This is much ado about nothing.
So you don't think AL republicans would try to disenfranchise minority voters?
Somehow I'm not convinced.
Moderators: nate33, montestewart, LyricalRico
This is much ado about nothing.

dobrojim wrote:This is much ado about nothing.
So you don't think AL republicans would try to disenfranchise minority voters?
Somehow I'm not convinced.
dobrojim wrote:world poverty rates have been plummeting - in no small part due to the US as the world's cop.
I suggest that is wishful thinking. Iraq's economy, nor ours for that matter (except for Halliburton etal),
hasn't been helped.
Wars and/or armed conflict is only good for the economy of arms merchants and other lowlifes.
Winning 'wars' against non-1st world countries is relatively easy. Exit strategies that preserve
our goals have proven over and over again to be difficult at best. And all the harder given the animus
that remains in place as we try to exit. But it does appeal to the rednecks all over amurica
who see US military intervention as the solution to every foreign problem around the globe.
Between 2000 and 2010, there were:
649 million votes cast in general elections
47,000 UFO sightings
441 Americans killed by lightning
13 credible cases of in-person voter impersonation

dobrojim wrote:I glanced over it. Sorry I didn't take the time to look in full detail.
I'm unconvinced that there is no racial bias in how AL governs itself given it's long history of
exactly that. I'm unconvinced that this mobile registration you mention is more than a sham.
I'd read recently that AL was limiting the types of IDs that would be acceptable.
I am convinced that this is yet another example of Republicans attempting to disenfranchise
minority voters who are unlikely to vote Republican under the guise of preventing voter fraud.
Voter fraud has been exceedingly difficult to demonstrate on a scale that would come close
to justifying the means by which incumbent representatives all over the country are going to try
to prevent it. In a number of cases, Republicans have been quite clear about their motives in
enacting these laws, usually in cases where they feel they can speak openly or want to brag
to the base about what a great job they're doing in combating a non-existent problem.
dobrojim wrote:I think I see the source of our disagreement. You feel our acting as the worlds policeman has prevented
war(s) in places like Germany and Japan. I'm unconvinced that the effect is as clear as you appear to believe,
particularly in Japan. I'm also looking at all the conflicts we actually have engaged in post WWII. It's a surprisingly
lengthy list.

dobrojim wrote:I could just as well say I'm equally unimpressed with your knowledge of history.
Tell me again you don't think AL has any partisan or racial motive, conscious or unconscious, in the combination of
their enacting voter ID laws and the choices they made as to where to close DMV offices.
Tell us about George Zimmerman again...
I can't recall any case where nate has seen even a possibility of discrimination or racism,

TheSecretWeapon wrote:I can't recall any case where nate has seen even a possibility of discrimination or racism

TheSecretWeapon wrote:I can't recall any case where nate has seen even a possibility of discrimination or racism, but the Official explanation of what's going on in Alabama is at least plausible. Alabama is a poor state, and it doesn't seem egregious to close DMV offices in less populated areas to reduce spending.
That said, the voter ID laws are much more of a pain in the ass for poor people than they are for those even a little more affluent. According to an NYU study, about 25% of blacks and 16% of Hispanics don't have photo ID, compared to 9% of whites. Wild guess, but this probably tracks pretty well with income differential. Why don't blacks and Hispanics and poor whites have photo ID? Well, if you can't afford a car, maybe you don't get a license. If you're going to travel abroad, odds are you're not going to the trouble of getting a passport.
Sure, these folks without photo ID could gather up the necessary documentation and trek down to the DMV (or wherever) and get an ID. It's difficult to imagine folks going to all that effort strictly for the sake of voting, however.
It's interesting that the laws are being implemented where Republicans control state legislatures. It's interesting that the Pennsylvania majority leader said that the state's new voting laws would have allowed Romney to win the state, and that Phyllis Schlafly wrote that new voting laws are intended to reduce the Democrat vote. It's interesting that these laws are being passed to fix a problem which hasn't been proven to even exist. It's interesting that few of the states with ID requirements at the polls have a similar requirement for absentee voters, who are usually older and white.
While the decision to close specific DMV locations in Alabama may not have been primarily racial in intent, it's pretty clear to me that the Republican-backed voter laws are designed to make it more difficult for students, blacks, Hispanics and poor people to vote. Maybe that could be the GOP's new slogan: If you can't persuade 'em, exclude 'em.

TheSecretWeapon wrote:That said, the voter ID laws are much more of a pain in the ass for poor people than they are for those even a little more affluent. According to an NYU study, about 25% of blacks and 16% of Hispanics don't have photo ID, compared to 9% of whites. Wild guess, but this probably tracks pretty well with income differential. Why don't blacks and Hispanics and poor whites have photo ID? Well, if you can't afford a car, maybe you don't get a license. If you're going to travel abroad, odds are you're not going to the trouble of getting a passport.



nate33 wrote:TheSecretWeapon wrote:That said, the voter ID laws are much more of a pain in the ass for poor people than they are for those even a little more affluent. According to an NYU study, about 25% of blacks and 16% of Hispanics don't have photo ID, compared to 9% of whites. Wild guess, but this probably tracks pretty well with income differential. Why don't blacks and Hispanics and poor whites have photo ID? Well, if you can't afford a car, maybe you don't get a license. If you're going to travel abroad, odds are you're not going to the trouble of getting a passport.
Of course, blacks actually voted in a higher percentage than whites in the last presidential election. It would appear that, despite the protests to the contrary, the black vote has not been suppressed.![]()
What's interesting is that blacks are more likely to vote than whites despite the fact that whites have a higher income, higher age, and a higher education level (all of which correlate strongly with voting likelihood).
The only conclusion is that blacks are WAY more likely to vote than whites in the same income class, age cohort, and educational cohort. Clearly, there is no serious effort to suppress the black vote, or if there is, it is woefully inadequate.
Another oft-repeated racism accusation is proven to be a myth…

gesa2 wrote:And maybe the historic election and re-election of a country's first black president had an effect. Black turnout has been way lower than white in every election until the last two.
