He won the vote, therefore it is corrupt. Got it. After eight years of stopping terrorism, he's horrible for not letting it go on. Got it. John Edwards was a nut.
Here is how Bush won the election.
Quote, "How To Rig An Election In The United States
Inside A U.S. Election Vote Counting Program.
The New Zealand Media blows the lid off of US vote fraud!
Local copy
How the Back-door was discovered in the voting machines.
Local copy
How the system integrity problem was discovered.
Local copy
Bald-Faced Lies About Black Box Voting Machines.
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/rigvote.html
"DELAND, Fla., Nov. 11 - Something very strange happened on election night to Deborah Tannenbaum, a Democratic Party official in Volusia County. At 10 p.m., she called the county elections department and learned that Al Gore was leading George W. Bush 83,000 votes to 62,000. But when she checked the county's Web site for an update half an hour later, she found a startling development: Gore's count had dropped by 16,000 votes, while an obscure Socialist candidate had picked up 10,000--all because of a single precinct with only 600 voters."
- Washington Post Sunday , November 12, 2000 ; Page A22
Yes. Something very strange happened in Volusia County on election night November 2000, the night that first Gore won Florida, then Bush, and then as everybody can so well remember there was a tie.
Something strange indeed. But what exactly? In the above report ( click for full version), written days after the election, hotshot Washington Post reporter Dana Milbank goes on to attribute the strange 16,022 negative vote tally from Volusia's precinct 216 to an apparently innocent cause.
"…. faulty 'memory cards' in the machines caused the 16,000-vote disappearance on election night. The glitch was soon fixed," he wrote.
But thanks to recent investigations into Black Box Voting by Washington State writer Bev Harris we now know this explanation is not correct. In fact it is not even in the ballpark.
Entire article
http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0310/S00211.htm
20. The Greatest Story Never Told
Are American elections fixed? Don't ask the mainstream media.
Imagine the following election procedure:
Paper ballots are marked, in secret and deposited by the voters in sealed ballot boxes. (So far, so good).
The ballot boxes are then delivered to the offices of a private firm, which is publicly known to be a supporter of and contributor to one of the political parties.
Upon receipt of the ballot boxes, the doors are locked and no one other than employees of that firm is allowed to inspect and validate the counting.
The ballots are then destroyed, after which the results are announced.
The firm's favorite candidate is declared the winner. The final results vary radically from pre-election polls.
Sounds like a Soviet "election," doesn't it? Like something that a dictator might dream up to assure himself a lifetime office. But surely, such a "fix" is too transparently and shamelessly obvious for anyone to think he could get away with it.
And yet this scenario is an exact analogy, in all relevant respects, to the "computer screen" voting system that has been rushed into use, following the fiasco of the 2000 presidential election.
http://www.crisispapers.org/Editorials/greatest-story.htm
<http://www.scoop.co.nz/mason/stories/HL0302/S00036.htm>
<http://www.blackboxvoting.com>
<http://www.votescam.com>
02.10/31. Justice cracks down on voter fraud
By Audrey Hudson
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20021031-30356402.htm
... Voter fraud has been reported this year in Arkansas, South Dakota,
California, Louisiana, Nevada, Kentucky, Iowa, Arizona, Rhode Island, New
York and Minnesota in federal and local elections.
One of the most bizarre cases occurred in the Minnesota town of Coates,
population 163, where 94 voter registration forms had false addresses
matching that of Jake's Strip Club. Patrons and dancers registered to vote
to oust City Council members who had shut down the club, authorities said.
In Arkansas, Democrats said a former staffer hired two teenagers to
recruit voters, but then used a phone book to register hundreds of unwary
residents, including dead people and businesses.
.......
The Justice Department has ordered investigations and close monitoring of polls this Election Day because of increased reports of voter fraud throughout the country
Attorney General John Ashcroft has directed U.S. attorneys to appoint election officers to deter discrimination and voter fraud and to prosecute violators vigorously under the Voting Integrity Initiative.
"Our goal here is to work hand in hand with civil rights leaders and state and local election officials to prevent violations and bring offenders to justice," said Jorge Martinez, spokesman for the Justice Department.
Voter fraud has been reported this year in Arkansas, South Dakota, California, Louisiana, Nevada, Kentucky, Iowa, Arizona, Rhode Island, New York and Minnesota in federal and local elections.
One of the most bizarre cases occurred in the Minnesota town of Coates, population 163, where 94 voter registration forms had false addresses matching that of Jake's Strip Club. Patrons and dancers registered to vote to oust City Council members who had shut down the club, authorities said.
In Arkansas, Democrats said a former staffer hired two teenagers to recruit voters, but then used a phone book to register hundreds of unwary residents, including dead people and businesses.
Republicans say election fraud is rampant and county clerks often are not requiring identification.
Democrats say demand for identification amounts to harassment and that Republicans are intimidating voters.
"With Election Day a week away, we have already seen a disturbing number of incidents in which Republican operatives are working to chill voter turnout," said Terry McAuliffe, chairman of the Democratic National Committee.
Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle said Republicans have targeted minority groups for intimidation. "In my state of South Dakota, we are now seeing a concerted Republican effort to make allegations and launch initiatives intended to suppress Native American voting," he said. "These efforts appear to be motivated more by partisan politics than a concern with clean elections."
Marc Racicot, chairman of the Republican National Committee, called the assertions by Mr. Daschle and Mr. McAuliffe "absurd and racially charged."
"They have set about to twist and pervert a normal and traditional effort to assure voter integrity, routinely undertaken by both parties, into something that would be outrageous and illegal if it were true," Mr. Racicot said.
In 25 South Dakota counties, state and federal officials are investigating suspected voter fraud and believe one Democratic operative is linked to 1,750 applications for absentee ballots. Becky Red Earth-Villeda was fired by the Democratic Party after the charges surfaced.
"A dead woman signed up twice to vote in two different counties - very active this woman," said Christine Iverson, spokeswoman for Republican Rep. John Thune, who is challenging Democratic Sen. Tim Johnson.
Justice Department officials Tuesday will monitor polls in Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, West Virginia and Texas.
In other published reports of voter fraud:
•A Louisiana parish (county) councilman is under investigation in a suspected vote-buying scheme and three other elected officials may be linked, Baton Rouge's the Advocate reported.
•FBI agents seized voter records from Nye County, Nev., offices to investigate suspected voter fraud.
•Two Republicans in California have been sentenced to four months in jail after pleading guilty to voter fraud for forging signatures, the Los Angeles Times reported.
•Iowa residents are receiving absentee ballots unsolicited in the mail.
•A Connecticut state representative who lost the Democratic primary last month was placed under investigation for supposedly helping seniors fill out absentee ballots in violation of state law, the Hartford Courant reported.
•The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation is examining suspected voter fraud in a Democratic race for Adair County commissioner.
•Three Arizona county officials have been indicted on charges of election fraud and helping illegal aliens to vote.
•In Rhode Island, Providence police are investigating a complaint by a senior citizen who said she was forced to turn over her ballot at a home for the elderly.
•In Texas, 16,000 dead or ineligible voters remain on the voting rolls, "creating an environment that is ripe for fraud and abuse," said Ted Royer, spokesman for the Texas Republican Party.
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20021031-30356402.htm
http://www.washtimes.com/national/20021031-30356402.htm
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57666-2003May15.html>