when Barack Obama's grandmother died shortly before the election, after she'd sent in her mail-in ballot in favour of her grandson. Apparently the answer is yes, dead people's votes are counted along with the rest. Probably because in practice, it would be more trouble than it's worth to track them down and remove them.