Daily Archives: September 6, 2012

Greg Palast on Stealing the Election

Colonels in Mirrored Sunglasses

An Excerpt from Greg Palast’s brand new book Billionaires & Ballot BanditsHow to Steal an Elections in 9 Easy Steps Greg Palast with comics by Ted Rall, introduction by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Chapter One: Colonels in Mirrored Sunglasses

Here are the facts, ma’am: In the 2008 election, no less than:

  • 767,023 provisional ballots were cast and not counted;
  • 1,451,116 ballots were “spoiled,” not counted;
  • 488,136 absentee ballots were mailed in, but not counted.

Add it up: in the last presidential election, no less than 2,706,275 ballots were cast—and never counted. I have not included a quarter million (251,936) provisional ballots counted only in part (that is, for some offices). That’s the official number I’ve calculated from the records of the US Election Assistance Commission. Approximately three million votes flushed away are ugly enough. But it gets worse. In addition to the roughly three million ballots cast and not counted, no less than:

  • 2,383,587 would-be voters had their registrations rejected;
  • 491,952 voters already registered were wrongly purged from the rolls; and
  • 320,000 properly registered voters were simply turned away from the polls when they tried to vote, mostly for not having IDs acceptable to a poll worker.

Add it up again and total grows to no less than 5,901,814 legitimate votes and voters tossed out of the count. Let’s call it the Missing Six Million. Karl Rove, when he was senior advisor to President George W. Bush, summed it up perfectly:

“We are beginning to look like we have elections like those run in countries where the guys in charge are, you know, colonels in mirrored sunglasses.”

Rove is not complaining, he’s boasting about his own accomplishments. But for strategist Rove, six million isn’t enough. Through several front organizations and affiliates, Rove and his comrades have launched a campaign making brilliant use of the tactics originating from the Red Scare and the War on Terror.

Now, instead of the communist lurking under your bed or the al-Qaeda sleeper cell next door, they’ve created a new monster to fear, to hunt, and to destroy: the Fraudulent Voter.

There aren’t any, of course. Or, to be accurate, so few you can literally count them on your fingers—about six in any year—not six million, half a dozen jerks convicted of voting illegally. In the whole country.

But in Rove’s echo chamber of fear, in the Voter-Fraud Hysteria Factory, these six become so threatening and dangerous that they will be used to take away the vote from six million. Tracking ballot-bending tricksters, figuring out how they game US elections and snatch the choice away from the electorate, that’s my job, my beat for more than a decade, for the Guardian newspaper and BBC television, and in 2008, for Rolling Stone.

I started covering the election games in November 2000 when I got my hands on two computer disks from the office of Secretary of State Katherine Harris of Florida. My team cracked the computer codes and found the names of ninety-one thousand criminals—felons—Harris listed to purge from voter rolls. We went through Harris’s list name by name. We didn’t find felons. But most were guilty of VWB: Voting While Black. “Purging” is one way to get rid of legal voters. There are eight more tricks, and I’ll take you through each in turn. It was bad in 2000. It was worse in 2004 and 2008. But in 2012, it will be much worse. And in 2016, worse than in 2012.

Mario Piperni on Clinton’s Speech

Clinton Mops Floor With Republicans

September 6, 2012 By

Tomasky beat me to it.

Holy smokes. That was the best political speech more or less ever. There wasn’t a thing he didn’t touch on, and there wasn’t a thing he didn’t just blast out of the park. His carriage and delivery nailed it for partisans and for persuadables. He hit Republican obstructionism. He slammed the Romney and Ryan plans on virtually every point they’ve raised in the last six months, from the welfare ads to the tax cuts to the Medicare “cuts” to so much more, and he did it in detail.

Amazing detail! Who else could burrow into those details, give a wonky speech—which this was, in a huge way—but a wonky speech that brought people to their feet two dozen times?

The Democrats are just wiping the floor with the Republicans so far. I’m not saying it will decide things, but the disparity in sheer talent is enough to make people look at Republicans as swimming in the kiddie pool.

Sitting there and watching a Democrat clearly articulate and shred to pieces every major talking point and lie Republicans have uttered in the last six months was a joy. It says much about the Democratic Party that they are able to showcase their last president proudly. Compare that with Republicans who just held a convention where they did their best to create the impression that the years 2000-2008 never happened.

Bush who?

Furthermore, and with few exceptions, Republicans who took the stage in Tampa spent more time talking about their own accomplishments than those of their presidential nominee. Bain Capital and Romney’s time as governor were hardly mentioned.

Republicans have nothing. Absolutely nothing…except for the fictional Obama they’ve created to feed to the Fox News minions they keep protected in a hermetically sealed bubble safe from the harming effects we call truth and facts.

BTW, the trailer for the above image can be viewed here.

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(The Mitt Romney source photograph is a Creative Commons licensed image from photographer Gage Skidmore. )

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Andrew Sullivan on Sane Policy

Obamacons in the Fight

via The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan by Andrew Sullivan on 9/4/12

 

A quote that gladdens the heart:

Romney is the opposite of conservative, with a plan that is fiscally reckless and a foreign policy that is unnecessarily militant. Obama has done about the best that could have been done, considering the united GOP opposition in Congress. My questions about Obamacare and my disappointment that we are not already out of Afghanistan are not enough to make me embrace a candidacy that even George W. Bush would have been repelled by—and, having had time to reflect on his own record, perhaps is.

That’s Wick Allison, former publisher of National Review under William F. Buckley, current publisher of The American Conservative, and (full disclosure) father of Maisie, one of our most recent Dishterns.

I’m struck by how many Obamacons have stuck by him. I feel more passionately about his re-election this year than his election back in 2008. Part of it is that I have long believed his long game can only truly bear fruit over eight years, and this was obvious from the get-go. The other part is that, as I predicted, the GOP has gotten much worse rather than better in reaction to its defeat in 2008 and in misreading the mid-terms of 2010.

The main obstacle to progress in this country, in my view, is the most radical right mainstream party in the West, when the times demand more rather than less government action. In order to restore some kind of actual conservatism to current Republican fanaticism, they need to be defeated handily. Even then, it may take longer for them to climb down from their crazy tree – remember it took the British Tories three lost elections before they came to their senses. But by adding Ryan to the ticket, Romney has ensured that the far right will not be able to blame defeat on a RINO candidate. They will have to accept that a teenage Randian vision of domestic society and a revolutionary militarist foreign policy are not acceptable options in a free and sane polity.

Humor: The Borowitz Report

Clinton Regrets Reading Short Version of Speech

Posted by
 

CHARLOTTE (The Borowitz Report)—Former President Bill Clinton apologized last night for reading what he called “a severely abbreviated” version of his Convention speech, saying that he had planned to read a “very educational and interesting” nine-hour version but lost his nerve.

“I don’t know what happens to me when I get up in front of a crowd like that,” he said. “I kind of tighten up and feel the need to rush through things.”

Mr. Clinton said that the longer version of his speech “was packed with good stuff,” including a detailed proposal to fix the United States Postal Service, an elaborate discussion of America’s fisheries and waterways, and a complete recitation of the Fleetwood Mac back catalogue.

As it was, the shortened version of his speech was interrupted by standing ovations many times, including for his reading of a section of the Manhattan phone book.

Mr. Clinton acknowledged that his speech went over well with its intended audience of diehard Democrats, who responded with many congratulatory e-mails and over twenty thousand proposals of marriage.

Photograph by J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo.

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