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Identification to vote? |
Discussion:
Identification to vote?
That's not the case everywhere...
In NY, for instance, you have to sign the book and supposedly they check to see if your signature matches. But in VT, all you do is spell your last name for them and you're set. You don't even need to know where you live - they tell you.
There is a copy of your signature in the book in WNY - you sign next to that where they also put which number you are in the voting process of that district.
and supposedly they check to see if your signature matches.
She specifically said "sign it exactly the same way." When my mom went to vote, she said my sister and I still have cards at our old polling place. I haven't voted there in over 5 years.
danced with Lazlo
· 20 years, 4 months ago
Gave my address and name, signed against the sig on file. Done. Very efficient, very courteous. Unlike last time where the woman held out her hand for my voter registration card and then glared at me and heaved a sigh when I told her I didn't have it.
I know my rights, dammit. :)
It disenfranchises many poor people, not just hte homeless.
I don't get it.� How does requiring a photo ID disenfranchise poor people?� And as to the homeless... don't you need an address to register to vote, anyhow?� So that's a problem for them even without the ID.
You can give a street corner as an address.
And poor people don't have the time or the money to go through DMV shit. Plus, poor and homeless people are likely to not have the points of identification required to apply for a DMV ID in the first place.
Fingerprinting? DNA test? Retina scan? ;)
Actually, what we should do is start having birth certificates in ID card form. A lot of the world seems to have that.
Actually, what we should do is start having birth certificates in ID card form. A lot of the world seems to have that.
That's available where I live. Retina scans? Well they can do one eye but not the other. I wonder if that would discriminate me from voting...hmmmm
We obviously need some kind of positive identification.
do we, though? do we even need voter registration? what we need is a system that allows everyone of voting age to vote and can prevent people from voting multiple times, through appropriate, privacy-minded record keeping. I'm not sure how that can be done, though.
I think we're talking about he same thing here.
:D I mean, my point was... I could have just looked down at ANY fucking entry in that book... and said it was my name. And they would have just checked me off. That, in my mind, is absurd. THe only thing stopping anyone from voting as "nate derose" was the fact that I showed up and voted as, well, me. You must first create an account to post.
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