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To what end?Hey, I think they need to be more stringent. I'm still all for having to take a literacy test before you vote.
I stated no opinion in regards to agreeing with it or not.You don't see a problem with that? If you don't have enough of an education to read, then should you really be voting or driving a car?
Voter identification should be payed for by the taxpayers. As someone said earlier in this thread, the poll tax still exists - silently. The poor are least likely to have a driver's license and passport.
We can't expect people to actually show that they are eligible to vote in order to cast their ballot. That's just unamerican! Why, Richard J. Daly the great mayor of Chicago would never stand for such nonsense.
Next thing you know, they will be trying to stop all the part time Florida residents from voting absentee up north and voting in person down here in the same election.
I like Indiana's approach to this:Oh, and of course the homeless have no say whatsoever in our society. If you don't have an address you can't vote.
If you have a non-traditional residence, you still have the right to register and vote. Simply draw a map on the voter registration applicatin indicating where you live (where you usually spend the night) and list a mailing address within your county that can be used to mail your notification that you are registered.
That's just too sensible to ever work!
Sorry about that.OMG you really had me confused, Mestemia.
I live in DeKalb County...except it's in GA.
Got me.Wasn't there just a primary in Indiana with this Voter ID law in place?
Where were the stories of millions of disenfranchised voters in Indiana?
The corporate media rarely talks about the plights of the poor.