(Note that I used a summary of the data analysis of TruthIsAll--thanks!)
Danny Westneat's column appears Wednesday and Friday. Reach him at 206-464-2086 or dwestneat@seattletimes.com.
Well, I don't know. I've defended the system in the past. It's still true that almost all the claims of fraud and stolen votes in recent elections have, to date, turned out to be bogus. When there were vote-counting irregularities, they were almost always due to innocent human error. Sorry, Danny, that is just plain not true. Or, more precisely, it’s flat out impossible to tell one way or another whether it is true or not because fully one third of the votes tabulated in this country cannot be audited in any way. If you think that being bothered by that qualifies one for a tinfoil hat, maybe you should prove that you don’t need a tinfoil hat yourself. Just demand that all the companies you invest in save money by dispensing with having their books independently audited. Obviously, no CEO could possibly have any motivation to mess with any of the numbers, just as manufacturers of voting machines who are also major donors to political candidates couldn’t possibly have any motivation to game the system to work in favor those candidates.
An example of just one type of problem from the data on nearly 40,000 voting problems reported to
https://voteprotect.org/index.php?display=EIRMapNation --if you do a search for ‘machine problems’ + Kerry or Bush, 89 incidents turn up. Of these incidents, 84 Kerry votes came up as Bush on the screen, 2 Bush votes came up as Kerry, and 3 were ambiguous. I’d like to hear your explanation of why the errors were so lopsided in one direction. These errors were not always corrected, and the reported ones almost certainly just the tip of the iceberg.
In addition to such issues relating to unauditable touch screen machines, even systems which do have paper records also have tabulation software which is proprietary. I find that to be an absolute outrage for the highly public act of voting. According to the New York Times, the quarter you put into a slot machine is better protected than your vote. The software on all gambling devices is on file with the state and the machines are constantly spot-checked by state officials. If a company wants to sell slot machines, it must submit to a criminal background check and register its employees with the state. If you think you’ve been cheated, you have the right to an immediate inspection of the machine.
I’d suggest that if you want people to quit spinning fantasies about what is going on when people use secret software to count our votes behind closed doors that you advocate that every single aspect of vote tabulation henceforth be conducted in the bright light of day.