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I'm having the following conversation with my county clerk (sans names - read from bottom up):
Hi helderheid, I hadn't heard the number that actually implemented Touch Screens in 2004. I know California and New York didn't use them. I don't think Ohio did either because they were still considering RFPs. As I read about all the varous counties purchasing equipment during the oast year, I would be surprised if 1/3 of the nation actually used touchscreens in 2004. Do you know how we can find out? Thanks,
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: helderheid Sent: Thursday, March 16, 2006 6:34 PM To: Subject: RE: Bet on a Bet but Not on a Ballot - Washington Post
Yes, it was 1/3 that did, right? Thanks!
-------Original Message------- From: Date: 03/16/06 14:51:18 To: helderheid Subject: RE: Bet on a Bet but Not on a Ballot - Washington Post Hi, I will be interested to see what his report says. However, please keep in mind that most jurisdictions didn't have electronic voting machines in 2004. Thanks,
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: helderheid Sent: Thursday, March 16, 2006 9:58 AM To: undisclosed-recipients Subject: Bet on a Bet but Not on a Ballot - Washington Post
Thu Mar 16th 2006 It's easier to rig an electronic voting machine than a Las Vegas slot machine, says University of Pennsylvania visiting professor Steve Freeman.
That's because Vegas slots are better monitored and regulated than America's voting machines, Freeman writes in a book out in July that argues, among other things, that President Bush may owe his last win to an unfair vote count.
The Stanford Political Communication Lab experiments are serious research studies, designed to test real hypotheses on important issues in political science, sociology and psychology. The link below will take you to the lab's Web site where you can take part in the experiments.
We'll wait to read "Was the 2004 Presidential Election Stolen? Exit Polls, Election Fraud, and the Official Count" before making a judgment about that. But Freeman has assembled comparisons that suggest Americans protect their vices more than they guard their voting rights, according to data he presented at an October meeting of the American Statistical Association chapter in Philadelphia.
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