http://www.miller-mccune.com/politics/how-polling-places-can-affect-your-vote-20318/
8/23/2010 2:34:17 PM
8/23/2010 2:46:18 PM
Currently voting at a school. In the past, I've voted in a church and an apartment complex.Did the study control for things like the demographics of the communities these polling stations serve? The types of protesters waiting outside the polls? While the lab test is certainly intriguing, I don't think it alone is conclusive. In addition, the SC "real world" example they cited seems to me a small enough difference to chalk up to chance.The last thing I want to hear is follow on news articles saying we need to shut down polling stations at houses of worship because it impacts people's voting patterns and thus violates separation of church and state. There aren't enough public spaces large enough to handle voting, and as the study pointed out, the impact of shutting down polling locations on voter turnout is far greater. That, or we can go all mailed ballots.
8/23/2010 2:53:51 PM
8/23/2010 3:02:09 PM
8/23/2010 3:18:28 PM
If the idea is that someone is going to change their vote because of the location of the polling place, that's extremely disheartening. I would hope that the average American voter isn't that fickle. Then, I remember that we live in the United States, and some people probably can be manipulated that easily. I would rather polling only occur in publicly funded institutions, such as government buildings, schools, and libraries. I shouldn't be forced to enter a place of worship in order to vote. There's enough government buildings that space shouldn't be an issue.
8/23/2010 3:36:28 PM
8/23/2010 3:38:14 PM
8/23/2010 4:21:09 PM
Yet as the article points out, if we vote in our local libraries, then the dangerous library clique is going to have an advantage each time their bond referendums come up to vote. Same with the education lobby in schools, etc. I guess the only thing that would solve this is to eliminate in-person poll voting for mail-in ballots all together.
8/23/2010 4:49:07 PM
8/23/2010 5:03:34 PM
8/23/2010 6:56:05 PM
8/23/2010 7:25:30 PM
there should be an election day holiday every november and they should just do municipal/state elections then as well.
8/23/2010 8:54:41 PM
I find this whole suggestion silly because the premise of the entire article is that the voting place can prime a person to vote in favor of an initiative that favors a particular facility, and while people seem to insist that we need to drive polling places out of houses of worship, they seem okay moving them to public buildings that probably have on a more regular basis many more voter initiatives that will impact them (bonds for various civil buildings like libraries and fire houses, education policy referendums, courthouse elections, etc.).Also, the article clearly states that the number of polling stations and location have a significant impact on voter participation, and I don't believe that there are enough government buildings to serve the communities. The buildings that are sufficient such as fire departments with ample parking, schools and community centers are usually already pressed into service for polling centers, and many of the other buildings like state, county, and Federal buildings tend to be clustered together in downtown. I think most local governments rely upon houses of worship as polling centers because they've already tapped the myriad of civil buildings that can handle an election without significant disruption, and for better or worse, the nation's churches, synagogues, temples and mosques are the next available set of public space available that are spread out amongst the neighborhoods. I would rather use these houses of worship to keep up voter participation than ban them entirely and hurt voter participation because of one study that hints at a possible correlation.
8/24/2010 11:08:57 AM
8/24/2010 11:15:14 AM
8/24/2010 11:17:13 AM
8/24/2010 11:19:18 AM
8/24/2010 11:27:03 AM
8/24/2010 1:55:15 PM
8/24/2010 3:46:29 PM
I vote at the fire department every year, now someone tell me which candidate supports arson so these guys can work more
8/24/2010 4:01:52 PM
As anti-religion as I am, I for some reason have no problem voting in a church.Maybe if the people running the event were preaching or something, but usually it's just a nice, air conditioned building with a lot of space to set up booths.
8/24/2010 4:59:33 PM
^ It's really about promoting people of a particular religion to vote over others. I guess the thinking is, if you locate a polling booth in a church, that Christians will be more comfortable (and more likely) to vote there, due to familiarity with the location and other factors.
8/24/2010 5:01:59 PM
^there's the old homo arguement again...if you are not a christian then the brick and mortar of that particular building is somehow infected with religous cooties that make it less comfortable than the brick and mortar down the street.
8/24/2010 5:07:40 PM
8/24/2010 5:09:41 PM
8/24/2010 5:29:44 PM
8/24/2010 6:02:51 PM
^ Maybe a military base, but not every branch of the government is complicit in or involved in our vicious interventionism.Christian extremists fill our front lines (and the people who pulled the trigger on going to war), however. Also, a lot of the anti-Muslim bigotry our country is currently in the midst of comes from Christian extremists (unsurprisingly). You seriously can't see a reason why having the polling place in ANY house of worship is inappropriate? Let's just agree to disagree, then.
8/24/2010 6:06:22 PM
8/25/2010 12:01:54 AM
It's funny that McDanger can't see how he is applying one form of logic to governmental buildings but ignoring that same thought process when religion is involved
8/25/2010 11:42:15 AM
8/25/2010 11:49:45 AM
8/25/2010 12:41:00 PM
^, bingo.Granted, I'm not a brown person but shit, I would probably be considered worse than a Muslim if the Christians running the church knew of my (non-)beliefs.Luckily I don't burst into flames or get outlined by heavenly light when I enter churches. I used to work out at the YMCA. Giant fucking portraits of the European version of Jesus everywhere.To be honest, I'd prefer that the church didn't exist and the polling place was at a convenient, large, air-conditioned public space, but the church I vote at does exist and is large and air-conditioned; I like it.As long as the religious practitioners aren't actively proselytizing, I would feel the same amount of comfort voting at a church or synagogue or mosque or Mormon temple. When it's not being used for spreading mystical bullshit, it's just a building. And typically well decorated and comfortable buildings at that.[Edited on August 25, 2010 at 12:57 PM. Reason : mosques too!]
8/25/2010 12:56:48 PM
8/25/2010 2:41:46 PM
8/25/2010 3:04:15 PM
Yeah, but the ubiquitousness of churches compared to such buildings has to count for a lot. Convenience, my good man.
8/25/2010 3:06:30 PM
8/25/2010 3:08:09 PM
Foster kids creep me out and there's already too many old people hanging out at polling places. That eliminates most of the non-stabby options.
8/25/2010 3:09:27 PM
8/25/2010 3:51:23 PM
8/25/2010 4:01:57 PM
8/25/2010 4:17:23 PM
Again, I think that we are reliant upon houses of worship for polling station is that the local governments have already used the facilities they have as polling stations and still do not have sufficient number of polling stations to properly serve the local community. I think many of the government facilities listed are mainly office buildings that do not have sufficient room, parking, access, etc. to serve as polling stations: for example, an office may have a conference room that theoretically is large enough to house one or two polls, but it may be deep within the offices and cubicles and would create too much a disruption having a stream of voters navigating their way through.I looked for example at Guilford County's list of polling stations, and they had just about every major municipal building listed from schools to rec centers to larger fire stations and training facilities. However, given how many polling stations there are, I can't see any way they could find enough secular buildings to make up for the number of churches and other houses of worship used as polling stations. Not unless we want to create super polling stations and collapse the hundred+ down to a couple dozen.
8/25/2010 4:26:29 PM
8/25/2010 4:27:53 PM
8/25/2010 4:58:40 PM
You said this earlier:
8/25/2010 5:42:53 PM
Botalics doesn't work with CrazyCode, despite being sufficiently crazy.
8/25/2010 10:38:39 PM
8/25/2010 11:03:47 PM
^Exactly what I came here to post. An empty church is not a religious institution.
8/26/2010 8:47:05 AM