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About that popular vote claim....

I am all for voter ID's UNLESS there is a cost for the ID. I cannot get over the hump of making a citizen have to pay to exercise their right to vote.
Yet I had to pay 200 dollars to get my BATFE approval for my suppressor?
 
I’m pretty untriggerable....


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What does shutting down Sunday voting have to do with voter IDs? I'll ask again, are blacks disadvantaged by voter IDs?

According to these debt-ridden NPC conformists (I mean university students) from a once-prestigious educational institution — blacks don’t know how to get IDs or use the internet.


 

Calling an anti-Semitic post anti-Semitic isn't being triggered.

Calling out your ridiculous red-pill CnPs isn't being triggered.

Calling out your complete and utter lack of any critical reasoning skills and your absolute gullibility isn't being triggered.

It's speaking the truth. When confronted with it you run and hide until the heat dies down and then start back up with your nonsense.
 
Calling an anti-Semitic post anti-Semitic isn't being triggered.

Calling out your ridiculous red-pill CnPs isn't being triggered.

Calling out your complete and utter lack of any critical reasoning skills and your absolute gullibility isn't being triggered.

It's speaking the truth. When confronted with it you run and hide until the heat dies down and then start back up with your nonsense.
Anything can be called triggered. There is a guy running around temporarily taking people off his ignore list so he can call them triggered.
 
Calling an anti-Semitic post anti-Semitic isn't being triggered.

Calling out your ridiculous red-pill CnPs isn't being triggered.

Calling out your complete and utter lack of any critical reasoning skills and your absolute gullibility isn't being triggered.

It's speaking the truth. When confronted with it you run and hide until the heat dies down and then start back up with your nonsense.

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This report (claim of all these "illegals" being registered to vote covers some 22 yrs. So, considering that conservative Republicans have controlled the State of Texas (Sec of State, Gov, Lt Gov, etc) for those 22 years, where are all the indictments?

They are simply using a computer that matches NAMES, but doesn't consider birth days, etc. to eliminate false positives. How many "Johnny Johnsons" or "Jose Gonzales" do you figure live in the State of Texas? So, if one with that name is flagged, then dozens of people who share that name are also flagged, without there being any actual investigation as to whether they were lawfully registered or not.

This sounds suspiciously like Kris Kobach's claims that "thousands" of "illegals" had voted in Kansas, and after 3+ yrs of investigating millions of voters, he ended up indicting 9 people. When asked to prove his claims in Federal Court, even his own witnesses ended up testifying that Kobach was make much more out of the numbers (by a significant magnitude) that what the evidence supported.

If and when we see the Texas AG actually start convicting people, then it will test these claims. Until then: 1. It just seems like "noise," and 2. If true it exposes those Republican State Officials as major-league incompetents. (My guess is that the list is completely bogus and based on little or no actual evidence.)
 
This report (claim of all these "illegals" being registered to vote covers some 22 yrs. So, considering that conservative Republicans have controlled the State of Texas (Sec of State, Gov, Lt Gov, etc) for those 22 years, where are all the indictments?

They are simply using a computer that matches NAMES, but doesn't consider birth days, etc. to eliminate false positives. How many "Johnny Johnsons" or "Jose Gonzales" do you figure live in the State of Texas? So, if one with that name is flagged, then dozens of people who share that name are also flagged, without there being any actual investigation as to whether they were lawfully registered or not.

This sounds suspiciously like Kris Kobach's claims that "thousands" of "illegals" had voted in Kansas, and after 3+ yrs of investigating millions of voters, he ended up indicting 9 people. When asked to prove his claims in Federal Court, even his own witnesses ended up testifying that Kobach was make much more out of the numbers (by a significant magnitude) that what the evidence supported.

If and when we see the Texas AG actually start convicting people, then it will test these claims. Until then: 1. It just seems like "noise," and 2. If true it exposes those Republican State Officials as major-league incompetents. (My guess is that the list is completely bogus and based on little or no actual evidence.)

http://amp.washingtontimes.com/news/2019/jan/30/pennsylvania-11000-non-citizens-registered-vote/
 
So far they’ve found more Catholic priests accused of abusing children in Austin than illegal voters in the state...
 
Let me CORRECT that report from the Washington Times. They said: "Texas Secretary of State David Whitley used state driver’s license records, which include immigration status, and compared those with voter rolls. He found that about 95,000 people whom the state says weren’t citizens were among the 16 million registered voters."

As they have no means/methods to independently verify this as being true/false, the BEST they could say is that Texas Sec of State CLAIMS this to be true. They CANNOT with any accuracy claim that he FOUND 95,000 non-citizens among the state's 16 million registered voters. Show me some indictments and convictions totaling even 1/50th of that number (1,900) and I will agree it's a signicant problem.

My educated guess is that the number indicted and convicted of "being a registered voter, while not a US Citizen" in Texas will turn out to be under 100 people. (.000625%) Just like Kris Kobach, after claiming the same, thousands of "illegals" registered to vote in Kansas and undertaking a multi-year investigation with millions of ballots cast over a 12 yr period being put under scrutiny, ended up being 9 people actually charged and convicted, NONE of them being "illegals."

It's easy to make outlandish claims, it's not so easy to actually back them up.
 
Let me CORRECT that report from the Washington Times. They said: "Texas Secretary of State David Whitley used state driver’s license records, which include immigration status, and compared those with voter rolls. He found that about 95,000 people whom the state says weren’t citizens were among the 16 million registered voters."

As they have no means/methods to independently verify this as being true/false, the BEST they could say is that Texas Sec of State CLAIMS this to be true. They CANNOT with any accuracy claim that he FOUND 95,000 non-citizens among the state's 16 million registered voters. Show me some indictments and convictions totaling even 1/50th of that number (1,900) and I will agree it's a signicant problem.

My educated guess is that the number indicted and convicted of "being a registered voter, while not a US Citizen" in Texas will turn out to be under 100 people. (.000625%) Just like Kris Kobach, after claiming the same, thousands of "illegals" registered to vote in Kansas and undertaking a multi-year investigation with millions of ballots cast over a 12 yr period being put under scrutiny, ended up being 9 people actually charged and convicted, NONE of them being "illegals."

It's easy to make outlandish claims, it's not so easy to actually back them up.

Keep bringing the actual data, @hollywood .

BTW, how are you feeling these days?
 
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