Posted on 01/08/2007 5:22:51 PM PST by lifelong_republican
"There is by now no doubt that there are serious problems with electronic voting machines: they fail to record votes, and even flip votes from one candidate to another..."
(Excerpt) Read more at amhersttimes.com ...
Paper ballots are better because they are controlled directly by the voter when created and confirmed, and are auditable under supervision, and are more physically reliable. No voters ever had to stand in line for hours or even leave without voting because a piece of paper and a marker wouldn't boot.
Opscan:
Paper ballot
Machine count
Machine and manually recountable
It's about your vote, too.
It's BS.
Yes, you are right! The opscans could be rigged, but the original paper can be recounted in other ways, and that's what adds the auditability.
Excellent point.
What is BS?
You make good points but the problems with the electronics include unreliability along with vulnerability. I'd like to see internet voting, too, but it can't be made sufficiently secure at this time, either.
Ideally, we should be able to watch the equivalent of CSPAN with informational sidebars and search engines at the ready, and each voter can enter an ID and password and send in a yes or no on every issue as desired.
Chicago, Newark, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Detroit.
And yet we seem to hand off our money to unknown computers run by unknown people. We do our stock trades in unknown computers run by unknown people. My kid's school grades are all kept in a computer. Computers run our cars. They run most of our military equipment.
Sorry, I don't particularly like electronic voting, but to suggest that the problem is inherent in a system using a computer that is programmed is simplistic.
Paper ballots are better because they are controlled directly by the voter when created and confirmed, and are auditable under supervision, and are more physically reliable.
Oops, I ment to say "wud" be lowr if we grt rid og the macgine. |
Previous cheating doesn't justify ongoing or future cheating. Those who support the electronics want to make it easy for the corrupt Democrats to cheat and get away with it.
Banks, merchants, and the others you describe don't use unknown systems operated by unknown people, and they most assuredly have tangible independent physical documents for audits.
I won't use electronic voting machines for the same reason that I won't use ATMs. They are error prone and constantly hacked. I could lose thousands of dollars.
Oh wait, that's not true at all. hmmmm
Even if you don't believe you can personally create or confirm your own ballot, you shouldn't hand those duties off to others who may not only introduce errors but thwart your intent.
Paper ballots are not only permanent tangible independent audit records, they're created and confirmed by the voters themselves and their handling can be observed openly.
ATMs are quite different from the voting systems. The newest ones do not use touchscreens at all and they all have independent physical documentation.
One trick pony.
Tell me what other issue would be anything but moot once you have given up your right to vote.
Real Americans would be better served than to use the NYTimes editorial as their main source not only for the thread, but for their argument.
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