Suzanne Pinnow, who serves as Thornapple’s chief election official, received a letter from the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division seeking information about why the town decided to get rid of electronic machines and how the township is helping to accommodate disabled voters in the process.
If I was a betting man I would bet that every State has in place a means to facilitate the vote for the disabled, which in my opinion would amount to LESS THAN ONE PERCENT OF THE VOTING POPULATION, and said Department of injustice is well aware of that fact due to the mountain of law piled high to protect miniscule amounts of US population for the purpose of further reducing what ever power any State might exercise relative to the ninth and tenth amendments to the US Constitution.
Yes my FR friends it is way past high time for at least red States to ignore anything coming from the corrupt Federal Government in regards to anything they might attempt to use to further usurp the rights, privileges, principles, and liberty of “We the People” or the States that gave even a smidgeon of power to what has now become the Federal leviathon.
How is an electronic machine any easier to use than a paper ballot for the disabled?
Funny the civil “rights” division had no issue with paper mail in ballots or dementia patients in nursing homes voting in mass for xiden.
Glad to see our govt still has their priorities right /s
Do the J6 detainees get to use electronic or paper ballots, bet the division is looking into that, again /s