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Enough of these "Was it hacked?", "It was hacked!", "If Hackett won, you wouldn't think it was hacked" discussions that go nowhere. It invites the "tinfoil hat" response every time. People (and Congress, damnit) need to focus on the real issue.
Real Issue:
There is NO way to know if it was hacked or not because the Voting Machines are a complete mystery. Are they reliable? Hackable? We don't know because Diebold, ES&S, and Sequoia all keep their source code secret. Any request into inspecting these damn things gets a shocked and hurt expression from Mr. Voting Machine Corporation who says, "Well, golly gee, you can trust me!"
It shouldn't be about trust or suspicion, it should be about accountability to the public. Even if we think that the vote was NOT hacked and was perfectly reliable, we should all still be demanding that these machines are independently tested, with capability for meaningful recounts, with paper trails, and all wrapped up in an open process.
It's the same reason we oppose the Patriot Act - not necessarily because we all think that Alberto Gonzalez is keeping detailed files on our library records, but because we believe that the government should not have these powers IN THE FIRST PLACE, regardless if we think they're going to abuse it. Similarly, voting machine manufacturers should not have the ability to keep their code secret.
Holy Jesus! We force Hostess to print the ingredients of Twinkies Cakes on the package, but we DON'T force Diebold to open up their source code for review? They're counting our goddamn votes!
The issue needs to be accountability. If we make the issue fraud, opponents will simply say, "Prove it!" And we won't be able to, because there's no accountability.
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