Posted on 12/19/2005 9:30:10 AM PST by new yorker 77
Edited on 12/19/2005 9:39:02 AM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
This post is in response to the Sunday, December 18, 2005, New York Times Op-Ed piece,originally posted by freeper 'salbam' here, which calls into question electronic voting machines. This is an argument being pushed by the liberal kook fringe because of the results in Ohio and Florida which liberals can not come to terms with.
Fact: If you compare the results of Election 2004 to the results of Election 2000, President Bush had Net Gains in 39 states while his Democrat Opponent had Net Gains in only 11 states. This proves that President Bush won a national election.
The Formula for Net Gain in a State is a s follows:
(# of Bush04 Votes - # of Bush 00 Votes) (# of Kerry 04 Votes - # of Gore 00 Votes) = Net Gain of Votes
If the Net Gain # is Positive, it is a Net Gain for Bush.
If the Net Gain # is Negative, it is a Net Gain for Kerry.
I tabulated the following results of Net Gains using data of Election 2000 and Election 2004 which I have sourced below. Feel free to correct me if need be, but I obtained these Net Gain results using a spreadsheet and double-checked the numbers inputed.
Fact: President Bush had a Net Gain of 749,296 Votes in the Northeastern states that he lost. The states include Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, & Maryland. Most of these states are run at the state and local level by Democrats.
President Bush had a Net Gain of Votes in 39 States
State--------------Net Gain
Alabama----------233,899
Arizona-----------114,459
Arkansas-----------52,773
California----------58,115
Connecticut--------91,259
Delaware-----------14,288
Florida------------380,441
Georgia-----------244,615
Hawaii-------------29,924
Idaho---------------29,837
Illinois-------------24,001
Indiana------------166,571
Iowa----------------14,203
Kansas-------------78,407
Kentucky---------123,112
Louisiana---------146,343
Maryland----------17,195
Massachusetts---5,294
Michigan-----------51,842
Mississippi---------46,664
Missouri----------117,756
Nebraska-----------56,404
New Jersey-------263,250
New Mexico--------6,354
New York---------352,610
North Carolina-----61,846
North Dakota-------6,031
Oklahoma---------185,765
Pennsylvania-------60,592
Rhode Island-------28,239
South Carolina--55,899
South Dakota------11,444
Tennessee---------267,669
Texas--------------328,320
Utah---------------110,500
Virginia------------42,017
West Virginia-----56,259
Wyoming-----------9,387
John Kerry had a Net Gain of Votes in 11 States
State--------------Net Gain
Alaska--------------8,530
Colorado----------45,998
D.C.---------------27,864
Maine-------------33,306
Minnesota--------39,712
Montana----------10,699
Nevada-----------------97
New Hampshire-16,485
Ohio---------------48,136
Oregon------------69,567
Vermont-----------33,640
Washington-------66,519
Wisconsin----------5,676
The following data shows the votes obtained by Bush in 2000, Bush in 2004, Gore in 2000 and Kerry in 2004 in all 50 States and D.C..
State-------------Bush 2004---Bush 2000Kerry 2004Gore 2000
Alabama---------1,176,394-----941,173------693,933-------692,611
Alaska-------------190,889------167,398------111,025--------79,004
Arizona----------1,104,294-----781,652------893,524-------685,341
Arkansas----------572,898------472,940------469,953-------422,768
California--------5,509,826---4,567,429----6,745,485-----5,861,203
Colorado---------1,101,255-----883,748-----1,001,732------738,227
Connecticut------693,826------561,094------857,488-------816,015
Delaware---------171,660------137,288------200,152-------180,068
D.C.----------------21,256--------18,073------202,970-------171,923
Florida-----------3,964,522----2,912,790----3,583,544-----2,912,253
Georgia----------1,914,254----1,419,720----1,366,149-----1,116,230
Hawaii------------194,191------137,845------231,708-------205,286
Idaho--------------409,235------336,937------181,098-------138,637
Illinois-----------2,345,946----2,019,421----2,891,550-----2,589,026
Indiana----------1,479,438----1,245,836------969,011-------901,980
Iowa---------------751,957------634,373------741,898-------638,517
Kansas------------736,456------622,332------434,993-------399,276
Kentucky-------1,069,439------872,492------712,733-------638,898
Louisiana-------1,102,169------927,871------820,299-------792,344
Maine-------------330,201------286,616------396,842-------319,951
Maryland-------1,024,703------813,797----1,334,493-----1,140,782
Massachusetts-1,071,109------878,502----1,803,800-----1,616,487
Michigan-------2,313,746----1,953,139----2,479,183-----2,170,418
Minnesota------1,346,695----1,109,659----1,445,014-----1,168,266
Mississippi-------672,660------572,844------457,766-------404,614
Missouri--------1,455,713----1,189,924----1,259,171-----1,111,138
Montana----------266,063------240,178------173,710-------137,126
Nebraska---------512,814------433,862------254,328-------231,780
Nevada-----------418,690------301,575------397,190-------279,978
New Hampshire-331,237------273,559------340,511-------266,348
New Jersey-----1,670,003----1,284,173----1,911,430-----1,788,850
New Mexico-----376,930------286,417------370,942-------286,783
New York------2,962,567----2,403,374----4,314,280----4,107,697
North Carolina-1,961,166----1,631,163----1,525,849----1,257,692
North Dakota----196,651------174,852-------111,052-------95,284
Ohio-------------2,859,764----2,350,363----2,741,165----2,183,628
Oklahoma--------959,792------744,337-------503,966------474,276
Oregon-----------866,831------713,577--------943,163------720,342
Pennsylvania---2,793,847----2,281,127----2,938,095----2,485,967
Rhode Island----169,046------130,155--------259,760------249,508
South Carolina937,974-----785,937--------661,699------565,561
South Dakota----232,584------190,700--------149,244------118,804
Tennessee------1,384,375----1,061,949-----1,036,477------981,720
Texas-----------4,526,917----3,799,639-----2,832,704----2,433,746
Utah---------------663,742------515,096--------241,199------203,053
Vermont----------121,180------119,775--------184,067------149,022
Virginia--------1,716,959----1,437,490-----1,454,742----1,217,290
Washington----1,304,894----1,108,864-----1,510,201----1,108,864
West Virginia----423,778------336,475--------326,541------295,497
Wisconsin------1,478,120----1,237,279-----1,489,504----1,242,987
Wyoming---------167,629------147,947---------70,776-------60,481
Total-----------62,028,285---50,455,156---59,028,109---50,992,335
Source of Election 2000 Data: http://www.gwu.edu/~action/resultsgfin.htm
Source of Election 2004 Data: http://www.gwu.edu/~action/2004/eday/results1104f.html
A paper trail is used to audit the vote. It could either be machine readable, human readable, or some combination of the two.
Is this a little slip of paper that the voter gets to show he voted, kind of like a receipt?
No. It will be deposited at the polling place just like regular paper ballots.
What if it does not reflect the voter's wishes? Does he go to the poll worker and have his vote deleted so he can revote?
If it doesn't reflect the voter's wishes, it would be handled similarly to the way that spoiled ballots are today. I would image in any well-designed electronic voting machine, a bad ballot would be able to be dealt with. The voter would probably have to sign that it was defective for whatever reason or something. In fact, a properly designed electronic system would display all of the voter's choices before printing. Perhaps it would be set up in such a way that after printing, it couldn't be second-guessed. This would be a problem though if you had paper feed problems, though paper fed through rolls jam much less often than sheet-fed paper.
One reason why you wouldn't want the voter to get a reciept for his vote is because it opens the door for verifiable fraud. Let's say Joe Democrat is offering $5 or whatever for votes for a candidate. If the voter got a reciept, Joe could demand the receipt (that he could check) before paying. Currently Joe Democrat can offer to pay for votes, but what the voter does in the booth is really his own choice. Personally, if I was offered something for a vote, I'd take it and then vote for the opponent.
Do we really want poll workers to be able to delete votes?
They can delete votes now with paper ballots. I believe a fair amount of this happened in Florida in the past couple of elections with the 'spoiled' ballots (overvotes mostly).
The same way you verify the authenticity of Lotto tickets. It isn't hard to produce an auditable paper trail. The easiest way is to produce a continuous tape of encrypted votes, using bar code technology, for each machine. The cost of the printer is negligible.
Why now should there be a paper trail for voting machines?
What about the mechanical voting machines we used in the past? No paper trail there.
The new electronic voting machines are more fraud proof than anything we have used in the past, including paper ballots.
You in essence have discovered why democrats want to return to paper balloting. Its much easier to fake a vote by punching a card in the backroom.
An electronic machine does what it's programmed to do. If it's programmed to spit out a billion votes for Hillary, it'll do so.
That's why paper verification is essential.
Nonsense. Producing fake paper votes requires a significant investment of effort, and a chance of getting caught, for each fraudulent vote. Fixing an electronic count requires less effort and risk to generate as many fake votes as desired.
I find it hard to believe that Diebold can't produce a machine capable of securely and accurately recording a vote tally. The Voting machine market is small potatoes compared to their business in the financial world. They have too much at stake to produce corruptible machines. This is all a Dem smokescreen.
That being said here is the Dem's fifth column in regards to voting IMHO:
A. Fight to the death for IDless voting as it allows multiple voting in Dem districts.
B. Paper is Essential!...Necessary votes can be gleefully generated weeks after the fact in the homes of Dem operatives while they enjoy "The Jerry Springer show" and "Oprah".
C. Tighten rules, mail out late, and discard as many military ballots as possible.
D. Push for Felonry Voting rights as they vote 90 percent Demorat.
Did I miss anything?
Try going to the inner city in a heavily democrat area. Many times the GOP can't even find a monitor to keep things on the up and up, but then they do they are subtly threatened. Then when it comes to actually deliver the votes, its packed into a van that is driven around the highway for hours and hours while special "vote technicians" press out fake votes. There was a great article in the WSJ (relating to the vast vote fraud in Philly) not too long ago in which someone admitted to taking part in this.
Same-old, same-old.
bump
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