Electronic Voting in the News 320
heymarcel writes "After a negative review of the Diebold voting machines by the State Gaming Control Board, it looks like Nevada has gone with a competitor for the upcoming election. And Secretary of State Dean Heller is requiring paper receipts. According to the Associated Press story, Nevada is the first state to do so." There's another story about Nevada voting machines as well. zapf writes "It appears that the major e-Voting machine vendors have banded together to form the 'Election Technology Council.'" Reader SemperUbi writes: "Demand for a voter-verified audit trail is really gaining momentum these days. The Voter Verification Act, introduced yesterday by Senator Bob Graham (D-Florida), would require a voter-verified paper audit trail, ban the use of 'undisclosed' software and wireless communications for voting machines, and require mandatory surprise recounts -- all in time for the November 2004 election. Rep. Holt's HR2239 in the House requires much the same thing. Resistance to both bills may focus on the aggressive timetable, but the effort is worth it -- as Warren Slocum once said, democracy ain't cheap. Take that, Diebold!" And finally, a Maryland newspaper dredges up an internal Diebold email that recommends gouging Maryland if the state wants paper printouts for its Diebold voting system.
Who says geeks can't make a difference? (Score:2, Funny)
Diebold 0.
We did it.
Re:Who says geeks can't make a difference? (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately they used Diebold machines for the scoring system, so this came out as
Geeks: -16305
Diebold: 463563541
Re:Who says geeks can't make a difference? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm surprised that the response has been so tame, actually. Given what is in the leaked email, I would think that the jurisdictions that had dealt with Diebold would be suing for breach of contract, demanding their money back and terminating existing contracts. And I wonder if some of the activity disclosed doesn't warrant criminal charges. Isn't screwing around with what is supposed to be a frozen, certified system election fraud?
In a similar vein, is Maryland really locked in to its deal with Diebold the way the Diebold people seem to think it is? If the system was secured as advertised and if Diebold screwed around with it in Maryland as they apparently did in some places, I would think that Maryland could easily void the contract.
What is it with America's love of voting machines? (Score:3, Insightful)
Haven't you bloody Americans learnt the KISS system - Keep It Simple Stupid.
This means no bloody machines, period !!! If Australia (& also virtually the rest of the democratic world) can do hand counted paper ballots, then so can the US.
The only reason they use machine systems in the US is to cut costs, but the simple fact is they arn't as good (they invalidate more votes then hand counts do, they intimidat
Re:Who says geeks can't make a difference? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm sure the mafia types running Nevada State Gaming Control Board had their opinions swayed by reading slashdot.
Mafioso Boss: Ok den, we's gona use dis Diebold system for all future voting right?
Mafioso Thug: But Gino, it says here on Slashdot that Diebold is BAD!
Mafioso Boss: WHAT? Dem guys at Diebold where trying to make a fool outa me? Get some cement galoshes.
Re:Who says geeks can't make a difference? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why did this happen? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Why did this happen? (Score:2, Funny)
Well, actually they got the memo, along with anybody else who was curious enough to read those misplaced emails.
Re:Why did this happen? (Score:2, Insightful)
Nah, better to deny that, wouldn't want your safe cozy little paranoid worldview to be shattered.
Until it is actually fixed, ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Especially since I haven't heard one remotely reasonable explanation why companies (like Diebold) that make a large number of electronic transaction devices (ATMs, food/entry access, etc.) all of which have/require paper trails and full auditability suddenly found themselves incapable of providing paper trails and auditability to something as important and potentially controversial as elections.
When this is actually fixed, maybe I'll be less cynical. Maybe.
Re:Until it is actually fixed, ... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, it's fixed alright. It's been fixed from the start.
Re:Until it is actually fixed, ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why did this happen? (Score:2, Flamebait)
I seriously doubt that there was a grand conspiracy. The problem with the Diebold scandal was that the company simply did not understand the standard they would be held to or why they would be held to it.
If Diebold was really up to no good their CEO would not have been blabbing about it in GOP fundraising letters. The GOP is arrogant but they are not that stupid. Of course one does wonder about the sense of a CEO who makes that type of sta
Re:Whoa whoa whoa... (Score:4, Informative)
This firm was hired in 1997 as a result of Florida Statute Section 98.0975, which mandated the use of a private firm to provide the names of potentially ineligible voters who remained on the voter-registration rolls. They were hired by the Florida Director of Elections, Ethel Baxtor (a Democrate), before Harris was even in office.
This firm produced a list and gave it to Harris saying 'hey, this list is over populated and needs to be rechecked by your officials - who should know who really IS an ex-felon in your state.' KH said 'No problem, just make it as "comprehensive" as you can, we'll sort it out!' So, the overloaded list was handed to KH... what did she do? She turned around and distributed it to the counties and their polling places, as is, and claimed that it was carefully reviewed before being put in to use.
That's what she was required to do by Florida State Law. The legislature, not the Department of State, required county supervisors to remove the names of these persons from the voting rolls if they were unable to determine that this information was incorrect.
End result? Hundreds, if not thousands, of eligible voters were turned away at the polls.
The US Civil Rights Comission [usccr.gov] struggled to find 5 such people (and 4 of the people they did find were eventually allowed to vote).
By the way, most modern industrialized (and even some not so industrialized) nations have realized that blocking ex-felons from voting is just another way of disenfranchising a class of voter - akin to poll taxes and the like. Reconstructionist bullshit, to put it nicely.
This isn't isolated to just Florida. 9 states have a lifetime voting ban on convicted felons, and another 32 states have some sort of restriction on felons voting. This is hardly something that can be blamed on those evil republicans.
Re:Whoa whoa whoa... (Score:3, Informative)
Article on Salon... [salon.com]
Harpers... [gregpalast.com]
Bradenton Herald... [bradenton.com]
Harvard U. School of Gov't Reseach Paper... [harvard.edu]
One or these days, they're going to declare it treasonous to be so criminally ignorant. Wise up before then.
Re:Whoa whoa whoa... (Score:3, Informative)
Guess you missed this correction [salon.com].
Harpers...
Here [findarticles.com] is Katherine Harris' response to the garbage the Palast published.
You might also want to read the USCCR Report [usccr.gov], which states in part:
The report does not find that the highest officials of the state conspired to disenfranchise voters. Moreover, even if it was foreseeable that certain actions by officials led to voter disenfranchisement, this alone does not mean that intentional discrimination occurred. Instead, the report concludes
Vote logging (Score:3, Informative)
the best Scheme(method) I have heard involves a unique key assigned to each vote and given to each voter... Each voter can then check up on that vote at any time to ensure that it is counted... Further, the list of votes could even be published and publicly browseable... such that each citizen or perhaps restricted to voters could identify and verify the vote.
Re:Vote logging (Score:5, Insightful)
There's only one horrible horrible problem with that system:
The guy buying your vote, threatening your family, or blackmailing you can also verify your vote.
Re:Vote logging (Score:2)
The idea would be that you'd hit the button for the person you wanted to vote for and this is what would happen.
1. A unique key would be generated
2. This key and your vote would be printed onto a spool inside the machine.
3. This key and your voite would be printed on a receipt and ejected from the machine.
4. The vote would be encrypted using PKE and sent over a link using something like SSL to a database server. Or stored locally and sent as a batch.
Also, that i
Re:Vote logging (Score:4, Interesting)
We're talking about Mafia-like tactics here, not some 14 year old script kiddie invading your privacy.
Re:Vote logging (Score:2)
Mafia-type tactics would be difficult to pull off on a scale large enough to shift an important election. One of the guys you'd try to coerce will turn out to be a loon with poor impulse control who will blow away your enforcer and bring your scheme to the attention of the authorities. It's not practical.
Far more practical to coerce the politicians who get elected, or just pay them off. Then you only need a single point of leverage to thwart the people's will.
Re:Vote logging (Score:2)
Yeah, that's true... after the book is released.
He confirms your number before the book is released.
Re:Vote logging (Score:2)
Man, if the guy is threatening you or your family, don't you think he'll be right there, taking your stub, sitting down with you and checking your vote? If you can check your vote after the fact, anyone willing to go to the extent of threatening you will be able to as well.
Re:Vote logging (Score:2)
But can't you get around that e.g. in a paper system by having a ballot randomizer (pick a card style if you wish) and a tear-off number on each ballot? Then only the ballot caster has their number (admittedly to give to the criminal at the door who's buying votes/blackmailing you)
Stuffing noise ballots in the books and finding a way to quietly stuff a noise-ballot stub in the hand of the voter might help... I mean, you vote with your real ballot, throw away your confirmation (you're in distress) and vot
Re:Vote logging (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Vote logging (Score:5, Insightful)
Spare printers, printer cartridges, etc, will need to be onhand. In fact, I'd make sure that the "receipt" be capable of displaying on a screen so that people could write it down with a pen and paper. People trained to print the little receipt will need to be on hand. Anything that can go wrong will.
Lastly, none of this stops voter fraud. In many states, it's very easy to vote. Show up with a Drivers' License or a neighbor to vouch, and you're in. You only need to be a resident for 30 days. If you don't have a neighbor, or a drivers' license, you can show up in Minnesota with a utility bill in your name, and that's enough to vote.
Re:Vote logging (Score:2)
I don't be
Re:Vote logging (Score:5, Funny)
"I'm not a voter but I play one on slashdot."
Printers (Score:2)
I recently received a recruitment letter from my county election board. Apparently because I am a registered Republican, an endangered species in this part of the state. The only prerequisites for the job
Re:Vote logging (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, this is an extreme example, but don't think it could never happen. History plainly shows that if a voting process can be corrupted in any way, it will be. Strong-arm tactics included.
A paper trail is a good idea, just not one that the voter carries away with him. Ideally, the voting machine would print out a receipt which the voter would then place into a ballot box for safe keeping in case it is needed for a recount.
Re:Vote logging (Score:3, Funny)
Fine, allow just in time rechecking... allowing you to poll and select on the spot an appropriate key to show to the strong arm morons... You vote for Nader... query the system for a key with a vote for gore... write that key down... and show it to the strong arm guy
Sorry, the idea of thugs standing outside a polling place demanding to see votes for Gore is just too funny...
I want a microsoft voting machine (Score:5, Funny)
Absolutely amazing (Score:5, Insightful)
This is one place where we should definitely push for open source software with peer review. Otherwise we'll have elections under control of a few people without any recourse.
Re:Absolutely amazing (Score:5, Informative)
Now why would you worry about Diebold ATM's [com.com]?
Re:Absolutely amazing (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, you mean the Diebold ATMs that got infected [slashdot.org] earlier this year? No, don't worry, they're completely secure [google.com]. Just like their voting machines [blackboxvoting.com].
Incompetent? Or something else... (Score:5, Informative)
You make a very valid point here. Robert Cringely makes this same point another way in I, Cringely:
I, Cringely linkage... [pbs.org]
Seeing the story of Diebold wanting to gouge Maryland for adding printers & an audit trail to their voting systems makes me think that Diebold did not just forget to put in a printed audit trail, but they deliberately do not want one.
I'm all for your suggestion. REQUIRED open source software in voting machines, with an extensive audit trail, not just of the machines, but the servers, protocols, etc. Competent crypto should be used extensively to protect the systems' integrity.
In the US... (Score:5, Insightful)
We just need contrarian, iconoclastic politicians (Score:3, Interesting)
You want democracy? Then vote for politicians who have made a career of fighting corporate power.....like Dennis Kucinich....
Source code to the people! (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to shamelessly promote EFF [eff.org] or anything, but they have some really good information on e-voting [eff.org] on their website. Here's a pre-made letter to your senator [eff.org] (for those living in the US) asking him/her for support in the fight for secure elections.
Re:Source code to the people! (Score:3, Funny)
I agree...counting isn't rocket science. You'd think they discovered how to add 1+1 for the first time.
Don't send pre-made letters! (Score:3, Insightful)
Write your own! If you want, look at the EFF letter as a model. But don't just rephrase it. Use those parts which get your dander up more than the rest, and write your own words as to why it pisses you off so much.
Re:Source code to the people! (Score:3, Interesting)
I find it appalling that there is software that runs these e-voting devices. You're talking about, in the simplest form, maybe what, a 4 state device? Why in the hell are they using an embedded system for something that would make a very good undergraduate EE project? C'mon, two flipflops and a bunch of EEPROMs containing pretty images would be good enough!
I don't want to check so
Re:Source code to the people! (Score:5, Interesting)
How about this? The hardware is really simple - you have a piece or thin cardboard that has these spots that are easy to punch out - you provide a simple jig that lines this card up with a printed list of names - you take the simplest of tools - a sharp object - and poke a hole in the cardboard next to the name you want. When you're done, you look at the piece of cardboard and if it looks ok you put it into a box where another simple machine is used to count it.
Why, these actions are so simple I believe a monkey could do them, being simple tool users themselves. Anyone who can't probably shouldn't be casting a vote in the first place.
Re:Source code to the people! (Score:3, Interesting)
I would rather have a closed-source voting machine with a paper trail than an open-source voting machine without a paper trail.
An open-source voting machine is best (I like OSS too), but if we concern ourselves with the integrity of the election, the above described measures are sufficient.
Re:Source code to the people! (Score:5, Informative)
Sec. 4:
(C) SOFTWARE AND MODEMS.
(i) No voting system shall at any time contain or use undisclosed software. Any voting system containing or using software shall disclose the source code of that software to the Commission, and the Commission shall make that source code available for inspection upon request to any citizen.
So what's the difference? (Score:3, Insightful)
In short we succeeded in replacing a cheap pencil by an expensive computer with totaly no advantages.
good point (no, he's not a troll!) (Score:3, Insightful)
But if they are just as prone to hacking as humans are ("count this in favor of John Steed or your family gets hurt!") , then there is no advantage.
It comes down to convenience vs. auditability. I don't trust people not to cheat. I want that auditability.
Re:So what's the difference? (Score:2)
Re:So what's the difference? (Score:2)
At some point with every successful product or process, it passes a point that makes it less simple and/or less efficient. Whether it's enhancements to the product or economies of scale issues with distribution and logistics, something invariably makes it less perfect than it was before. That's where innovation has
Re:Duh, the problem's distributed by definition. (Score:2)
An automated and reusable system is beginning to look like a better solution.
Re:Duh, the problem's distributed by definition. (Score:2)
Re:So what's the difference? (Score:3, Funny)
No advantages, except for the fact that no one will have to decipher what the computer 'meant.'
"Well, first it filled in this circle, but then looks like it erased it an drew a frowny face over the candidate's name and penciled in 'L4M3r'..."
Re:So what's the difference? (Score:2)
This is a Troll (Score:2)
There are two goals in voting. Quickly and accuratly counting votes, and making sure no one cheets. Paper and pencle voting were great for the later. All that was needed was good physical security and oversight. Computers are supurb for the former. Press the button and out pups the reuslts. It is finding a system where both goals, Accountibility and Efficiency, are met that is the issue.
Computer data, as has been shown on slashdot overe a
And in related news... (Score:5, Funny)
It is reported that the American people are very happy to have receiptless electronic voting machines. No dissenting reports can be found...
A very interesting point (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:A very interesting point (Score:2, Funny)
There are some other [ogvegas.com] reasons [crazyhorsetoo.com] to move [binions.com] to Vegas, too, you know.
for more information (Score:5, Informative)
E-voting Haiku (Score:4, Funny)
Big business hides the memos,
Congress wants answers...
Damn! (Score:3, Funny)
Now if people only kept their receipts. (Score:4, Funny)
Now if we printed out a decorative "Don't blame me, I voted for so-and-so" certifiate people could use to impress their friends (seeing as voting is for the most part a social event nowadays for a lot of people, so they can discuss politics at cocktail parties)...
Re:Now if people only kept their receipts. (Score:3, Informative)
A paper receipt would be retained by the polling station and used to verify the electronic results. There are a number of ways they could implem
The voter doesn't get to keep the receipt (Score:4, Informative)
If people got to keep their receipt, it would do away with the secret ballot system that American democracy is founded on. Others posters have mentioned the practical consequences of eliminating the secret ballot system.
Re:Now if people only kept their receipts. (Score:3, Informative)
The Lesser Evil? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure the subject has been discussed before, but what if the original hacker is caught? It's clear that the information "stolen" is of critical importance in the debate over the trustworthiness of Diebold, and electronic voting in general. But will that hacker be able to use the importance of his/her discovery as a mitigating factor in court?
It seems like a parallel situation would be this: My neighbor has a tall fence, topped with electrified razor wire, plastered with "NO TRESPASSING" signs, and a tiger prowling the grounds for added security. I suspect that he is planning to commit a crime on his property -- say I've heard he's planning to kill his wife for the insurance money. If I ignore the signs, scale the wall, avoid the tiger, and take pictures of his detailed murder plans (which he conveniently leaves on his dining room table), I may prevent Ms. Neighbor's untimely demise.
Am I guilty of trespassing? And even if I am, was it worth it? I'd say yes -- I'd commit a small crime to prevent a much larger one. Was the Diebold hacker thinking along those lines? Or were they just out for a walk with the tiger?
Re:The Lesser Evil? (Score:2)
That's what jury nullification [fija.org] is for.
Generic voting machines (Score:2, Interesting)
1. Interface a generic touch-screen monitor
2. Run on FreeDOS (linux is overkill for this one)
3. Allow the Supervisor of Elections to load a database with the election particulars
4. Allow any old cheap PC to read the election database and arbitrate an election via the touch-screen.
5. Print out a ballot which the voter then verifies and drops into a box for later counting by h
receipts = trash (Score:3, Insightful)
The paper ballot should never leave the booth. Many voters might be intimidated by buyers/threats into bringing the receipt to a vote controller, even if there are easy ways to vote differently from a receipt. By settling for a paper receipt, we're handed the illusion that there's a paper trail, so the pressure's off. But the fraud will continue unabated.
Re:You drop the receipt into a locked box (Score:2)
Still don't really see the need (Score:5, Interesting)
In the UK (about 1/6th the population stuffed into 1/50th the area, so our voter-density is far higher, and hence counts will be higher) there has never been much of a problem. Sure, it takes 12 hours or so for the tallies to come in from all around the country, but how else to deploy the 'swingometer'
Simple system. Pencil. Anonymous paper. big dirty cross in the box for the candidate you want. Big separation between the candidates. 2 crosses or ambiguity means a spoiled vote (effectively "none of the above"). Count them all (done by volunteers) and you're done.
Sure, we get some recounts, but the system is so simple it's hard to justify flipping a vote from one candidate to another.
Just seems like it's a mountain out of a molehill
Simon. (dons flameproof suit
Re:Still don't really see the need (Score:2)
I guess that's what wrong with UK politics. Next election, try using a pen.
Re:Still don't really see the need (Score:2)
Simon
One simple question... (Score:5, Insightful)
What is the actual benefit of voting electronically? Many countries use the tried and true method of voting using paper and pen -- just mark your X in the square next to the name. Volunteers tally up the votes at the end of the voting day and, within hours of closing, you get your results.
It's something everybody understands. The paper waste is minimal compared to the paper output of election-related things -- government paperwork, campaign signs, and flyers in your mailbox and everywhere else. You absolutely don't get hanging chads, broken levers, or some other malfunctioning convoluted contraption. Recounts and verifications are simple -- get those same volunteers to count 'em again.
Geek factor aside, where's the benefit of going electronic?
Diebold is evil.. but.. (Score:5, Insightful)
If the state failed to insist on a paper trail, how can you scream at Diebold for not providing one?
Hasn't someone stepped up? (Score:3, Interesting)
What does e-voting buy? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know where or when the ballots are counted, but we have long had machines which could read these ballots. There is a paper trail. Every time an idiot plays the lottery, he also practices filling out a ballot (as the lottery tickets use a similar method).
Obviously, this must spend lots of money getting fancier systems which are no more acurate, and for now leave no paper trail.
Security is goes beyond the voting machines (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the idea of the paper trail is mainly important so there is a record folks can understand-but with good encryption it shouldn't be necessary. What _is_ necessary is better means of monitoring low tech vote fraud-and that probably means cameras at the polling places-and _never_ allowing ballots or media out of the view of a camera--and good encryption on those records.
Re:Security is goes beyond the voting machines (Score:2)
Bzzt! Sorry, but I doubt a dead person will ever show up for an e-vote. The paper printout for use as a hard, long-term copy/record is secure. As secure as e-voting can possibly get.
If a "dead" person can vote via punch card ballot or any other paper type ballot, they can certainly vote just as well on an e-voting machine. You must actually USE the e-voting machine to get the printout.
Re:Security is goes beyond the voting machines (Score:3, Interesting)
A "dead" person votes by either:
1) falsification of of records(say by a corrupt county clerk)
2) someone showing up with the dead persons voter
registration card and using it(along with
supplementary ID).
3) in areas that use vote by mail, by diversion of the mail records
I don't see that e-voting solves any of these except
Ohio has already put breaks on E-vote for 2004 (Score:2)
link here. [wired.com]
Re:Ohio has already put breaks on E-vote for 2004 (Score:2)
Nevada not the first (Score:2, Informative)
Can paper be abused? (Score:2)
Things like, all union members must show their receipt to prove they voted for canidate x. Or an abusive husband controlling the voting his wife. Or a wife withholding sex from her husband because he didn't vote for a canidate.
We can pass a law against it, but having a verifiable receipt will really change things.
Re:Can paper be abused? (Score:2)
You don't keep the receipt. The receipt is there for you to verify that what you thought you were voting for is what the machine tallied (or at least printed out). After you verify that the printout is correct, it is deposited in a secure box and held as a record. If a recount is called for (either random check or a full recount in contested election) then the secured box with the receipts in it is used for the final tally.
You don't get to keep the receipt, thus you don't get to be punished for your vo
Re:Can paper be abused? (Score:2)
So for example in my precinct, which from the makeup of my area is easily 75% demos/greens/etc, all of the sudden a GOP candidate got 80% of the vote, I could call shenanagins and ask them to count the paper ballots.
Re:Can paper be abused? (Score:2)
IMO, the best system is to have the votes entered electronically, printed out (in a font optimized for human and O
Independant 3rd party modifications? (Score:2)
Given the crappy security on the diebold machines, they couldn't be that hard to reverse engineer.
mandatory/surprise (Score:3, Funny)
"require mandatory surprise recounts"
Mandated surprises tend to lose that "surprising" quality.
ain't cheap is exactly what Diebold wants (Score:2)
OMFG (Score:2, Funny)
Jaysyn
What aggressive time table? (Score:2)
1) The new system must be at least as reliable in recording and talling votes as the current system.
2) The new system must be at least as secure from fraud as the cur
Form a free software voting machine company (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, seriously, with everything that has happened it is about time hackers not only whine about it, but actually steps up and creates a system that does it right. There's nobody more qualified to do it than a bunch of hackers anyway, and it should be an ideal field to show what can be created, and it should be a rock-solid business plan: You sell hardware and open code.
Start with a prototype that does what the proposed bills say, based on a free OS. Then move up to implement the best things out there (there was this crypto proposal here a couple of weeks ago), and then strip down the OS to the bare essentials needed for the operation. That way, conducting an exhaustive review of the complete source becomes managable.
Really, hackers should see this as a great business opportunity!
They're not "receipts", dammit! (Score:5, Insightful)
A receipt would prevent anonymous voting; it's what you'd provide to -- oh, Enron -- to prove that you voted for the "right" candidate. Then they pay you. (Maybe a meal, or by not firing you, or whatever.)
An audit trail is what's needed. And a paper, voter-verifiable copy of the ballot you just filled out is exactly the right thing there. But it must never leave the polling place,
Let's stop having slashdot advocate that the world make it even easier to sell out to corporations and other organizations that are corrupting the political process. Stop calling them "receipts" in the stories, and get editors who stop making such mistakes. Let's try to be up-level from the Faux News Network.
Cmon, I need a step by step (Score:2)
Im sure if Rob where elected into office, the public (the politicians) would realize that they made a huge mistake somewhere...
Please we would get a new Microsoft court case every other week to keep us entertained.
hmm... maybe something would be done about software patents too..
Some SourceForge projects for OSS E-Voting (Score:3, Informative)
http://sourceforge.net/projects/free/ [sourceforge.net]
http://sourceforge.net/projects/vote/ [sourceforge.net]
http://sourceforge.net/projects/freevote/ [sourceforge.net]
http://sourceforge.net/projects/votesystem/ [sourceforge.net]
http://sourceforge.net/projects/kbvote/ [sourceforge.net]
ACLU (Score:3, Informative)
Well, personally I don't doubt that it would probably be a negative for blind voters.
Myself, I have a slight case of cerebral palsy and I'd certainly be upset that I had been inconvenienced at the polls, but I would at least have the fortitude to understand that I shouldn't put my one need above the needs of the many.
I can hardly see the justification behind supporting a fairly small proportion of the popilation while causing the rest of us to suffer.
Fix the system for the larger population and then work on it for the handicapped among us.
Re:Democratically elected? Not Clinton either (Score:2, Interesting)
In this country we are on an electoral vote system. You know this and I know this. It doesn't change the fact that the last election was decided in a courtroom and not at the ballot box.
Re:Not realistic... (Score:2)
What, exactly, is so hard about writting a voting program? Display a form with buttons on it with all of the appropriate choices for an issue (presidential candidates, etc.), the user pushes the button(s), and the response is stored in a variable. The buttons then are changed for the next issue, wash, rinse, repeat. At the end, the form displays a list of all of the issues, and the selections made with accept and change buttons. Maybe even have each issue, in the
Re:Not realistic... (Score:2)
Sub ParseVote()
On Error goto ResetAgainstBush
DIM votesForBush as Long, votesAgainstBush as Integer
Select Case VoterChoice
Case ForBush
votesForBush=votesForBush+1
Case AgainstBush
votesForBush=votesForBush+1
votesAgainstBush=votesAgainstBush+1
End Case
Exit Sub
ResetAgainst:
votesAgainstBush=0
Resume Next
End Sub
Re:Now that's good government (Score:2)
Finally, a story where the goatse.cx link would be relevant.