"North Carolina has the worst election problem in the country right now," said David Dill, a computer science professor at Stanford University and founder of the watchdog group Verified Voting.
"[Carteret County] is the only case where votes are permanently lost. I think a few heads ought to roll about this Carteret County thing."
1 posted on
11/16/2004 3:29:54 PM PST by
TaxRelief
To: Constitution Day; Helms; 100%FEDUP; 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; ~Vor~; A2J; a4drvr; Adder; ...
2 posted on
11/16/2004 3:31:06 PM PST by
TaxRelief
(Or maybe they were just exercising their civil liberties...)
To: TaxRelief
4 posted on
11/16/2004 3:37:58 PM PST by
Freepdonia
(Victory is Ours! (I told you so :-))
To: TaxRelief
Be nice, if they would decide to let the Rep's take Agriculture and let the Dem's take Public Instruction, since both of their candidates are showing as the winner. Drop this before it gets ugly, you can't get those votes in Carteret County back.
5 posted on
11/16/2004 3:52:13 PM PST by
jbwbubba
(Will we be a nation based on hate or Faith)
To: TaxRelief
How do you "lose votes" on an electronic voting machine?
6 posted on
11/16/2004 4:18:16 PM PST by
snopercod
(Bigger government means clinton won. Less freedom means Osama won. Get it?)
To: TaxRelief
It can't be the worst...Ohio is recounting the whole state.
We might be 2nd. Whoo-hoo!
Its all a farce, driven by sore losers, especially Ohio's.
BTW, you can "lose votes" the same way your computer can "lose" a document, imho. Usually its operator error. Still, you would think if the fbi can recover documents from a computer thats been deleted and "swept" with something like Clean Sweep, a voting machine ought to be equally accessible. Anyone know if this is true?
9 posted on
11/17/2004 3:49:51 AM PST by
Adder
(Can we bring back stoning again? Please?)
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