Is there any legal way to challenge the system before the next election? If we don't get a handle on the Democratic fraud, the will of the people will never be realized.
The only ways would be to either get a change past a Governor Jim Doyle (D-Madistan) veto (the Pubbies only hold a 19-14 advantage in the state Senate and 60-39 advantage in the Assembly, not enough to bust a veto) or have the US Attorney find a federal hook (the DAs in both Milwaukee and Dane Counties, as well as the Attorney General are all DemonRATs).
I forgot to explain that Dane County is the county that has Madison (aka Madistan), the capital.
This really should be a job for the FBI. But wait, the government bow wows are sleeping.
You want to get a handle on vote fraud?
It's easy.
Let a Republican win an election engaging in that kind of fraud.
I submit that being more goal-oriented than the Democrats, we can probably manufacture 10 phony votes to each Democrat phony vote.
Yes, it will. YOU are NOT the PEOPLE. YOU are a SERVANT of the PEOPLE. (In other words, you have a job and pay taxes for the privelege of working your a$$ off.)
It is the WILL of the PEOPLE that it will always be thus.
Everyone needs to began NOW, writing or calling their senators and congressmen/women and tell them to immediately vote for a national registry so when ANYONE tries to register, they can immediately check the registry and see if they're registered anywhere else. Even with that, they need to STOP same day registration. They need to make a lot of changes, but at least the national registry will catch most of double voting.
If we don't do something, we're going to become a communist third world country. That's what the liberals are working toward. They're getting desperate and since they can't win with their agendas and are unwilling to change, they're trying to force their will on us via fraud voting.
Nothing will be done as long as Doyle is governor. All attempts in the past to get a handle on things have either been stymied by the democrats, either when they had a majority in the state senate or assembly or by a veto from a democratic governor.