Has Mr. Trump taken his insurgent campaign too far by questioning the legitimacy of our free elections?
Using simple non-common core math:
834 million - 219 million = 615 million excess general election ballots.
The 219 million is "voting age Americans." In reality the number of REGISTERED voters is around 146 million.
Again, using simple non-common core math:
834 million - 146 million = 688 million excess general election ballots.
How do we get to 35? Loyola Law School must be using common core math.
Odds Hillary Won Without Widespread Fraud: 1 in 77 Billion Says Berkeley, Stanford Studies - HNN...
Academic Researchers: Statistical models applied to 2016 vote data proves Hillary Clinton's win was only possible through widespread vote fraud.
http://www.snopes.com/stanford-study-proves-election-fraud-through-exit-poll-discrepancies/
Stanford Study Proves Election Fraud through Exit Poll Discrepancies
Two researchers released a paper (not a study) examining whether primary election fraud that favored Hillary Clinton had occurred.
Rigging the Election - Video II: Mass Voter Fraud
In the second video of James O'Keefe's new explosive series on the DNC and Hillary Clinton campaign, Democratic party operatives tell us how to successfully ...
From the horse's mouth...
Note - Robert Creamer and Scott Foval (seen in this video) have been fired by the Clinton campaign following their exposure in these videos. This is just the beginning.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hDc8PVCvfKs
Odds Hillary Won Without Widespread Fraud: 1 in 77 Billion Says Berkeley, Stanford Studies - HNN...
Academic Researchers: Statistical models applied to 2016 vote data proves Hillary Clinton's win was only possible through widespread vote fraud.
http://commonsensegovernment.com/the-tytler-cycle-revisited/
The Tytler Cycle Revisited | Common Sense Government
In 2003 I became very interested in a theory developed by Scottish historian Alexander Tytler, and wrote an article on it at the time, which ironically enough is now getting a lot of attention due to being linked to from Wikipedia.
Odds Hillary Won Without Widespread Fraud: 1 in 77 Billion Says Berkeley, Stanford Studies - HNN...
Academic Researchers: Statistical models applied to 2016 vote data proves Hillary Clinton's win was only possible through widespread vote fraud.
Had we used the the proposed mechanism (selective recount) of the Democrats, it would have been closer to 200 (and some show as low as 60) in the other direction (giving VP Gore the win).
Those 35~ votes you mention, if placed in the right spot.... can make a huge difference.
One vote per legitimate, registered citizens should be everyone's goal. Why some are concerned about voter ID is concerning. We should all want to know every ballot is legitimate. This is 2016, almost everyone has a state, city or federal ID card of come sort, if not we can also do provisional ballots while we ensure the person is a registered voter. I want no one disenfranchised but I also want no false ballots cast.
When you look at the electoral college, many states winner takes all and some of these states have been pretty close in previous election. Anyone remember Florida and the hanging chad recounts all the way to the supreme court? That is how close they can be and for all the marbles. We need to be sure about every vote.
My understanding is that Trump is talking about the media endorsing a candidate and is guilty of trying to sway undecided voters. In a poll of news media personnel these people admitted that 350 had donated to Clinton's campaign and 50 had donated to Trump. So I see his point.
As the Wall Street Journal's John Fund reports, Minnesota Democrat Al Franken’s narrow, 312-vote victory in 2008 over incumbent Sen. Norm Coleman may have come as the result of people being allowed to vote who, under existing law, shouldn’t have been.
The certification of Franken as the victor came only after a series of recounts dragging out for almost half a year. It also sparked an investigation by Minnesota Majority, a conservative watchdog group that compared the list of those recorded as having voted in the election against what Fund calls criminal rap sheets.
… At least 341 convicted felons voted in Minneapolis's Hennepin County, the state's largest, and another 52 voted illegally in St. Paul's Ramsey County, the state's second largest. Dan McGrath, head of Minnesota Majority, says that only conclusive matches were included in the group's totals. The number of felons voting in those two counties alone exceeds Mr. Franken's victory margin.
There is no guarantee the voiding of those 393 votes would have changed the outcome of the election. However, with credible, original source, documented evidence presented, by an interested private party investigation, both the Minnesota Attorney General and the State Election commission issued summary decisions with no investigation on their part. Their joint decision was to "let sleeping dogs lie."
Had Senator Franken's election been deemed illegitimate. The Democrats would have been stymied in there efforts to pass Obamacare.
In a free society, no act or process of government is above question, ever.
What's more, the Constitution explicitly assumes that felons may be barred from voting. The 14th Amendment — which, like the 15th, was passed during Reconstruction to ensure equal treatment of African Americans — acknowledges that states can disenfranchise people for "participation in rebellion, or other crime." So an interpretation of the Voting Rights Act to bar felon disenfranchisement would not only be inconsistent with the intent of that statute, it would exceed Congress' constitutional authority.
Or look at it this way: When someone is kept from voting because he has been convicted of a felony, this does not "result in a denial or abridgement of the right … to vote on account of race or color" (to quote the law); it results in the denial of the right to vote because that person has chosen to commit a serious crime against a fellow citizen.
Finally, even when civil rights laws are used to challenge practices that are not racially discriminatory in their terms, application or intent but simply because they have disproportionate racial effects, the defendant always has an opportunity to show that the practice is still justified. So, for example, requiring English fluency for a particular job may be permissible, even if it disproportionately excludes members of a racial or ethnic group.
Likewise, a state may have strong and legitimate reasons for limiting the right to vote, even though it may have a disproportionate effect. Allowing only citizens to vote may have a disproportionate effect on groups that include many recent immigrants, but that is surely permissible. And the state also has good reasons for denying the vote to those who have committed serious crimes.
We don't let everyone vote — not children, not noncitizens, not the mentally incompetent. There are certain minimum and objective standards of trustworthiness, loyalty and responsibility, and those who have committed serious crimes against their fellow citizens don't meet those standards. If you aren't willing to follow the law, you can't demand a role in making the law.
Finally, are you capable of arguing without resorting to incendiary histrionics. Quite frankly, the wild-eyed comparisons of the GOP to the Nazis party or fascist movements just damages your credibility. Still waiting for the Merton and Day references, or do you need the 30 days to bone up on something you never actually read?
Hillary keeps saying 17 intelligence agencies have agreed. Really? One of the 17 intelligence agencies is the Coast Guard. Does anyone think they would wade into this mess?