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Tag: ACORNBy apackof2, Section News
![]() (4 comments, 1159 words in story) Full Story By The Wizard of Laws, Section Multimedia
You may have heard about ACORN's recent troubles. Well, ACORN is fighting back with its characteristic hypocrisy and stupidity. Read part one of an analysis here and see one of the videos that started it all.
(2 comments) Comments >> By Rougman, Section News
John Conyers was very concerned about allegations made in 1998 in Arkansas against ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, when a contractor for one of its affiliated groups was arrested for falsifying almost 400 voter registration cards. Conyers, like the skilled politician he has proven himself to be during his century or so in office, was able to set aside these concerns after determining that a one-time fraud could not be indicative of the total operation.
I'm certain Conyers was extremely concerned too in 2003 when it was alleged that the registration cards ACORN submitted in St. Louis were only 37% valid. But, since it had been five years since the previous incident, Conyers wisely decided to hold his tongue and keep a closer eye on the organization to assure its motives and means continued to be as clean as the wind driven snow. (2 comments, 601 words in story) Full Story By apackof2, Section News
The government looking at expanding a pioneering scheme in Flint, one of the poorest US cities, which involves razing entire districts and returning the land to nature.
(193 words in story) Full Story By The Wizard of Laws, Section News
Cross-posted in The Wizard of Laws
Voting used to be treasured as a right and a privilege. Whenever I vote, I feel a genuine sense of pride at participating in the democratic process, and I made sure to take my children with me whenever I could in order to instill that same feeling in them. Now, it seems like voting is becoming just another opportunity to scam the public. The dregs of ACORN, considered criminals in days gone by, are now embraced by our federal government and given hundreds of millions of dollars in funding. Remember, this is the same group that, in concert with the Ohio Secretary of State (a Democrat) and a federal judge (appointed by Clinton), effected a settlement by which the homeless were permitted to use park benches(!) as their addresses for voter registration purposes. ACORN is being investigated or has been charged with voter fraud in 14 states. The U.S. Department of Justice has now ordered that states are not permitted to verify voter citizenship. Still, all that is happening outside Michigan, right? Wrong. Not only has our legislature decided to endorse "no reason" absentee voting, but two legislators are trying to further dilute any protections we might have against voter fraud. HB 4993, introduced by Reps. Melton (D-Pontiac) and Johnson (D-Detroit), would permit anyone to register to vote at any city, county, or township office anywhere in Michigan. The office receiving the application is required to process it and give the voter a receipt for it, then send the application to the city, county, or township where the applicant resides. Why even require voter registration anymore? If we are going to allow people to register wherever and whenever they want, and if people can use park benches as addresses, how is it possible to detect voter fraud? What is to stop a person from selecting park benches in a dozen different locations, driving around the state to register, and then voting absentee in each location? Internet voting and same-day registration will only compound the fraud. And is in-district registration really an issue? I called Rep. Melton's office and was told the purpose of the bill was to "make it easier to register" but not to encourage voter fraud. The example used was of college students who may find it difficult to register at home. Oh, please. This is the most mobile society in history (at least it is until our governor and our president succeed in destroying the automobile history). If a person wants to register and vote, he can, and there is no need to degrade the process into a free-for-all. My personal view is that voting should be made more difficult. Requiring photo identification is a terrific first step, and citizenship checks should be next. I worked the polls in a heavily Democratic precinct during the last presidential election. No one complained about the photo i.d. requirement, but there was one glaring example of why voting should be more - not less - difficult. A middle aged man entered, went through the process of checking in, and was handed his ballot. Rather than proceed to the booth, he stopped and asked, "Who's going to help me with this?" When no one responded immediately (probably from the surprise of it), he again demanded, this time more loudly, "Who's going to help me vote?" With voters like this, who's going to help the rest of us? (2 comments) Comments >> By JGillman, Section News
Cross posted at Michigan Taxes Too Much
There are folks who have put the current administration in office. Many are the same folks who put our current governor in office. They are quite responsible for the electoral successes of both executives. They want for the United States, what has happened in Michigan. The bi-polar left elects those who destroy the needed life enhancing product of our great nation by an assumption that Healthcare and manufacturing can be micromanaged and mandated. (501 words in story) Full Story By Nick, Section News
And on the same day I said something nice about the caucus here on RightMichigan.
It was just yesterday that I praised the House GOP for having the stones and the urgency to recognize the severity of a $1.32 BILLION budget crisis and to try (at least) to take some immediate action to right-size the size of our state government. Then twelve of them follow up that great move with this bone-head play? No GOP legislator interview today. I'm frustrated personally but I don't think I'm going to be alone. This is the kind of nonsense that makes it tough for the GOP to build an effective brand. Yesterday in the Michigan House of Representatives, twelve Republican members unnecessarily joined the overwhelming Democratic Majority in approving "No Reason Absentee Voting." Representatives Justin Amash, Darwin Booher, Brian Calley, Bill Caul, Cindy Denby, Kevin Green, Goeff Hansen, Matt Lori, Pete Lund, Paul Opsommer, Tory Rocca and Sharon Tyler chose political expediency over the integrity of the ballot and secure elections. I, for one, couldn't be more disappointed. Please read on... (62 comments, 809 words in story) Full Story By Nick, Section News
Check out these numbers courtesy of this morning's Ivory Tower:
Detroiters 18 and older: 603,000 National voter registration: 67.6% National African American voter registration: 60.7% Projected Detroit voter registration: 375,000 (approx.) Number of bad registrations flagged for removal: 47,000 Total projected voter roll plus acknowledged bad entries: 422,000 (approx.) Detroiters registered to vote: 633,000 Phantom voters: 211,000 Hu-wha?! Yep. You read it here first, boys and girls. According to the best projections, historical records, census and registration figures there are somewhere in the neighborhood of 211,000 voter ID cards floating around the Motor City that have no business even existing. The Tower goes to great lengths to explain away the fact that more registered voters exist than eligible voters, highlighting ad nauseam the problems with federal law that require bad voter registrations to remain on the books for two federal election cycles before being removed (that 47K number above) but never does the rest of the arithmetic. 211,000 phantom voters. Here are a few more numbers to consider, from the top of the ticket...
2008 General Election results-
2006 General Election results-
2004 General Election results- I'll say it again... 211,000 phantom voters. 211,000 phantom voters in a city that has spent the last two election cycles going more than 95/5 for the Left. I'm just glad I'm not the only person who thinks that's a problem. In exclusive interviews with RightMichigan, 2010 Secretary of State candidates Cameron Brown, Michelle McManus and Anne Norlander each expressed concern about the integrity of registration rolls and groups like ACORN who have been caught red handed registering everyone from Mickey Mouse to Daffy Duck in cities across the country. The Democrats argue that very few bad registrations make it all the way to City clerks, but I (don't) know 211,000 non-existant Detroiters who'd take issue with that claim. (6 comments) Comments >>
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