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To: mgist

I had absentee ballots from my in laws that were rejected on election day. They said I needed to turn them into another precinct about an hour away. So after waiting all morning in line, (there were ten voting machines and only one was in use). I wasn’t able to go to the other side of town. I was a very strange day.


2 posted on 02/25/2013 2:34:52 PM PST by mgist
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To: mgist

How Chicago and Ob Globalized Voter Fraud

http://shawsblog2011.blogspot.com/2013/02/how-chicago-and-obama-globalized-voter.html

Chicago has a long tradition of padding its vote totals by placing homeless and deceased persons on its voter registration list. Jim Laski, who once served as the City Clerk of Chicago, second in power only to the mayor, noted in his book My Fall From Grace that fraudulent voters were registered to addresses that included cemeteries, municipal buildings, and taverns. The taverns, at least, are understandable: politically connected city workers spent so much time on bar stools the Board of Elections thought they lived there.
Other voters who had died or moved away were also on the voter registration list. Once again, the tendency for the dead to vote in Chicago can be easily explained: the dead cannot be expected to walk to City Hall and remove themselves from the registered voter list. Everyone in Chicago knows they can only walk as far as the local polling place. This tradition was verified in 1983 when the registered voter list was examined and it was found that 3,000 had either died or moved away.


3 posted on 02/25/2013 2:38:47 PM PST by mgist
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