Nov. 6th, 2004

lapsedmodernist: (Default)
I spent a bipolar hour last night trying to make sense out of what exactly is Ralph Nader doing in New Hampshire with the recount. On one hand it sounds completely insane. The request came in one minute before the deadline. The check did not go through. It will have to be appealed. No one knows if it's happening or not. Nader-haters (well, greater Nader-haters than me) are screaming that he is trying to set up Kerry. But shit, if they can make a litmus test out of any state, since Nader has a legal standing to get a recount, I will support Nader (I just nearly choked on those words) in that endeavor. The grassroots organizations working with him on this are going to try for Florida, too.

Incidentally, what prompted this? Lookie here for a detailed statistical analysis done using actual voter totals from the New Hampshire Presidential Elections of 2000 and 2004 from the New Hampshire Secretary of State website.

In the meantime this outlet brings us the following charming visual aid:
Read more... )
The article also links to various grassroots initiatives to process circumstantial evidence of voter fraud and find hard proof.

Bev Harris of Blackboxvoting.org
has filed Freedom of Information Act requests for vote records in over 3,000 counties with more to follow.

Greg Palast has been tracking this from the get-go and before.

The word is, The Mirror wants to do a story on voting fraud early next week.

I am not going to waste my time arguing with people who "maturely" tell me to accept it, it's over, if we fight it, we look like sore losers, the voting fraud issue is just a way to shift blame from ourselves, and we should really focus on bringing in more voters in 2008. The near-aneurysm I experience every time I read those arguments responding to my math, statistics, testimonials, evidence, is not worth it. As [livejournal.com profile] boymanead so aptly put it, it's like "you were beaten and robbed and left for dead at the county fair? well, let's just move on and plan next year's. I'm sure it won't happen again, if we use more orchids in the decorations." I will do whatever I can to contribute to the campaigns investigating this embezzled election for as long as they go on. And unlike supporting Kerry, I won't even have to do it with a pinched nose. This stolen election means that unless we do something about it, the same scenario will play itself out in 2008. And as for attracting voters? That popular soundbite that dovetails with Kerry's insipid call to "let the healing begin"? I touched on that in my last entry, but Leonard Pitts puts it so eloquently in The Miami Herald, where he writes about the possibility of the US literally splitting into two or more separate countries, a Humpty Dumpty that won't be put together again:

That disconnect is not about liberalism vs. conservatism. Agree with them or disagree -- I've done both -- there is a certain pragmatism to traditional conservatives. You know where they're coming from: small government; personal responsibility; fiscal restraint. And their arguments are usually grounded in something recognizable as logic.

But social conservatism is another thing entirely, a mutant strain unhindered by critical thought. These are the nominal Christians whose Bibles are so long on judgment yet so short on compassion, the soldiers of the new American theocracy who want to force creation ''science'' on the schools and deportation on the Muslims. They are the super patriots who regard criticism as treason, the pious moralizers who believe single mothers should be barred from teaching in public schools. They are blind guides who see tens of thousands dying in Iraq and think the defining issue of the election is what gay men do in bed. They give God a bad name.


So here is where I am at. To me this Tuesday proved beyond a doubt that the Bush administration has established an indefinite illegal monopoly on the executive branch, with all the obvious reprocussions (the stacking of the Supreme court, the grinding into the ground the already-broken spine of the legistlative branch, etc.) People who are consoling themselves by preemptively cheerleading for 2008, people who will crowd around Hillary and Obama (yeah RIGHT, like our country would ever elect a woman or a black man) are still operating within the "sane" paradigm, the paradigm of The Economist that I wrote about some time back (excuse my citing myself):

I like The Economist. I often don't agree with its political platform, but it has excellent news analysis and international coverage. It's solidly libertarian, and very British. It is very polite and reasonable. And that is its downfall at this juncture in history. The Economist is stuck in a world of the past, when everyone was reasonable, when corruption could only be entertained as a phenomenon within certain reasonable parameters, when conspiracy theory was some kind of paranoid tomfoolery. It's like King Arthur at the Yankee Court. The Economist Does Not Comrephend in the way that your grandma Does Not Comprehend the nature of your dating imbroglios (or at least mine does not). How does a journal too sensible to engage with anything that deviates from the "rational choice model" and furthermore indulges in the colonial nostalgia of the Benevolent Western Influence fare in a world where the PNAC blueprint for actual Global Domination is laid out, in open text (well, open hypertext), making some pretty explicit wishes to the Neoimperialism Fairy for "another Pearl Harbor"?

Or, as Zizek put it, in the article thoughfully brought to my attention by [livejournal.com profile] homburg, “Democracy” is not merely the “power of, by and for the people.” It is not enough to claim that in a democracy the majority’s will and interests (the two do not automatically coincide) determine state decisions. Today, democracy is above all about formal legalism—the unconditional adherence to a set of formal rules that guarantee society’s antagonisms are fully absorbed into the political arena. “Democracy” means that whatever electoral manipulation takes place all politicians will unconditionally respect the results. Simulacrum-democracy, in other words, to use Baudrillard. The signifier claims to stand for a discrete, separate signified, but in reality represents nothing but itself.

I am not one of those people who are, like, "both parties are the same, voting does not matter." That is the metaphoric, hyperbolic, drama-queen take on the "voting: does it matter?" issue. However, with the infrastructure for electoral fraud cleverly in place, voting will not matter literally. Which is why I think the most important thing we can do now is work with the nation-wide efforts to prove electoral fraud. There are still enough "activist" judges on a local, or circuit levels to have hearings, create precedents, and illuminate the corruption. The Achilles heel of the electoral system of the New World Order is that it draws its legitimacy from this broken, perverted illusion of Democracy. This is not a military coup (we might get to that in a few years, but not yet). People are so blinded by the Democratic Electoral Process, reified and fetishized, that they don't see the forest for the trees. So we can weaponize that reification; proof of fraud would be dangerous to this particular incarnation of the wolf, because it still insists on shrouding itself in sheep's clothing. Lambs of God indeed. So for those of you wondering what to do next, this is what I am planning on working next. I invite you to join me in this endeavor.
lapsedmodernist: (Default)
Outrage in Ohio: Angry residents storm State House in response to massive voter suppression and corruption


November 3 - Toledo, Ohio Hundreds of angry Ohio residents marched through the streets of Columbus—Ohio’s Capital—this evening and stormed the Ohio State House, defying orders and arrest threats from Ohio State Troopers. "O-H-I-O ! suppressed democracy has got to go,"they chanted. After troopers pushed and scuffled with people, nearly a hundred people took over the steps and entrance to the State’s giant white column capital building and refused repeated orders to disperse or face arrest. People prepared for arrests, ready to face jail—writing lawyers phone numbers on their arms, signing jail support lists and discussing non-cooperation and active resistance (linking arms, but not fighting back).

Also, here is one of the websites aggregating evidence of voter fraud. (Note: Faun Otter's analyses are the ones that I based my exit poll post on)

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