Tuesday, November 20, 2012

The Folly of Electronic Voting
in the U.S.

By Marta Steele with Harvey Wasserman

Marta Steele has done yeoman work for the election integrity movement. She has plowed through more websites and blogs than one can even imagine.

She set out with the nearly impossible task of writing the definitive historical narrative of the folly of electronic voting in the United States between 1988 and 2008.

More shockingly, she accomplished that task.

Electronic voting machines are perfectly designed to steal elections. That’s their principle purpose. Ireland has just gotten rid of them altogether.

Germany, Japan, Canada, Switzerland all use paper ballots. Why? Because you can actually count them in public, and then count them again.

But here in the US, elections are corporate-owned and operated.

Anyone who experienced pushing the e-spot for John Kerry and having the name George W. Bush light up—as happened so often in Ohio 2004—knows all too well that what Marta Steele documents in this remarkable book has become the defining reality in American election theft.

What she has done by way of documentation is truly impressive. Never again will those who question the validity of electronic voting be called “conspiracy theorists.”


She accumulated mountains of incidences that show the so-called “red shift” in favor of the Republican Party is not an anomaly or computer “glitch,” but evidence that there is systematic tampering of computerized voting machines by private companies connected to the Republican Party.

Although our newspaper, the Columbus Free Press, and our website freepress.org published plenty on the flaws of electronic voting and election irregularities, we were nonetheless overwhelmed by the research documented in this volume.

Those who read this book will no longer fall for the easy propaganda lines and talking points put forth by Karl Rove and his cohorts in explaining away impossible election results.

This book is important because its research is so detailed, its history so clear, and its analysis so convincing.

The book destroys the mythology that “it can’t happen here”--that our system is an old and infallible democracy that can’t be corrupted.

This powerful work will force all who read it to take a side, but more importantly, to take action, perhaps even direct action.

A key breakthrough shatters the absurd notion that the empire of the United States may very well meddle in and steal elections abroad, but would never use these tactics at home.

The fact that the Bush family, with their patriarch George Herbert Walker Bush being the CIA director, is so inextricably linked to the rise of electronic voting and improbably election results, should be no surprise.

That’s why it is no coincidence that she starts her history of election voting irregularities in the year that George H.W. Bush wins New Hampshire and becomes president.

The Bush family ascendancy corresponds to black box, non-transparent voting in America.

The more we’ve privatized our software and hardware and called it “trade secrets,” the better the Bush family candidates have done, against all odds.

Their presidential victories, with the official exit polls falling well outside the margin of errors and predicting victories for their opponents, would easily be denounced by election observers in a Third World country.

Small wonder that when push came to shove, Ohio’s Republican Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell refused to allow United Nations observers into the Buckeye State polling places to check the veracity of the 2004 balloting.

We believe this book does more than any other to expose the evils of electronic voting.

The endnotes alone amount to a giant step forward in revealing the crimes of privatized e-voting in our nation.

As Al Gore and John Kerry refused to do, we must now face the reality that as long as our balloting process is dominated by electronic machines, the outcome of any election can be flipped by a governor or secretary of state with a few late-night key strokes.

Considering the hundreds of millions the rich and super-rich are willing to spend to control the government, would you ever doubt they would hesitate to buy an election?

What Marta Steele has done is to confirm far beyond any reasonable doubt that as long as electronic machines are at the core of our vote count, there is no such thing as democracy in the USA.

What we have instead is an electronic corporatocracy….proprietary, secretive, anti-democratic and for sale (or lease) to the highest bidder.

The real question is: now that Marta had made this all perfectly clear, what are we going to do about it?

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The People of the United States Demand
GOVERNMENT-OWNED VOTING MACHINES!

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