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5 hours ago, SShooterZ said:

I see a desperate party afraid to lose it's state's traditional leaning and thus is trying to "Stop the Steal" when no steal was present.

Literally every one of those things makes it more difficult to vote. Why should we restrict access to voting and not make it more accessible to every US citizen eligible to vote? The only way you can justify more restrictions is if you believe there is widespread voter fraud, which has been proven over and over that there's not, and you're trying to reduce it. What's funny, is that this could completely backfire on the R party. We'll have to see what happens when the Midterms come but considering voting is the very core of our nation and what our nation stands for, no, I don't see it being legitimate, especially when one of the new laws is "A ban on handing out food and water within 150 feet of a polling place, or within 25 feet of any voter." What exactly does that accomplish?

Don't you find it ironic that these laws were put in place in a state that has voted R every 4 years since 1996 and there was no concern, and then boom, they vote D for the first time in 2 decades and it's "We need more voting laws!". 

Literally every bullet point in your speech happened to me for the first time ever in my life, last fall. There was fraud and any fraud should piss any constitutional American off. Seems that’s not the case with you though so the rest of your BS is just hypocritical shit. 

1 hour ago, Mainecat said:

The new voter laws won’t hurt Republicans….lol okaaay

That and refusing vaccines should put the repub party where the wooly mammoths went…..extinct.

Will you go “extinct” if things swing the other way next year? 

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18 minutes ago, SayatodaU.P.eh? said:

Literally every bullet point in your speech happened to me for the first time ever in my life, last fall. There was fraud and any fraud should piss any constitutional American off. Seems that’s not the case with you though so the rest of your BS is just hypocritical shit.

And your proof is?

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10 minutes ago, SShooterZ said:

Simply asking you to support your belief re: the fraud. As suspected, none provided. Carry on...

Unfortunately, this is what we've become as a nation ... we will always question election integrities - or be pissed at the Electoral College vs. popular vote process.  The 2020 election will always be viewed as a huge conspiracy, despite all of the efforts to prove/disprove any wrongdoings.  The way mail in balloting was abused last year was absolutely absurd and had Trump pulled off another upset win people would be losing their shit claiming the Republicans cheated.  That's the way this shit works, plain and simple.  You claim the Georgia changes are so bad (predictable) yet they make sense - people are still able to vote if they really want to.  And that's the way it should be nationwide.  Are you really afraid Republicans are trying to bully their way to a victory, by disenfranchising voters?

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32 minutes ago, Bontz said:

Unfortunately, this is what we've become as a nation ... we will always question election integrities - or be pissed at the Electoral College vs. popular vote process.  The 2020 election will always be viewed as a huge conspiracy, despite all of the efforts to prove/disprove any wrongdoings.  The way mail in balloting was abused last year was absolutely absurd and had Trump pulled off another upset win people would be losing their shit claiming the Republicans cheated.  That's the way this shit works, plain and simple.  You claim the Georgia changes are so bad (predictable) yet they make sense - people are still able to vote if they really want to.  And that's the way it should be nationwide.  Are you really afraid Republicans are trying to bully their way to a victory, by disenfranchising voters?

I don’t disagree with most of what you’ve said. I said the GA laws are more restrictive than pre C19 and it seems obvious it was around Republicans losing the state. They didn’t have these concerns for the last 2 decades. I think they (R) are instilling fear in their voters as a way to motivate them to go out and vote. If you don’t vote R look at all this bad stuff that could happen. Dems do it with guilt. If you don’t vote Democrat you’re supporting racism, blah, blah. To your point though, it’s all become pop culture. We’re left with voting for candidates that we view as the lesser of 2 evils. That sure is a shitty way to elect the POTUS IMO.

 

 

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9 hours ago, SShooterZ said:

I see a desperate party afraid to lose it's state's traditional leaning and thus is trying to "Stop the Steal" when no steal was present.

Literally every one of those things makes it more difficult to vote. Why should we restrict access to voting and not make it more accessible to every US citizen eligible to vote? The only way you can justify more restrictions is if you believe there is widespread voter fraud, which has been proven over and over that there's not, and you're trying to reduce it. What's funny, is that this could completely backfire on the R party. We'll have to see what happens when the Midterms come but considering voting is the very core of our nation and what our nation stands for, no, I don't see it being legitimate, especially when one of the new laws is "A ban on handing out food and water within 150 feet of a polling place, or within 25 feet of any voter." What exactly does that accomplish?

Don't you find it ironic that these laws were put in place in a state that has voted R every 4 years since 1996 and there was no concern, and then boom, they vote D for the first time in 2 decades and it's "We need more voting laws!". 

Leftists love vote fraud 

 

After he has made such a spectacle of himself in professing that voter protection laws are unnecessary, it was unsettling for Al Sharpton to publicly hug a convicted perpetrator of vote fraud at a public event.

Yet, there was Sharpton — hugging Melowese Richardson on March 20.

At a rally promoting a referendum to amend the Ohio state constitution to make it easier to register to vote, expand valid identification and guaranteed early voting, he didn’t run away from Richardson, who recently served eight months behind bars for voting multiple times. She effectively stole the votes of innocent, law-abiding Americans.

Have you no shame, Reverend Al?!

The case against Melowese Richardson couldn’t be more open and shut. She admitted to vote fraud on a local Cincinnati television broadcast. “Yes, I voted twice,” she declared on WCPO-TV in February of 2013. The longtime poll worker, who originally voted by absentee ballot, was afraid it might have been mailed too late. So she voted again on Election Day.

Richardson also “absolutely voted an absentee ballot” for her granddaughter. When the granddaughter was found to have voted twice, Richardson speculated that the granddaughter forgot grandma already voted for her. Then there was Montez Richardson, her sister. Richardson voted for her sister, although her sister has been in a coma since 2003.

Richardson claimed what she did resulted in “absolutely legal votes” and said at the time she would fight the allegations against her as part of an apparently larger struggle “for Mr. Obama’s right to sit as President of the United States.”

Richardson ended up pleading no contest to vote fraud and was sentenced to five years in prison. The plea deal contained her admission that she voted on behalf of her comatose sister in 2008, 2011 and 2012.

When Richardson went to prison, Sharpton’s National Action Network knew her case. They didn’t condemn her actions, but protested her punishment. NAN’s Greater Cincinnati Chapter issued a statement saying it was “deeply concerned and frankly appalled” by the judge’s sentence.

NAN claimed Richardson was “being used as a pawn in a political game to attempt to further the agenda of those who are trying to enact voter suppression legislation through the use of false hysteria around unproven and non-existent mass voter fraud.”

But the NAN statement also notes there were three cases of known voter fraud in Hamilton County, Ohio during the 2012 election. The problem, as NAN saw it, was that only Richardson was sentenced to prison (for four counts of fraud) while the other two cases (one count each) resulted in lesser punishment. And the other two offenders are white while Richardson is black.

The Ohio Justice and Policy Center successfully appealed the sentence, claiming Richardson suffers from bipolar disorder — a never-before-mentioned complication. Her sentence was subsequently reduced to five years probation.

About a week after her release, Richardson was on the stage at the voting rights rally and getting a hug from Al Sharpton.

Naturally, county Republicans criticized the Richardson’s inclusion at the event. But Hamilton County Democratic Party Chairman Tim Burke also called it “particularly problematic.” Bobby Hilton, the president of NAN’s Greater Cincinnati Chapter, in desperate spin mode, tried to deflect the bipartisan outrage by telling the Cincinnati Enquirer: “We did not celebrate or applaud a convicted felon. We congratulated a lady with health issues coming home to take care of her sick sister.”

If that’s true, isn’t there a health care event at which Richardson could be celebrated?

To even acknowledge someone convicted of vote fraud among the crowd at such an event is unseemly. Bringing that person up to share the stage with distinguished guests — and for one of the leading critics of polling place protections to hug them — is just plain wrong.

In January, on his “PoliticsNation” program on MSNBC, Sharpton likened voter ID to a poll tax and claimed its supporters “have not been able to come up with any widespread fraud in any of the states that are passing these laws.”

To the contrary, Al, you’ve embraced the problem.

Cherylyn Harley LeBon is co-chairman of the Project 21 black leadership network

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