Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]
Welcome to The New Coffee Room. We hope you enjoy your visit.


You're currently viewing our forum as a guest. This means you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use. If you join our community, you'll be able to access member-only sections, and use many member-only features such as customizing your profile, sending personal messages, and voting in polls. Registration is simple, fast, and completely free.


Join our community!


If you're already a member please log in to your account to access all of our features:

Username:   Password:
Add Reply
  • Pages:
  • 1
  • 2
Supremes uphold voter ID law.
Topic Started: Apr 28 2008, 07:12 AM (495 Views)
The 89th Key
Member Avatar

Quirt are you opposed to voted ID?

:sombrero:
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Kincaid
Member Avatar
HOLY CARP!!!
^_^
Kincaid - disgusted Republican Partisan since 2006.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Jolly
Member Avatar
Geaux Tigers!
We've had to have photo I.D. down here for years....no big deal....
The main obstacle to a stable and just world order is the United States.- George Soros
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
George K
Member Avatar
Finally
QuirtEvans
Apr 28 2008, 10:39 AM
Got any links to any evidence of recent voter fraud (in Indiana) ?

Any?

Bueller? Bueller?

Voter cited by opponents of Indiana's ID law registered in two states

WASHINGTON — As a hearing before the U.S. Supreme Court begins today, the Indiana Voter ID law became a story with a twist: One of the individuals used by opponents to the law as an example of how the law hurts older Hoosiers is registered to vote in two states.

Faye Buis-Ewing, 72, who has been telling the media she is a 50-year resident of Indiana, at one point in the past few years also claimed two states as her primary residence and received a homestead exemption on her property taxes in both states.

Monday night from her Florida home, Ewing said she and her husband, Kenneth, “winter in Florida and summer in Indiana.” She admitted to registering to vote in both states, but stressed that she’s never voted in Florida. She also has a Florida driver’s license, but when she tried to use it as her photo ID in the Indiana elections in November 2006, poll workers wouldn’t accept it.
A guide to GKSR: Click

"Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... "
- Mik, 6/14/08


Nothing is as effective as homeopathy.

I'd rather listen to an hour of Abba than an hour of The Beatles.
- Klaus, 4/29/18
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Red Rice
HOLY CARP!!!
George K
Apr 28 2008, 01:04 PM
at one point in the past few years also claimed two states as her primary residence and received a homestead exemption on her property taxes in both states

Boy, she's gonna pay for that.
Civilisation, I vaguely realized then - and subsequent observation has confirmed the view - could not progress that way. It must have a greater guiding principle to survive. To treat it as a carcase off which each man tears as much as he can for himself, is to stand convicted a brute, fit for nothing better than a jungle existence, which is a death-struggle, leading nowhither. I did not believe that was the human destiny, for Man individually was sane and reasonable, only collectively a fool.

I hope the gunner of that Hun two-seater shot him clean, bullet to heart, and that his plane, on fire, fell like a meteor through the sky he loved. Since he had to end, I hope he ended so. But, oh, the waste! The loss!

- Cecil Lewis
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
QuirtEvans
Member Avatar
I Owe It All To John D'Oh
George K
Apr 28 2008, 04:04 PM
QuirtEvans
Apr 28 2008, 10:39 AM
Got any links to any evidence of recent voter fraud (in Indiana) ?

Any?

Bueller?  Bueller?

Voter cited by opponents of Indiana's ID law registered in two states

WASHINGTON — As a hearing before the U.S. Supreme Court begins today, the Indiana Voter ID law became a story with a twist: One of the individuals used by opponents to the law as an example of how the law hurts older Hoosiers is registered to vote in two states.

Faye Buis-Ewing, 72, who has been telling the media she is a 50-year resident of Indiana, at one point in the past few years also claimed two states as her primary residence and received a homestead exemption on her property taxes in both states.

Monday night from her Florida home, Ewing said she and her husband, Kenneth, “winter in Florida and summer in Indiana.” She admitted to registering to vote in both states, but stressed that she’s never voted in Florida. She also has a Florida driver’s license, but when she tried to use it as her photo ID in the Indiana elections in November 2006, poll workers wouldn’t accept it.

Photo ID wouldn't solve that problem. A U.S. passport would enable you to vote in both places.

What's needed is [pause for Mark to go apoplectic] a national ID.
It would be unwise to underestimate what large groups of ill-informed people acting together can achieve. -- John D'Oh, January 14, 2010.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Kincaid
Member Avatar
HOLY CARP!!!
Hear hear!
Kincaid - disgusted Republican Partisan since 2006.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
« Previous Topic · The New Coffee Room · Next Topic »
Add Reply
  • Pages:
  • 1
  • 2