Two precincts had high undercounts, analysis shows
By Ken McCall and Jim Bebbington
Dayton Daily News
DAYTON | Two Montgomery County precincts had extraordinarily high numbers of ballots cast Nov. 2 with no presidential vote counted, and the county’s overall rates of such undercounts were highest where Democratic hopeful John Kerry did best.
Undercounts are ballots that do not register a vote for a particular race, in this case for president. Two precincts - one in Kettering and (…)
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Dayton Daily News: Two precincts had high undercounts, analysis shows
21 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
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Dayton Daily News: Electronic voting proves to be winner in election
21 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
2 commentsElectronic voting proves to be winner in election Fewer missed votes than with other methods
By Ken McCall and Lynn Hulsey
Dayton Daily News
In an election where talk of voting irregularities continues to heat up the Internet, electronic voting machines appeared to score a victory in Ohio.
In the Nov. 2 election, counties that used electronic voting machines had a dramatically lower rate of ballots that did not register a valid presidential vote, according a Dayton Daily News (…) -
Ohio Presidential Results to be Challenged
21 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
1 commenthttp://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2004/899
November 20, 2004
Ohio’s 2004 presidential vote will be challenged as soon as next week in the state Supreme Court, a coalition of public-interest lawyers announced Friday.
The lawyers have taken sworn testimony from hundreds of people in hearings in Columbus and Cincinnati, and will use excerpts as well as documents obtained from county election officials and Election Day exit polls to make a case that thousands of votes were (…) -
The Resounding Silence Continues. How Much is Enough for the Media to Cover Votergate 2004?
21 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
40 commentsThe Resounding Silence Continues. How Much is Enough for the Media to Cover Votergate 2004?
By Anthony Wade
Silence. That is all we continue to hear from our media. There was a time in America when the media would actually practice journalism. They would investigate. They would corroborate. They would scrutinize. In modern day America , this must be proving to be too daunting for our faux media. It seems to be easier to create news, based on what is fed to them. It must be far simpler (…) -
This Election is Not Over — With Exciting New Math Calculations!
20 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
3 commentsSince 11/2, there have been various stages of dealing with what happened. Anger, denial, claims of fraud, etc., etc. Blaming Kerry for "quitting." More recently, talk has shifted to procedural issues like how to fix the voting system (didn’t we DO this four years ago? Apparently not.)
What has become clear to me, reading between the lines and ignoring a lot of shit (sorry) is that THIS ELECTION IS NOT OVER. Floating around in various threads is the notion that several states are still (…) -
Media downplays vote-counting problems
20 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
3 commentsMedia downplays vote-counting problems By Media Matters
Washington Post columnist and editorial board member Anne Applebaum wrote a widely criticized column this week, suggesting that concerns over paperless electronic voting were unfounded because she doesn’t take a receipt when she uses an automated teller machine (ATM).
At least, we think that was her point; it was a little difficult to tell for certain.
In what CJR Daily called a "well-deserved smackdown to Anne Applebaum," the (…) -
Automatically, at every turn of pen or lip:
20 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
3 commentsWe need to use the exact same tactics back on them.
Automatically, at every turn of pen or lip:
"There were thousands upon thousands of instances of election fraud committed by Republican operatives and the electronic vote was manipulated to favor Republicans. There is an ocean of evidence to show it."
Preface everything with those two sentences. End everything with those two sentences. Repeat often. Mantra them right back. Long drawn out arguments do not penetrate into the two (…) -
The Triumph of Liberalism
20 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
1 commentBy Dave Stratman
The electoral campaign has finally crawled to its dreary and foreseeable end: the victory of George W. Bush, anti-"red state" hysteria and despair among Kerry supporters, and the effective end of the antiwar movement.
Those millions of Americans appalled at the continuing carnage in Iraq must step back from the electoral debacle and draw the right lessons from it, beginning by examining the role of the Democratic Party and the liberal agenda in the antiwar movement. (…) -
Forget the Democrats, Build The Mass Movements!
20 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
17 commentsby Roy Rollin
In the aftermath of the elections, much of the mainstream left remains in a state of despair or disbelief over Bush’s victory. Many are hoping against hope that some scandal of epic proportions will emerge out of Ohio. Others contemplate packing their bags and moving to Canada. Not a few of the liberal literati have taken to writing off most of America’s population as a bunch of religious rednecks who got the government they deserved by not heeding their enlightened advice on (…) -
Now or Never
19 November 2004 par (Open-Publishing)
6 commentsby Jolly Roger
The obviously fraudulent election, combined with the democratic party’s refusal to challenge it, and the news industry’s willingness to cover it up, should be awakening millions to the true nature of how this country is being ruled. Instead, I think that many people find it a lot more comfortable to believe that we’ll have an honest election in 2008, although it doesn’t really look as if we’ll ever have an honest election again.
The illusion of democracy will always (…)