I fully endorse what Lynn Landes is saying - we must insist on paper-only voting.
I am writing to her to tell her that she needs to add some additional points to her argument:
The Republicans have shown every time that they will take any action to block a recount, including getting a "stay" from the US Supreme Court, running out the clock so that recounts are ineffective, rigging the recount evidence, etc. ad infinitum. So having paper trails "for a recount" just sets us up for another land mine.
In addition, it is ONLY in paper-only elections that exit polls match the tallies. Machine tallies have NEVER been proved accurate.
- Nina
http://onlinejournal.com/evoting/121704Landes/121704landes.htmlElectronic Voting
Voting rights groups 'block' talk of machine-free elections
By Lynn Landes
Online Journal Contributing Writer
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Discussion about the accuracy of voting machines is also fodder for disinformation. Take Dr. Ted Selker of MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), please. At the conference, he once again blathered about "residual votes" (i.e., overvotes and undervotes), claiming that "new" machines are better than old machines. How wonderful for the industry. Selker avoids the real elephant in the closetâthat
voting machines can be easily rigged and impossible to safeguard. Selker claims that voting machines reduce undervotes and overvotes, when in fact, he can provide no evidence that the voting machines don't add and subtract votes on command or willy-nilly.
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It's time for a good hard look in the mirror. Voting machines have been around since 1892. Why have the voting rights groups failed for so long to recognized the tremendous threat to basic civil rights these machines pose? When the Voting Rights Act of 1965 was passed why didn't these groups question the use of voting machines? Why
didn't they stop and consider that all the good the act would do, would be rendered moot by these technological Trojan Horses? Sure, a few minority congressmen have made it to Congress, but that doesn't mean that elections haven't been routinely rigged. The U.S. Congress does not remotely represent the diversity of people or opinions in the general population.
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Four years after the 2000 election, voting machines are causing more problems than ever. Someone needs to get a clue. At least let's have a real debate, Wade.
Lynn Landes is one of the nation's leading journalists on voting technology and democracy issues. Readers can find her articles at EcoTalk.org. Lynn is a former news reporter for DUTV and commentator for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Contact info: lynnlandes@earthlink.net / (215) 629-3553