Prove It.
Just how does one "prove" something? In political discourse, "proving" serious accusations is very hard. That does not mean that it is a hard sell. Especially by today's standards. From the Boston Massacre to Cheney's shooting of another, facts are hard to come by. Even more so when at the start of an event(whether planned or accidental) the management of the event is of what's primary importance to the players. The outcome and portrayal are all to often the goal and not a reasonable query of the facts to ascertain the truth of cause and effect. The main motivating force is either to deny responsibilities, put it on others or claim some accomplishment all the while showing the best face possible.
It has worked well for the American body Politic for over 200 years. But, like all things, there comes a time where the importance of collective mortal cost outweighs the well, same old crap.
With today’s threats of neverending War and planetary annilation we can not afford to let others have the same political power that they have had for a long time. Some people as you know just cannot be trusted.
The power can only be reclaimed if we have a informing knowledge of the facts. And the fact is
that a Government by and for the People is what we need to survive. It is what we lack. To get it we have some very formidable opponents. They are the richest people. Ever. Living above the Law while making new ones up. Starting Wars for more Power and Profit. They do not have one principle. Save one. Anything goes.
I think there is no better example of what type of people we are up against then their actions concerning their grab for Power. For it is in their illegitimacy, that there Achilles’ heal is.
How do I "prove" that The Bush Regime is illegitimate? Well, by what standard? A court of Law? If I had the powers of a Federal Prosecutor and with the help of a Grand Jury I think I could get a couple of people to squeal on how the 2000 election was stolen. But I am not a Cop, FBI agent or the AG of the
What follows is an article by Mr. Palast that 1st appeared in Dec. 2000. Following that is a link to a short vid. on the stole election and then another article on how E-voting in Fla. circa 2000
www.Salon.com
Monday, December 4, 2000
Early in the year, the company, ChoicePoint, gave
But it turns out none on the list were guilty of felonies, only misdemeanors. The company acknowledged the error, and blamed it on the original source of the list -- the state of
In the process, however, the list invariably targets a minority population in
And if this unfairly singled out minorities, it unfairly handicapped Gore: In Florida, 93 percent of African-Americans voted for the vice president.
In the 10 counties contacted by Salon, use of the central voter file seemed to vary wildly. Some found the list too unreliable and didn't use it at all. But most counties appear to have used the file as a resource to purge names from their voter rolls, with some counties making little -- or no -- effort at all to alert the "purged" voters. Counties that did their best to vet the file discovered a high level of errors, with as many as 15 percent of names incorrectly identified as felons.
News coverage has focused on some maverick
On Friday, the Miami Herald reported that after researching voter records in 12
But
Howell, who said she has never committed a felony, said the letter she received in March shook her faith in the process. "It really is a mess," she said.
"I was very upset," Howell said. "I know I'm not a felon." Though the mistake did get corrected and law enforcement officials were quite apologetic, Howell decided not to use the state list anymore because its "information is so flawed." She's unsure of the number of warning letters that were sent out to county residents when she first received the list in 1999, but she recalls that there were many problems. "One day we would send a letter to have someone taken off the rolls, and the next day, we would send one to put them back on again," Howell said. "It makes you look like you must be a dummy."
Dixie and
Carol Griffin, supervisor of elections for
But if some counties refused to use the list altogether, others seemed to embrace it all too enthusiastically. Etta Rosado, spokeswoman for the Volusia County Department of Elections, said the county essentially accepted the file at face value, did nothing to confirm the accuracy of it and doesn't inform citizens ahead of time that they have been dropped from the voter rolls.
"When we get the con felon list, we automatically start going through our rolls on the computer. If there's a name that says John Smith was convicted of a felony, then we enter a notation on our computer that says convicted felon -- we mark an "f" for felon -- and the date that we received it," Rosado said. "They're still on our computer, but they're on purge status," meaning they have been marked ineligible to vote.
"I don't think that it's up to us to tell them they're a convicted felon," Rosado said. "If he's on our rolls, we make a notation on there. If they show up at a polling place, we'll say, 'Wait a minute, you're a convicted felon, you can't vote. Nine out of 10 times when we repeat that to the person, they say 'Thank you' and walk away.
They don't put up arguments." Rosado doesn't know how many people in Volusia were dropped from the list as a result of being identified as felons.
Some had been convicted of a misdemeanor and not a felony, others were felons who had had their rights restored and others were simply cases of mistaken identity.
An additional 279 were not close matches with names on the county's own voter rolls and were not notified. Of the 3,258 names on the original list, therefore, the county concluded that more than 15 percent were in error. If that ratio held statewide, no fewer than 7,000 voters were incorrectly targeted for removal from voting rosters.
Iorio says local officials did not get adequate preparation for purging felons from their rolls. "We're not used to dealing with issues of criminal justice or ascertaining who has a felony conviction," she said. Though the central voter file was supposed to facilitate the process, it was often more troublesome than the monthly circuit court lists that she had previously used to clear her rolls of duplicate registrations, the deceased and convicted felons. "The database from the state level is not always accurate," Iorio said. As a consequence, her county did its best to notify citizens who were on the list about their felony status. "We sent those individuals a certified letter, we put an ad in a local newspaper and we held a public hearing. For those who didn't respond to that, we sent out another letter by regular mail," Iorio said. "That process lasted several months."
"We did run some number stats and the number of blacks [on the list] was higher than expected for our population," says Chuck Smith, a statistician for the county. Iorio acknowledged that African-Americans made up 54 percent of the people on the original felons list, though they constitute only 11.6 percent of Hillsborough's voting population.
Smith added that the DBT computer program automatically transformed various forms of a single name. In one case, a voter named "Christine" was identified as a felon based on the conviction of a "Christopher" with the same last name. Smith says ChoicePoint would not respond to queries about its proprietary methods.
Nor would the company provide additional verification data to back its fingering certain individuals in the registry purge. One supposed felon on the ChoicePoint list is a local judge.
While there was much about the lists that bothered Iorio, she felt she didn't have a choice but to use them. And she's right. Section 98.0975 of the Florida Constitution states: "Upon receiving the list from the division, the supervisor must attempt to verify the information provided. If the supervisor does not determine that the information provided by the division is incorrect, the supervisor must remove from the registration books by the next subsequent election the name of any person who is deceased, convicted of a felony or adjudicated mentally incapacitated with respect to voting."
But the counties have interpreted that law in different ways.
According to
He says 20 people proved that they did not belong on the list, and a handful of angry phone calls followed on Election Day. "Some people threatened to sue us," he said, "but we haven't had any lawyers calling yet."
In
Many
But Collins said the county has no figures for how many voters were able to successfully appeal their designation as felons.
ChoicePoint spokesman Martin Fagan concedes his company's error in passing on the bogus list from
But he added that ChoicePoint is responsible only for turning over its raw list, which is then up to
Last year, DBT Online, with which ChoicePoint would soon merge, received the unprecedented contract from the state of
In January, the state of
a contract with ChoicePoint after discovering the firm had sold citizens' personal profiles to unauthorized individuals.
Fagan says many errors could have been eliminated by matching the Social Security numbers of ex-felons on DBT lists to the Social Security numbers on voter registries. However,
In its defense, the company proudly points to an award it received from Voter Integrity Inc. on April 1 for "innovative excellence [in] cleansing"
Especially if that president is named "Bush." ChoicePoint's board and executive roster are packed with Republican stars, including billionaire Ken Langone, a company director who was chairman of the fund-raising committee for New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani's aborted run against Hillary Rodham Clinton. Langone is joined at ChoicePoint by another Giuliani associate, former New York Police Commissioner Howard Safir.
And Republican power lobbyist and former congressman Vin Weber lobbies for ChoicePoint in
(Alicia Montgomery, Daryl Lindsey and Anthony York contributed to this story.)
GregoryPalast@Guardian.co.uk
Original article - http://www.salon.com/politics/feature/2000/12/04/voter_file/index.html
Short vid on stolen election(realplayer) - http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article3187.htm
E-Voting Fla. -
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0310/S00211.htm
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