contradictions
Posted at 10:44am on Jan. 18, 2008 To the Professionally Offended, there *is* no Right Answer
The ACLU sues to prevent a change from a voting method they sued to force a change from...or something. Who really knows with these characters, anyway?
By Jeff Emanuel
Yesterday, the American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio (yes, the same one that sued the state over its "Choose Life" license plates, citing "viewpoint discrimination" against pro-choicers) filed a lawsuit to prevent Cuyahoga County (the state's largest county, and home to Cleveland and its surrounding communities) from switching its voting apparati from touch-screen machines to what the ACLU believes represents "unequal, inaccurate and inadequate voting technology."
The new method of voting, which the ACLU -- one of the most "professionally offended" organizations in the nation -- finds so, well, offensive?
The Paper Ballot.
Cuyahoga County is switching to paper ballots for the state's primary election on March 4. According to the Cleveland Plain-Dealer:
The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Cleveland, argues the county's new system violates the U.S. Constitution and Voting Rights Act of 1965 because it doesn't give voters a chance to fix mistakes on their ballots.
The ACLU said it will seek an injunction next week to block the voting-system switch.
In the laughable quote of the day, ACLU staff attorney Carrie Davis said "We take no position on what kind of voting technology is used so long as voters have the chance to check their ballots for mistakes before casting their vote."
Read on.
Posted in ACLU | contradictions | Elections | Ohio | paper ballots | voting machines — Comments (21)/ Email this page » / Read More »
Posted at 9:08am on Dec. 17, 2007 The absurdity of Michigan Democrats
By RightMichigan.com
Cross-posted on Right Michigan at www.RightMichigan.com.
Detroit's City Council is a "structural absurdity," according to this morning's Ivory Tower but believe me, that's not the only absurdity in the State of Michigan these days. Track down a local Detroit Democrat, a Democrat State Legislator or a Democrat special interest group and absurdity abounds. But let's start with that Detroit City Council and work our way from the less absurd towards utter insanity.
The Ivory Tower opines this morning about the need to change the make-up of the Detroit City Council. Members are currently elected "at-large," meaning there isn't necessarily any geographic representation for large portions of the city. And it just so happens that one of these portions is an almost exclusively Hispanic part of town.
Read on . . .
