I looked around a little bit for another thread to post this in, and I'm not even sure what kind of discussion we could have around this, but I wanted to share the following personal experience from my trip to the (early) voting booth last Friday.There were a ton of people at the polling place (in N. Raleigh, off of Six Forks), it was hard to find parking, and once I wound my way to the polling place entrance past the cabal of campaigners handing out voting guides, campaign flyers, etc., I found myself standing in line to verify my registration.Directly in front of me in line were a mother and daughter who arrived together. The daughter was apparently well-over eighteen, and well-retarded. She probably had downs syndrome. I didn't get their history or anything, but I did overhear enough "conversation" between them to ascertain that the daughter, against the advice so readily available online, had gone full-retard.At any rate, as they arrived at the front of our line with their republican voting guides clutched firmly in their ham-like fists (not particularly relevant, but I found it funny), the mother asked the elderly line-master if it would be OK if they shared a voting booth. There was some offering of explanation and exchange of the desired particulars that I couldn't entirely hear, but finally the woman in charge told them it would be fine if they shared the same booth.Now, don't get me wrong, I'm sure there's nothing sadder, more unfortunate, or more indicative of a parent's love and hard work than a developmentally challenged child, and I'm sure many of you are close to similar situations and can share that sentiment. Further, please know that I don't wish to make any more light of this child's condition than is necessary to furnish us with an entertaining narrative and perhaps a spirited discussion.That having been said, this particular situation struck me as odd and potentially improper. Here's this mother -- in what appears to be full control of her child -- ready, willing, and cleared to take "advantage" of the situation and to cast what one might consider the equivalent of two votes.TWW:TSB, what say you?[Edited on November 1, 2010 at 6:21 PM. Reason : accidentally a word]
11/1/2010 6:19:12 PM
I bet it was this dynamic duo that put Bush in the whitehouse in 2000.This has to be stopped.
11/1/2010 6:24:17 PM
^ Cut the bullshit out, asshat.Coaxing someone into voting for someone you support to essentially have 2 votes is wrong. It's no different than paying someone to vote for you. You know damn well that mother was point her daughter to the Republican candidates, or just filling out the ballot herself. If you don't have the mental capacity to vote yourself without the aid of others (considering how simple the entire process is), then you shouldn't vote.
11/1/2010 6:39:58 PM
I can see how some would feel this is wrong. comma however . . . If coaxing someone into voting for you based on the promise of financial remuneration is wrong then our entire system would fall apart. Shit, politicians practically run on either the promise of delivering something to the voters or fearmongering that the other guy will take it away.In the big scheme of things, I'm less worried about a woman convincing her retarded daughter to vote than I am of massive voter fraud perpetuated by political machines all around the US. Until we get a lock on that, this is a non-issue.
11/1/2010 6:58:33 PM
^ it's an interesting philosophical question.I guess you could suppose that the mentally handicapped person might have expressed some desire that could be interpreted as left/right leaning, and the mother ran with this as her political platform (although most likely this isn't the case...). This is pretty much how democracy is supposed to work, anyone can vote that meets the requirements in the constitution (and what Plato felt was a flaw in democracy).But if the mother is seeing this as a way to easily enhance her vote, that is morally and ethically wrong. The best we can hope for is that people on the other side are doing the same thing.In the grand scheme of things, this type of fraud probably doesn't have a meaningful effect.
11/1/2010 7:08:43 PM
I agree that there are bigger fish to fry. And hell, I'm registered to vote twice in Wake county, but they don't care enough to fix it even though they notice every time I go.Also, keep in mind that I didn't witness any coercion, I'm simply reading in to their sharing of a booth and their two identical voting guides. It's entirely possible that they had the best of intentions, and the mother simply aided the daughter in physically filling out the form, I don't know.
11/1/2010 7:18:25 PM
Apparently there are laws on the books in some places that bar mentally incapable people from voting:http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/19/us/19vote.htmlThe American Bar Association seems to recommend that someone can vote if they can provide on their own information for a voter registration form. I guess this skirts the requirement of there being no test to vote, since you theoretically would have filled this out anyway.
11/1/2010 7:26:30 PM
11/1/2010 7:27:45 PM
everyone is under the influence of others, thats how society works. You get your ideas from the news who gets their shit from some source who did some research which probably involved other people. Everyone down the line has their own agenda that taints the final product. You can try to take everything you hear with a grain of salt, but you're still going to be making a best effort guess on who you wanna vote for. A retard brain may not be able to handle the concepts of verifying sources or understanding motives, but in the end they're gonna make the best choice their retard brain can make. If they only ever get their data from one source (caretaker) then yeah they'll probably have the same opinions, but thats how it is. You cant set a point "must have this much 'tard or below to vote" because that point is gonna be too hard to pick. And really how different is this from someone like Hooksaw, getting all his news from fox news? Or supplanter, getting all his news from democratic talking point sites?In the end its all bullshit and theres not even a guarantee who you vote for will be the same person once in office. Retard or less of a retard, it doesn't really matter and you aint gonna fix it.
11/1/2010 7:56:07 PM
Everybody deserves a vote. And they deserve a free, private vote that doesn't include their mom or a caretaker standing over them.We need to make accommodations for folks so they can vote. Does anybody know anything about this? How do people with motor disabilities fill out those little circles?
11/1/2010 7:58:37 PM
my grandma has macular degeneration and shes legally blind. She can see well enough to walk around somewhat but cant read. When election time comes around she gets an absentee ballout and someone from my family goes over and helps her fill it out. Shes still got her wits about her, so its not like shes gonna be swayed by one of us, she just cant physically fill out the bubbles, or fill out the forms/addresses.A caretaker or family member is going to be a better help than some volunteer election assistant who doesn't know anyting about the person or their disability. If someone is so disabled they cant fill out the form, they aren't gonna be driving themselves to the polling place nor are they gonna be able to fill out a ballot at home. In either situation they're gonna have someone who helps them out.
11/1/2010 8:04:26 PM
11/1/2010 8:07:11 PM
if aaronburro can vote, why not retards? (just kidding... i couldn't help myself)
11/1/2010 8:10:47 PM
http://www.sboe.state.nc.us/GetDocument.aspx?id=2408
11/1/2010 8:12:26 PM
Okay, so it looks like we need to continue let people vote (I'd never have it any other way), and we need to allow them to have a person to help them vote.The only implication of this thread is that poll workers need to remain on the lookout for coercion. I don't know what the protocol would be if they did witness coercion though. What do you do? Just file a report?
11/1/2010 8:15:59 PM
11/1/2010 8:27:31 PM
11/2/2010 5:46:43 AM
11/2/2010 6:05:23 AM
11/2/2010 11:09:32 AM
retards have the samel constitutional rights as any other citizen, and they have every reason to vote according to their best interests, even if it has to be explained to them by their primary care giver.you fucking Nazis need to clean your own house.
11/2/2010 11:23:39 AM
^^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0942385/quotes?qt0477767^ I agree, and from some of the information posted in this thread what happened was most likely completely fine.
11/2/2010 11:41:04 AM
Question... why, whether you agree with it or not, is there a minimum voting age?
11/2/2010 11:42:20 AM
are you serious? are you asking why is there a difference between adults and children? do you think this is a clever argument that you have devised?the legal age of responsibility does not vary according to intellectual capacity. unless the person has been declared legally incompetent or is a convicted felon, every adult citizen has full legal rights and responsibilities as a citizen.[Edited on November 2, 2010 at 11:51 AM. Reason : ]
11/2/2010 11:50:24 AM
Can we have retarded children sheriffs?
11/2/2010 12:11:27 PM
It's so sad to hear about someone voting Republican when they are so desparately in need of stem cells.
11/2/2010 12:18:03 PM
my wife checked my ballot to make sure I voted the right way. is that voter intimidation?
11/2/2010 12:19:12 PM
11/2/2010 12:22:31 PM
11/2/2010 12:47:03 PM
11/2/2010 1:03:24 PM
It seems to me that if you are legally competent to sign a contract, stand trial etc, that you should be allowed to vote, even if you need someone to read you the ballot, or even mark it for you. Solving the intimidation coercion at the ballot problem is as simple as having a a poll worker available to oversee and limit the reading of the ballot to something like:"For president, do you choose Bob Jones, John Doe, or Jane Plain"and "Do x to mark for Jane Plain"As for solving the influence at home problem, you simply can't and there's no point in trying, and certainly not in denying someone the right to vote simply because a few disabled people who have difficulties reading or marking the ballot might be influenced by their care giver.
11/2/2010 1:08:44 PM
thanks merbig. you saved me a lot of typing.
11/2/2010 1:14:19 PM
merbig/wdpricein the US, and throughout all of human societies for thousands of years, the full rights as a society member are granted based on age.in the United States, voting is a constitutional right for all adult citizens who have not had their right revoked for conviction of a felony. plain and simple. the constitutional right to vote is not predicated on intellectual capacity, or IQ tests, or reading comprehension tests, or English language test, or credit checks, or hair and eye color tests, or genetic chromosomal tests, or any other restrictive qualifiers you may wish to impose.now you can go read the United States Constitution before espousing your next round of Nazi interpretations of who can vote and who cant.[Edited on November 2, 2010 at 1:35 PM. Reason : ]
11/2/2010 1:29:16 PM
Godwined by joe_schmoe!
11/2/2010 1:35:49 PM
^^You're missing the point (yes, I know you probably see their point, but you're not making it very apparent in your argument). You're quoting the law when they're asking you why the law exists in the first place. (And, just as a frame of reference, it's that sort of by-the-books law-for-the-sake-of-law self-referential-loop sort of argument that sometimes got used by hooksaw and some other less-than-rational conservatives in the past)[Edited on November 2, 2010 at 1:40 PM. Reason : hyphenated-word-string-adjective-combos!]
11/2/2010 1:37:39 PM
Thanks, but i knew this objection would follow. it was easier for me to wait for it.okay, WHY is it a law, you ask? because the architects of this country came from places where all sorts of qualifiers were used to exclude people from self-governance. qualifiers like religion, property, wealth led to disenfranchising large groups of people and the establishment of a "ruling class" that was able to inflict all sorts of abuses upon the ruled. not that the founders were perfect; they themselves excluded people based on race and gender. but we've since corrected that disparity.it comes down to this: when you open the door to require "testing" people as to whether or not they are "qualified" to vote, you open the door to allow any number of civil rights abuses that will disenfranchise voters. a functioning representative democracy requires that every single adult citizen be allowed to vote, and this right to be universally applied regardless of ability, means, class, or capacity. you cant pick and choose a subset of the adults you wish to include for self-governance, otherwise your representative democracy will become an oligarchy.[Edited on November 2, 2010 at 2:00 PM. Reason : ]
11/2/2010 1:58:29 PM
There should only be two qualifications for the right to vote:-Adulthood, or the arrival of adulthood during the term.-Citizenship
11/2/2010 2:08:12 PM
^^Ah, but, just to play a little bit of devil's advocate, maybe even give you some more points to mention...You never made mention of why our voting law discriminates on the basis of age in the first place. If "you can't pick and choose a subset of adults you wish to include", then who's to say what even constitutes an 'adult' to begin with (or more to the point, why are they right to say it)? You mention "testing" and "qualifications", but how is age not a qualification? As per that other thread, what reason is stopping lawmakers from moving the age of 'adulthood' from 18 to 16? Or to reference wdprice and merbig, why aren't we declaring 5-year-olds to be legal adults? Why don't we allow all people of all ages just as we allow people of all colors, classes, religions, and intellects?
11/2/2010 2:25:59 PM
Adulthood, for the purposes of voting, is the moment when, with regards only to age, a person can be reasonably expected to make sound decisions and be fully responsible for one's actions. It is a national standard, and while it may not be accurate in all cases, it's completely unbiased and fair.There are certainly adults who do not posess the cognitive rationale implied with their age, but thats far more difficult to quantify fairly than age.
11/2/2010 2:49:40 PM
11/2/2010 2:54:08 PM
11/2/2010 2:59:32 PM
Joe feels threatened you guys are going to take away his right to vote. But he is right on this issue. imo
11/2/2010 3:08:04 PM
"New Elite" vs. "Classical Liberal" battle ITT
11/2/2010 3:25:04 PM
11/2/2010 3:28:29 PM
look i'm tired of this, go troll someone else.besides, caregivers of the mentally handicapped ensure they will vote overwhelmingly for Democrats. we get our activists to take them to the polls by the vanload. retirement homes, too.[Edited on November 2, 2010 at 5:31 PM. Reason : ]
11/2/2010 5:29:46 PM
Not according to my overwhelming anecdotal evidence.
11/2/2010 5:31:30 PM
yeah, your two fatty hamfisted Fox and Friends watchers.
11/2/2010 5:32:37 PM
She wasn't mentally retarded - that's just how tea partiers come off Just kidding, calm down..
11/2/2010 6:32:10 PM
While I know tromboner950 is playing devils advocate, let me clarify something.I'm not saying we need to redefine any type of Constitutional qualification. I'm saying that we simply don't allow people to help mentally handicapped people vote. If someone wants to drive a retard down the the polling stations, give them a pep talk to vote straight-ticket Democrat, fine. I morally object to it, but I see no reason to legally object to it. Where I object is allowing anyone to help them out, only on the basis that someone can basically vote for them.You tell me to go look back at the Constitution. Well, I thought it was understood that we all only get one vote, and no one person's vote is more important than another. You're setting yourself up to allow one person to have more than one vote when you allow them to help a mentally handicapped person.To take this to the extreme. What if a retarded person was brought in to vote. This person is not functional. They're in a wheelchair and they aren't even capable of forming words. They are below the mental capacity of a 3 year old. They have very little control of their motor skills. I think we all know damn well that if someone goes into that booth to vote, that the person voting "for them" has no way of knowing what the person wants, and anyone who has any scruples wouldn't bring them to a polling place, because we know that they aren't capable of voting. So who would be casting their vote? Their caretaker? Who are they going to vote for? Whoever the caretaker wants elected. Tell me, is this fair? Is this even legal? A person is effectively getting two votes.I'm not asking for a ban on people with below a certain IQ to not be allowed to vote. I'm saying that they simply aren't allowed assistance, unless there is a physical handicap involved (like a loss of a limb or two). A family member certainly shouldn't be allowed to help, and the retarded person has to tell the assistant who to vote for, IE, they have to treat them the same as anyone else who had a physical handicap. If the person isn't able to tell the person who to vote for, either through pointing or some other communication method, then no, they shouldn't be allowed to vote. Not because I think they're stupid, but because they're not the ones who are actually choosing the candidate.
11/2/2010 6:51:35 PM
They don't check ID's when you vote. If you do your homework you could easily cast a bunch of votes. Just go take a survey getting names and addresses of people asking if they intend to vote. And honestly that one girls vote was probably more reasoned and insightful than all the tea partier votes.
11/4/2010 8:18:33 AM
11/4/2010 8:32:00 AM