Posted 2012-November-03, 05:44
I often yearn for the simpler days of old. When I was in college I took a variety of jobs, some long term, some short term. One very short term job was on an election day. My job was to drive to various polling places, pick up boxes of ballots, and haul them off to where they would be counted. I was 19, I am sure I was not vetted in any way, I don't recall signing anything, they just gave me the boxes, I hauled them somewhere, they paid me some money. In cash. This would be 1958 so it wasn't a presidential election, but still it was an election.
Also, the thought of early voting favoring one candidate or the other drives me a bit up the wall. I have voted in every presidential election, every gubernatorial election, every senate election, etc beginning in 1960. I vote on the first Tuesday in November. Playing f2f bridge on Thursday afternoon a lady at the table remarked she was going to go vote after the game. Ok. I have no idea who she voted for. I have no idea if early voters are Dems or Reps. I know political operatives have to worry about such things. I am very pleased that I do not have to do so.
About fraud. I can see how it might occur in the manner described above. Someone trashes registration forms, depriving someone of the opportunity to vote. It is less easy to see how to commit fraud by having people go to the polls pretending to be someone else. A person could do that I suppose, but why would he? It seems rather dangerous. A person who is not registered because he was too lazy to do so suddenly gets so inspired to vote that he is willing to risk imprisonment to do so? Or an illegal alien, Mexican or Martian or whatever, normally someone keeping a low profile, decides to take the risk? Or someone wanders through the streets soliciting unregistered voters to commit fraud for a price? Wouldn't it be easier, cheaper, and more effective to use the money to get out the vote of the many registered voters who don't bother to come to the polls? And, with modern access to affiliation information, you would have a far better estimate of what the person will actually do inside the booth.
I try hard not to be one of those old farts always grumbling about change, but there are times that I find the modern world very unfriendly. Just too much stuff to get worked up over. Still, I guess I will be making a New Year's resolution to learn how to tweet. Can't just dwell in the past.
Ken