PeterZ wrote:gcomeau wrote:
A more extensive investigation is more likely under the guy fighting to make sure even the less extensive investigation is blocked from occuring.
Riiiiight....
And what the hell do you mean by "it would reveal just what it did"? You mean the evidence of a problem in the vote that you thought was so darn important a few posts ago? Because *that* is what it revealed. That came to light because of the recount push.
A recount is an attack on the legitimacy of the election. An investigation by the guy who won the election is an exercise in rightful authority. Big difference. Also, very few votes recounted in Wisconsin or Michigan switched but there were many more ballots than documented votes cast. Which 50 of the 306 ballots in that heavily Clinton precinct should be counted? Records show that precinct certified 50 votes but the sealed packet contained 306 ballots. 60% of Detroits precincts had similar problems. How does a recount fix that? It doesn't.we need an investigation.
I was right about election fraud leading up to the election. Detroit is little different than Chicago. One party rule leads to election fraud. The re-count exposed the election fraud I cited in my prior post. Pennsylvania wanted nothing to do with the re-count. Not sure if the single party precincts there are being protected. All in all we need an investigation of the election process in all states.
Given that the government in Detroit is both incompetent and corrupt, the election problems observed could be due to either (i.e. 306 voters showed up and cast ballots, but the poll workers only documented 50 of them or someone added extra Democratic ballots for 256 invisible voters). Since there is hard evidence of something bad either extreme incompetence or corruption, Detroit's precincts should be monitored by court appointed neutral observers next time. Perhaps we can hire the Australians.
Agree with Peter that one party government (either party) leads to corruption. We are best served when there is a functional opposition. In Idaho for example (one party Republican), there aren't ballot problems but there are a lot of corrupt crony backroom deals that are never called out because the Democrats are so non-functional. So it's a two way street.