norseamd
Lifer
- Dec 13, 2013
- 13,990
- 180
- 106
I will keep refineries, chemical plants, and power stations running.
Why does this seem depressingly very familiar?
I will keep refineries, chemical plants, and power stations running.
You might want to see the post where mr music box was bragging about his salary and how life is so easy for him before you post.
Why does this seem depressingly very familiar?
Tug boat welders and chemical workers think they know the answers to the countries problems. Dumb people do dumb things.
Tug boat welders and chemical workers think they know the answers to the countries problems. Dumb people do dumb things.
If you're that important, why do you post here so often.
I'd think you would have other things to do.
As with previous military voting laws, some discretion is still left to the states under UOCAVA, and variations in registration requirements, deadlines for submitting ballots, and tight time frames between when ballots are sent to military voters and when they are due to be returned still cause problems.106 These problems were made clear by the 2000 election, as we discussed earlier in this article. In Florida, issues such as ballot transit times continued to disenfranchise voters. The New York Times conducted an independent examination of late overseas absentee ballots received in the 2000 Florida election received after November 7, 2000, and examined by canvassing boards between November 17 and November 26.107 Researchers examined 3,739 overseas ballots, of which 2,490 where accepted and counted by canvassing boards. Thus, 33% of these overseas ballots received after November 7, 2000 were invalidated for various reasons. The researchers then examined the 2,490 overseas absentee ballots that were received after November 7, 2000 and were accepted by canvassing boards and included in county tabulations. Based on the Florida regulations for what constitutes an acceptable overseas absentee ballot, 680 (27 percent) of the accepted late ballots were flawed. If these 680 ballots had not been accepted and counted, then 52 percent of the late overseas absentee ballots would have been rejected in the 2000 Florida election.
Then, in 2000, Florida received 2,411 overseas ballots after the statutorily mandated 7 p.m. election day deadline which, if counted, gave Bush/Cheney a 537 vote edge in the state and, if rejected, gave Gore/Lieberman a 202 vote edge.122 The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida was therefore faced with determining whether a statute or administrative rule was the applicable standard for the counting of absentee ballots. In contrast to nearly every other circumstance, the Court ruled that the administrative rule superseded the directly contradictory statute because the rule was mandated by a federal court as part of the enforcement of federal overseas and military voting statutes.123 Thus, a resolution of a logistical problem with the timely mailing of overseas ballots nearly twenty years prior had a dramatic and decisive effect on the election of a president.
In theory, military votes were treated differently in every Florida federal election since at least the Soldier Voting Act of 1942. At the very least, military votes were treated differently in every Florida federal election since the Federal Government's Justice Department sued Florida for violating the Overseas Citizens Voting Act. At that point, Florida adopted a Consent Decree (later codified as Florida Administrative Code 1S-2.013) bringing Florida into compliance with federal law, both the 1942 Act and the 1975 Act. This was also addressed in the Uniformed and Overseas Absentee Citizens Act of 1986, which did not change Florida's Consent Decree but did bring the two earlier Acts into agreement. But for twenty tears, Florida managed to remain in compliance with federal law. It was not until 2000 that Democrats sent an army of lawyers into Florida to remove voting rights from military personnel, recognizing that almost forty years of demonization had succeeded in shifting the military vote from Democrat to Republican.
Here is a link of the issue's history; it is at least theoretically possibly that enough people could be assembled to explain it to you (especially given the ability of the Internet to link together more people than be fitted into any one location.) https://www.overseasvotefoundation.org/files/History of Mil Voting and Ballot Transit issues.pdf
Speaking of which, Bill Clinton would make an excellent VP.
Would that be legal ?
Now that is one very interesting thought.....
Probably .....
I never said I was important. :'(
That would be crazy. I dunno if it would be legal as he would be 1 step away from being president again.
I admit your retard strength would overtake me in a street brawl. Because of this I have tempered my anger towards you and am not mad in the slightest.
And you do it all from within the bubble of retardation. impressive.
If P&N is known for one thing, it is its class.Keep it classy, Mr. Democrat.
Keep it classy, Mr. Democrat.
I like that the left is putting all their eggs in her basket.
She couldn't be more beatable. Now to beat her.
-John
My wife last night:
"She could tell me she has the cure for cancer and will feed all the starving kids as long as she's elected, I still won't vote for the bitch."
She's still pissed that Hilary didn't have enough balls to leave her husband.
Keep it classy, Mr. Democrat.
the hilary is the most cheated on woman in the world. She never did figure out how to put the testicle lock box on the impeached ex president. She managed numerous bimbo eruptions for BJ Clinton but may have set him up for the Paula Blue Dress fiasco.
I like that the left is putting all their eggs in her basket.
She couldn't be more beatable. Now to beat her.
-John
Did I hear the radio reports right, that she has 2.5 Billion dollars lined up behind her?!
Can I start and stop this whole campaigning thing by saying,
"Oh My Gosh. This lady couldn't care LESS about you?"
-John
her finance team and the outside groups supporting her candidacy have started collecting checks in what is expected to be a $2.5 billion effort, dwarfing the vast majority of her would-be rivals in both parties.