and remember to be decent to everyone
all of the time.
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Comments
But time and obsolescence eliminated them and vote-by-mail is far better.
EXCEPT: VERIFY YOUR SIGNATURE, KIDS!
Mine changes over time and I re-submit a new one to the County Auditor every couple years just in case. Also check on-line that your vote was properly recorded.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPw-3e_pz…
As someone who is inclined not to vote for a candidate with children who didn't attend public schools, I'd prefer locating all polling places there over instituting vote-by-mail everywhere. I like the idea of giving people who might not otherwise step inside a public school a chance to see what they're possibly voting against.
The maintenance crews for the old machines are largely gone, and the last-minute approval to use the old machines didn't work in favor of them all getting a full cleaning and re-greasing.
Why go back to the old machines, you ask? I'm glad you asked. Apparently, the Board of Elections was freaking out about the short time between today's primary and the October 1 run-off primary. The form-scan machines are apparently a bitch to audit/recount, which involves hand-counting all the paper forms, and could take so long that they wouldn't be able to give proper advance notice of who was going to be in the run-off elections. So, they had to go to court to get permission to use the old machines, and that took a while itself.
Organizing and orchestrating the fucked-up-ed-ness of this mess to your advantage would involve something between criminal genius and science fiction.
More irritating was finding out they moved my polling place from the school around the corner (which is still a polling place for other election districts) to a high school that's 6 blocks further away, and probably outside the district, without any notice printed on the official 48-page Voter Guide that came in the mail from our Campaign Finance Board. No lines in either place, though. Waltz right in and vote. I just love those old machines. Run down the line and click the levers on your choices and then pull the giant handle (which looks like something that might switch a subway train between tracks), and all the levers pop up as the gears turn the little counting wheels behind the locked back cover. The whole deal takes seconds.
If we were going to set a national standard for voting machines, I would have picked something like these. We have much better materials and manufacturing standards these days. Those machines could be awesomely reliable and tamperproof, if someone wanted to invest the money and there was a big enough market.
What better way for the vote buyer to verify that he's getting his money's worth?