Quote:
Originally Posted by King Spew
Cite please.
It can be impossible to catch though, so demanding citations doesn't really work. The difficult hill to climb when claiming voter fraud isn't whether or not it happens, it's whether enough of it happens to change an outcome.
Wisconsin had hundreds of thousands of known bad names on the voter lists. The election commission was ordered last winter to follow the law and remove them, but refused to do so. They were held in contempt, but still gave no ****s.
I bought my current house in 2014 from a guy who was moving to Texas. A few months ago, I received his mail-in ballot application. The only personal information needed on the application was stuff that I could find elsewhere on the mailer itself. I threw it in the garbage, but I can say with near certainty that if I had opted to return it, there is no chance I'd have been caught. How would they?
I know, one guy one example does not a pattern make. But don't just dismiss it or you'll never get through to the person you're arguing with.