Respect of the dead is a universal value. We all respect the dead and we try not to speak ill of them.
But hell, they shouldn't vote!
In Allegheny County, PA, home to Pittsburgh, over 1,500 dead folks are registered, mostly as Democrats. And while it seems logical that dead people would vote for Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election, it's just wrong.
In Allegheny, a lawsuit has been filed by the Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF), over duplicate voting registrants and also listing dead voters [H/T Washington Free Beacon].
Last week, PILF aimed its legal attack at Allegheny County’s election manager as well as three Board of Elections members. The group alleges the board broke federal and state law by not properly maintaining the county’s voter record.
According to the filing documents, the voter roll includes at least 7,500 records with almost 1,600 dead people planning to vote for "Sleepy Joe." Some of the dead (one lady in particular) go back as far as 1800 and never qualified for Obamacare. And you can bet that she no longer has the mental capacity to make an informed judgment at the voting booth.
In PA, back in 2016, of the almost six million votes cast in that county, President Trump only won by 44,000, or less than one percent.
So those dead voters can throw the election results to the wrong party.
Voter suppression of dead people should not be a Democratic talking point, [although they forget to mention the physical state of those voters].
PILF wants two things for Allegheny citizens, as listed by Communications Director Logan Churchwell.
One, the flaws in voter registration need to be addressed "head-on."
And second, the federal courts need to help establish guardrails to prevent a repeat of this situation. Churchwell said, "If our intelligence services are correct, we must always be vigilant against outside intrusion and sabotage attacks in these systems. Energetic voter list maintenance efforts are frontline protections against that threat.”
“Anyone who has a problem with cleaning up duplicated voter registrations is no longer allowed to proclaim they stand for the tenet of ‘one person, one vote,'” he added.
Sounding like a Joe Biden guy, the Allegheny County Elections Division Manager responded to the lawsuit thusly:
“The first and foremost concern of Allegheny County is to protect the voting rights of all citizens. Each citizen registered to vote gets one vote should they choose to exercise that right. There are no allegations that anything to the contrary has occurred. The allegations in this lawsuit will be reviewed and addressed as necessary consistent with all applicable federal and state laws. As is always the case with voter registration list maintenance, the utmost care will be taken to ensure that no one is disenfranchised.”
It seems as if protecting the rights of voters, a substantial number of whom were born in the 1800's, with a total of 1.523 over 100, is more important than actually knowing if the rights you are protecting are for those folks who are dead and need no voter protection.
That is, unless you're voting for them.
Then there’s the issue of doubling up, plus more — some voters “managed to become registered to vote two and even up to seven times with matching or substantially similar names and other biographical information with the same addresses.”
The Pennsylvania suit comes on the heels of a similar filing by PILF in swing-state city Detroit.
There, 2,500 deceased voters are on the books with 512,000 registered to vote but less than 480,000 folks of voting age.
It sounds like Brian Williams MSNBC math.
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In Allegheny County, PA, home to Pittsburgh, over 1,500 dead folks are registered, mostly as Democrats. And while it seems logical that dead people would vote for Joe Biden in the 2020 presidential election, it's just wrong.
In Allegheny, a lawsuit has been filed by the Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF), over duplicate voting registrants and also listing dead voters [H/T Washington Free Beacon].
Last week, PILF aimed its legal attack at Allegheny County’s election manager as well as three Board of Elections members. The group alleges the board broke federal and state law by not properly maintaining the county’s voter record.
According to the filing documents, the voter roll includes at least 7,500 records with almost 1,600 dead people planning to vote for "Sleepy Joe." Some of the dead (one lady in particular) go back as far as 1800 and never qualified for Obamacare. And you can bet that she no longer has the mental capacity to make an informed judgment at the voting booth.
In PA, back in 2016, of the almost six million votes cast in that county, President Trump only won by 44,000, or less than one percent.
So those dead voters can throw the election results to the wrong party.
Voter suppression of dead people should not be a Democratic talking point, [although they forget to mention the physical state of those voters].
PILF wants two things for Allegheny citizens, as listed by Communications Director Logan Churchwell.
One, the flaws in voter registration need to be addressed "head-on."
And second, the federal courts need to help establish guardrails to prevent a repeat of this situation. Churchwell said, "If our intelligence services are correct, we must always be vigilant against outside intrusion and sabotage attacks in these systems. Energetic voter list maintenance efforts are frontline protections against that threat.”
“Anyone who has a problem with cleaning up duplicated voter registrations is no longer allowed to proclaim they stand for the tenet of ‘one person, one vote,'” he added.
Sounding like a Joe Biden guy, the Allegheny County Elections Division Manager responded to the lawsuit thusly:
“The first and foremost concern of Allegheny County is to protect the voting rights of all citizens. Each citizen registered to vote gets one vote should they choose to exercise that right. There are no allegations that anything to the contrary has occurred. The allegations in this lawsuit will be reviewed and addressed as necessary consistent with all applicable federal and state laws. As is always the case with voter registration list maintenance, the utmost care will be taken to ensure that no one is disenfranchised.”
It seems as if protecting the rights of voters, a substantial number of whom were born in the 1800's, with a total of 1.523 over 100, is more important than actually knowing if the rights you are protecting are for those folks who are dead and need no voter protection.
That is, unless you're voting for them.
Then there’s the issue of doubling up, plus more — some voters “managed to become registered to vote two and even up to seven times with matching or substantially similar names and other biographical information with the same addresses.”
The Pennsylvania suit comes on the heels of a similar filing by PILF in swing-state city Detroit.
There, 2,500 deceased voters are on the books with 512,000 registered to vote but less than 480,000 folks of voting age.
It sounds like Brian Williams MSNBC math.
Please consider following this blog, and remember, every time you click on an ad, an angel gets its wings and a terrorist gets his virgins.
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