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ketsuko
You can't do anything else in this country without a valid ID, even get arrested, but heaven forbid we ask anyone to bring one when they vote ...
Oh, irony, it burns sometimes.
AboveBoard
ketsuko
You can't do anything else in this country without a valid ID, even get arrested, but heaven forbid we ask anyone to bring one when they vote ...
Oh, irony, it burns sometimes.
Granted, we do need photo IDs for many things. I'm pretty sure you can get arrested in NC without a photo ID, however.
It just makes it easier on you if you have one...
Again. The list did not say someone would not be allowed to protest if they didn't have a photo ID or that you could be challenged and kicked out if you didn't produce it, it merely recommended that they bring one as something wise to have. That is a significant difference.
The point being made here is that it was "ironic" that they were recommending people bring a photo ID to the protest as if that were equivalent to a law proclaiming that they MUST have the ID in order to vote.
Requiring a valid ID is only a small part of a larger picture in NC. There have been several changes people are unhappy about, that seem to them to have no other purpose than to keep certain segments of the population from being able to participate as easily at the polls. One can argue whether or not these new rules will actually have this outcome.
For example: 1) Removal of Sunday voting = this is a common day for the African American community to vote after church when they share rides and make a big deal out of assisting people to get to the polls, 2) extreme limits on early voting = it seems more Democrats vote early than Republicans and the Republican legislature seems to have done this simply in the hope of fewer Democratic votes, 3) the effort to keep college students from voting in NC if they have a "home" (i.e. parental) address listed that is not in NC = again, college students are generally more on the liberal side in NC, so this seems to be on the same level as the other two, 4) Districts have been redrawn to make sure people who now have power, keep power for a long time to come (and yes, both sides do this when they can)...
So, in light of all of the points above, people in NC are protesting the Voter ID law and, well, a whole laundry list of other things they don't like.
BOTH sides have said extreme things about the new voting laws in several states. PolitiFact has a good article on it that shows the spin on both sides.
PolitiFact: Fact-Checking Voter Suppression Year End Report
peace,
AB
ProfessorChaos
One thing I have learned by pointing this article out to people is this:
Liberals are completely and utterly unable to recognize or appreciate irony, especially when it applies to themselves.
muse7
It's actually not a bad idea to bring along some form of photo ID if you're going to be participating in a protest or march.
AboveBoard
For example: 1) Removal of Sunday voting = this is a common day for the African American community to vote after church when they share rides and make a big deal out of assisting people to get to the polls, 2) extreme limits on early voting = it seems more Democrats vote early than Republicans and the Republican legislature seems to have done this simply in the hope of fewer Democratic votes, 3) the effort to keep college students from voting in NC if they have a "home" (i.e. parental) address listed that is not in NC = again, college students are generally more on the liberal side in NC, so this seems to be on the same level as the other two, 4) Districts have been redrawn to make sure people who now have power, keep power for a long time to come (and yes, both sides do this when they can)...
peace,
AB
pavil
AboveBoard
For example: 1) Removal of Sunday voting = this is a common day for the African American community to vote after church when they share rides and make a big deal out of assisting people to get to the polls, 2) extreme limits on early voting = it seems more Democrats vote early than Republicans and the Republican legislature seems to have done this simply in the hope of fewer Democratic votes, 3) the effort to keep college students from voting in NC if they have a "home" (i.e. parental) address listed that is not in NC = again, college students are generally more on the liberal side in NC, so this seems to be on the same level as the other two, 4) Districts have been redrawn to make sure people who now have power, keep power for a long time to come (and yes, both sides do this when they can)...
peace,
AB
Just some comments, Nice post btw,
1. Some places have Sunday voting? I have NEVER seen that up here in Michigan. Seems a strange concept to me, voting on a weekend. If that was a regional voting thing, it CAN be changed via legislation. It would seem that Sunday voting was similar in a way to Gerrymanding, getting a desired base of voter turnout, I guess in this case, the African-American Church vote.
2. Early Voting. My direct second hand experience of this is the following. I had a friend who ran for the local County office. He had an over 11% lead in the actual walk up vote at polling stations. He lost by over 9% because of the absentee vote. I'm not saying he didn't lose fair and square, but he implied that the "machine" behind the other politician (incumbent and backed by power brokers) knew how to make a huge impact with the absentee vote, one that was not really those old people actually voting. Just saying......... what things "seem" might not hold up to the scrutiny of a spotlight on it.
3. I don't think Non-Residents ie; those with permanent residences in other States, should be allowed to vote in their temporary State, that includes Snowbirds as well as Students. I would make an exception for Military. Theoretically they can vote in two States elections at the same time. Doesn't seem very "Democratic" to me to have one person's vote count twice.
4. Gerrymanding happens with both parties, I find it deplorable, but it's a pretty equal opportunity party thing. The party in power does things to make it stay in power. Nothing new there, been happening since almost the founding of this Country.
edit on 9-2-2014 by pavil because: (no reason given)
Last month, North Carolina General Assembly approved a sweeping piece of legislation that requires voters to show a state-issued photo ID or a U.S. passport at the polls. Out-of-state licenses will be accepted only if the voter registered in North Carolina less than 90 days prior to the election....
The legislation doesn’t strictly prevent any students or residents from voting in any given election. Out-of-state students who wish to vote in North Carolina may do so after obtaining a state-issued driver’s license or a voter identification card, which will be issued for free at any N.C. Department of Motor Vehicles after Jan. 1, 2016, when the voter ID law takes effect.
According to Husser, it may be difficult for some college students to prove residency in the state, especially if they live on campus.
“Electric and utility bills with your address on them is one of the easiest ways to prove residency, but a lot of students have theirs handled by their schools,” he said.
- See more at: The Pendulum - Elon College News (in NC)
Three cases are scheduled to be heard by the state Board of Elections on Tuesday afternoon.
The cases on the state board’s agenda include:
• Montravias King, an Elizabeth City State University student disqualified from seeking a city council seat, is fighting a ruling by the Republican-controlled Pasquotank County Board of Elections. In an August decision, the eastern North Carolina county’s board upheld a challenge by Richard “Pete” Gilbert, the county’s Republican Party chairman, claiming King could not use his on-campus dorm address to establish residency in a county where he had been registered to vote for four years.
Clare Barnett, the attorney from the Durham-based Southern Coalition for Social Justice representing King, argues that there is a long-established right of college students to vote in their college communities. Under equal protection principles of the Constitution, Barnett argues, college students cannot be treated differently from other voters.
___ [EDIT] ____
In Winston-Salem, the Republican who heads the Forsyth County elections board had proposed to close an early voting site at Winston-Salem State University. But after much publicity about his proposal, the county elections board chairman decided to delay any decision until next year after more study.
Since 2008 – when young voters were among the Democrats biggest supporters, with the under-30 set endorsing then-candidate Barack Obama 2-1 – student identification cards have become a focus for Republicans pushing for voter ID laws.
Pennsylvania, Kansas, Wisconsin and Texas and other states have tried to limit, or ban, the use of student IDs as voter identification. In Florida, lawmakers tried to limit “third party” organizations, including student groups, from registering new voters.
Under the elections law revisions in North Carolina, student IDs are not among the list of acceptable identification cards.
Read more here: www.newsobserver.com...=cpy" target="_blank" class="postlink" rel="nofollow">News Observer: NC Elections Board to hear cases that touch on student voting rights
muse7
It's actually not a bad idea to bring along some form of photo ID if you're going to be participating in a protest or march.
MrInquisitive
reply to post by beezzer
Why is this so hilarious? Don't most/all states have laws that require you to show the cops ID if they request it? As they are protesting, they are likely to get confronted by police, if not possibly arrested. So it makes perfect sense to tell people to bring ID with them.
Apparently NC is trying to enact some voter ID law, which may require an additional photo ID card of voter registration -- which seems stupid if you have other valid forms of ID, i.e. a driver's license, passport or other such items. I didn't see anywhere in the protest organization notes say that people who don't bring such ID will be refused from marching.
Yet the usual group of suspects is chiming in, along with the OP, on how ironic/hilarious it is that the protest organizers are asking or suggesting people bring ID. What a bunch Dittoheads.
squittles
reply to post by AboveBoard
Just to clarify, they shortened the early voting period by one week, so didn't eliminate Sunday voting, they just reduced the number of Sunday voting days from two to one.
I always find it amusing when they find defendants for these things - they have time to contact lawyers and give depositions, yet don't have time to go to the DMV?
And to give a deposition pretty much requires an ID - so, basically, you must provide ID to give a sworn deposition that you don't have ID - how does *that* work??
Also, the Department of Justice is, of course, filing a lawsuit against the bill. Will there come a day, I wonder, when the Department of Justice files a lawsuit against itself?
African Americans were 22 percent of registered voters in 2012, but they cast 34 percent of the Same-Day Registration ballots for new voters, 33 percent of the ballots cast in the first week of the Early Voting, 30 percent of the out-of-precinct ballots cast on Election Day, and 43% percent of the ballots cast on the now eliminated first Sunday of Early Voting. They are 34 percent of the registered voters who do not appear to have a DMV license or NC photo ID, but only 9 percent of the voters who use mail-in absentee ballots, the one method the new law expands.
Read more here: www.newsobserver.com...=cpy
ABC News on Voter Fraud: It's Real but Rare...
Out of the 197 million votes cast for federal candidates between 2002 and 2005, only 40 voters were indicted for voter fraud, according to a Department of Justice study outlined during a 2006 Congressional hearing. Only 26 of those cases, or about .00000013 percent of the votes cast, resulted in convictions or guilty pleas.