ldrews, on 2018-August-02, 11:13, said:
But isn't there a significant difference? Russians, and probably 100s of other groups, try to influence voters. Busloads of people coming over the borders, some of them actually vote illegally, potentially changing the outcome of an election.
I agree that there is a difference. As to Russian efforts, I am not certain, I doubt anyone is, of the extent. I think that there is good reason to be concerned. And, really, it is not just Russians. Exactly how we cope with robotic influence is not clear. I pay more attention than some, perhaps more attention than average. to political matters and I try keep a skeptical eye on what I am told, no matter from where. But I can be misled. I do think we have entered an era where the massiveness of mis-information, organized relentlessly by people who do not wish us well. Is a problem. In the old days, if I were to tell someone that Hillary Clinton was operating a child abuse ring out of the basement of a pizzeria, possibly some nut would believe me, most would write me off as just Ken being a nut. Today, this spreads, and becomes something that gets news coverage, debate, the whole works. It isn't that this was never a problem before, there was the commie plot of the 50s to floridate water, but the massiveness is new. You pull one weed and ten more spring up. It's a problem.
As to the busloads, as I said I don't object to some reasonable efforts. I seriously doubt it is a major problem. It's tough enough to get people to walk to the local elementary school and cast one ballot. Hopping on a bus along with hundreds of others, off to someplace to vote? And then would it work when they get there? I go to vote, they look up Ken Berg, see that Ken Berg has not voted, I vote. The guy from the bus would have to know that Ken Berg is registered, and that Ken Berg has not yet voted. If there really is a problem I favor dealing with it, and I am ok with some modest preventative majors, but I think the Russian problem, the general problem of organized mass dis-information, and the potential problem of technological meddling, is larger. Much larger.
Just a side story I have told before. In college in the 50s I was always scrambling for money, sometimes with just a short term job. I was hired to transport ballots from one point to another. I would drive to a place where the ballots were cast.They would give me some boxes. I would transport them to some other place to be counted. I wasn't even old enough to vote, 21 at that time. The people giving me the ballots had never seen me before. I never checked, but I doubt the boxes were sealed all that securely. It was a bit bizarre.
Anyway, I am fine with preventing voter fraud. I am not fine with making it difficult for qualified people to vote. Sometimes an effort might be attempting the former. Often I think it is attempting the latter. It might not always be easy to judge.
A question occurs to me. Suppose Bobby McGee thumbs a diesel down, just before it rains, and it takes them all the way to New Orleans. Now I think Bobby and Janis should be allowed to vote in the presidential race, but maybe not in a mayoral race, not in New Orleans nor in Baton Rouge, assuming they are just passing through both places. Does anyone know how this is handled?