Sundance can be so depressing. A few days after the election, Cochise County wanted to hand count their ballots. Hobbs sued to make them stop, because the law is that if ballots are recounted, it has to be by the same method used to count them the first time, and that was by machine. This all relates to the case now before the SC about elections being managed by state legislatures, or anyone else. I sure feel like my civil liberties have been infringed, which ought to be a federal issue.
That's what depressed me about Sundance's article, knowing that this is exactly how Hobbs et al screwed us there legally, and that the Legislature had set it up. Which leads to the SC case: normally I would be in favor of letting the Legislatures make the rules, but some are going to make rules that benefit their party, and set up the parties so they can't be directed by the constituents.
He is a bit of a downer at times, but in contrast to doomers, sometimes the truth hurts. In this article, I think he is pointing out how our constitution is broken as it relates to elections.
The real problem, in my opinion, is that republican state legislators are just as corrupt as those in DC. The state legislatures could have fixed 2020 before they sent electors to DC. But they all caved.
Sundance can be so depressing. A few days after the election, Cochise County wanted to hand count their ballots. Hobbs sued to make them stop, because the law is that if ballots are recounted, it has to be by the same method used to count them the first time, and that was by machine. This all relates to the case now before the SC about elections being managed by state legislatures, or anyone else. I sure feel like my civil liberties have been infringed, which ought to be a federal issue.
They wrote a law mandating that machine counts have to be verified by⦠another machine count? WTF?
I thought machine counts were for convenience and hand counts were for verification. AZ really needs to revert those laws.
That's what depressed me about Sundance's article, knowing that this is exactly how Hobbs et al screwed us there legally, and that the Legislature had set it up. Which leads to the SC case: normally I would be in favor of letting the Legislatures make the rules, but some are going to make rules that benefit their party, and set up the parties so they can't be directed by the constituents.
He is a bit of a downer at times, but in contrast to doomers, sometimes the truth hurts. In this article, I think he is pointing out how our constitution is broken as it relates to elections.
The real problem, in my opinion, is that republican state legislators are just as corrupt as those in DC. The state legislatures could have fixed 2020 before they sent electors to DC. But they all caved.