|
Ok, I do software quality assurance for a living, and "preparing the machines" for a recount doesn't make any goddamn sense. Consider:
During initial vote count, machine spits out X votes for Bush, Y votes for Kerry. Total number of votes, X + Y + (nader, etc., negligible) = Z
For the moment, let's not worry about whether the machine was correct or incorrect in its initial count.
The article states that the method for the recount is to select 3% of the votes, and count them by hand and then count the same votes using the machine. If there's any discrepancy between the hand count and the machine count, then you recount everything. The problem is that if the machine has been reconfigured (say, to count votes properly) after the initial count and before the recount, you'd never know that there was a discrepancy, because you don't ever count up all the votes. You never get to look at X, Y, and Z number of votes. You look at some random sample of 3% of Z. In an election that was won by, what... 2% difference, you wouldn't even be able to determine a statistically significant discrepancy based upon this type of recount.
It makes no goddamn sense to "recalibrate" the machine, as the entire point of the fucking recount is to determine whether the machine was properly calibrated at the time of the original count. Whether or not the machine is capable of giving a proper count isn't relevant AT ALL. The only relevant information is whether it was configured properly when the original vote took place.
Anybody who knows me here on DU knows that I don't put a lot of stock in the various stolen Ohio vote theories, but this is just utter fucking nonsense. If the proper operation of the machine is in question, and it requires some sort of routine maintenance "calibration" in order to work proplery, it should be done by an outside party. Regardless of the various fraud theories, etc, the company at the very least has a vested interest in making sure it's machines are known to be accurate. It's an absolutely gross conflict of interest to have company representatives doing this work. Given the number of vote counting machines in Ohio that needed to be recalibrated, I'm guessing that the process isn't fucking rocket science, and any necessary standard maintenance on the device could be done by a third party acceptable to both the government and Triad.
Speaking of that, who the savage sam hill hell names a voting machine company TRIAD for God's sake? That's like calling your aviation safety company The Trilateral Commision.
|