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vote "tabulation" (done with 'TRADE SECRET,' PROPRIETARY programming code, owned and controlled by rightwing Bushite corporations), the huge insecurity and hackability problems with these machines, the unreliable results, and everything else, I want a 100% audit for the next two federal elections. Then we can talk about what to do next.
A 2% audit of the current system is absurdly inadequate. A 2% automatic audit of a system with real paper ballots and in which secret source code has been banned in both the voting machines and the central tabulators might suffice, if certain other conditions were met, including a ban on partisan vendors, an easier, less expensive system for requesting recounts, tougher recounts where recounts are requested, and public access to all ballots. Right now, the voting system is designed like a nuclear weapons facility, with the "enemy" being the voters and citizens of this country.
I realize that HR 550 is a compromise that we may have to stomach, on premise that incremental election transparency is better than no transparency. The bill appears to be designed to pass in a Congress controlled by Bush junta criminals. If passed, it would give us some means of monitoring '06 results--for instance, a real paper ballot, and access to the "trade secret" codes (unless that provision goes soft, as I suspect that it will, and gets knocked out)--as opposed to the current situation, with virtually no audit/recount controls. I would hope that, if, somehow, huge voter turnout manages to overwhelm the machine advantage to Bushites and warmongers this November, that a much better bill would be introduced: one that repeals HAVA altogether, as the piece of shit, corrupting, porkbarrel, fascist, Bushite legislation that it is; or one that cleans house in the elections industry and banishes all corporate privatization of our elections (which will rid us of the more corrupt election officials). Most of the dangers in electronic voting--and all the corruption around it--are created by the PRIVATIZATION of our elections. Get rid of that, and you will have honest government officials and true representatives of the people designing a real voting system with adequate controls--and we can all contribute to that discussion.
The problem--in essence, the loss our sovereignty as a people, which we exercise through voting--is not likely going to be solved by fiat of this Congress. Their predecessor, the Anthrax Congress, took away our right to vote; this Congress is not likely to give it back. And I am immensely distrustful of any federal solutions, even ones that sound good--for fear of last minute amendments that could make things worse, loopholes, and poison pills, such as a nationalized voter database (try to get back onto a voter list that you have been purged from, if you have to deal with Bushite bureaucrats in Washington DC, for instance)--and I especially fear this Congress. IF HR 550 could be passed as is, or if it could be passed with a stronger audit provision, fine. But what are the chances of that? Somewhat better, I'd say, than when Tom Delay was running the House. But not a whole lot better. The Democrats don't have a great record on holding firm, and some of them are themselves corrupt on electronic voting and other gov't electronics issues. (--the ban on secret software will be the first to go, since, if passed, it will likely mean the corporations will pull out of the "market").
Anyway, if Holt is going to try to push this in THIS Congress, I'll be holding my breath the whole time. More likely, it is intended to make the Democrats look good to an aroused grass roots, who are fed up with their past silence on Bushites corporations "counting" all our votes behind a veil of secrecy. What I mean is that the Dems have no intention of banning secret software--and thus corporations--from our election system, and it probably doesn't matter how weak the audit provision is, because it will not be passed this year, and they know it.
I think we're in for a long, difficult slog through every state/local jurisdiction in the country, to try to restore our right to vote. I think we should face that reality, and keep at it. HR 550 is something of a poison pill itself, as to that: it legitimizes HAVA and electronic voting, and strengthens centralization, including the Bushite-controlled Election Assistance Commission. What would we think of this bill if it did NOT have the ban on secret code (which, in any case, may or may not apply to the entire voting system)? What would it look like then? It would give us a paper ballot with very inadequate auditing (ergo, a fairly useless, cosmetic control), and a more entrenched, private electronic voting industry.
Beware!
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