Quote:
Originally Posted by Ksyrup
I'm assuming they will be filing lawsuits and/or complaints with state election boards today. Let's see what they file. I've seen a lot of allegations, and I've seen explanations for most of it.
I don't expect any of it to stick, but I'll admit I'm still curious about the dead people voting thing. The registered dead people thing isn't a concern because that's explained away and there's no evidence those people voted. I've seen snippets of evidence of dead people whose votes allegedly are verified as having been cast. I'll believe it when I see a lawyer stand behind it in court, and I don't believe there will be anywhere near enough to affect the election if there's some proof, but even if they find just a half-dozen verified votes, that's just going to fuel the fire for the cult. That's the bigger picture I'm more concerned about.
|
I'm sort of curious about the dead-voter thing, too. Indiana has a long and storied history of sucking at purging our voter lists. I get that it's one of those things that's hard to do because you don't want to disenfranchise anybody accidentally by being too vigorous with your cuts, and it's the sort of thing that makes for headlines with bad optics.
It's not really an issue here because up until 2020, we've never had a particularly robust mail-in voting system, so I'd sort of assumed that states like Washington(?) who have done it for a decade just built a bunch of best-practices into their design to handle keeping the voter registration system updated with the most current data to ease the vote counting process.
So most of my curiosity revolves around how other states made it work and where this election might expose gaps in that system.