You really expect an answer to that one?Having everyone chipped will sure make it easier to drag the right ones off.... /godwin.
You really expect an answer to that one?Having everyone chipped will sure make it easier to drag the right ones off.... /godwin.
No, that's why he flagged it /godwin.You really expect an answer to that one?
What part of "there are people who pretty much spend their paycheck the second they get it in order to afford the bare necessities of life" don't you understand?Hey fucktard (see I can do it too!) minimum wage jobs are still more than $500 per month, which is all it takes to have a checking account that costs you nothing. It is absurd to say that someone can't afford a bank account.
Being poor and having a family counts as bad decisions? Let me paint a picture for you:But even all that aside, you're easily shown to be wrong, because just about everything you described is a consequence of terrible choices made, which demonstrates an inability to make good choices, which if anything should be a disqualifier for voting, lest your propensity for bad decisions make the country that much worse.
And you're arguing that allowing those people living in poverty the right to vote constitutes a threat America's well being. The impoverished being overwhelmingly made of minorities. You essentially want only middle class or higher (predominantly white) people to vote. You're right, I did misrepresent you: you don't care if they're male or own land.Congratulations! Your ad hominem wins you the argument! What'll you do now, go to disney world? No, I miss the days when we made at least a token effort to make sure that we weren't driving ourselves off a cliff by voting ourselves largesse from the public coffers.
Yes, but it was not the state-issued form of ID most of these voter ID laws are require.Did your College ID have a picture on it?
I'm aware.No, that's why he flagged it /godwin.
I'm sorry, I lost family in the camps too.I'm aware.
Still, I lost family in the camps and thinking for even a second that I'd support anything that would even hint at those politics is just wrong and inexcusable. I demand an apology and a retraction. It's just such an obvious ploy. Hateful! Pah!
/Jewishreply
Way to respond with a reply that is both subjective and a fallacious appeal to emotion. For every "Mike" you show me, assuming he exists, I will show you ten people who dicked around in high school, got in trouble with the law, got somebody pregnant before they had even the beginnings of the means to support a family, and yet still spends some of their meager money each month on smokes, booze, drugs, diablo 3, or some other such vice. The statistics show that your typical american in "poverty" actually has a higher standard of living than the average european (the AVERAGE european, not the average european in poverty, the AVERAGE european). Before 2006, this was a land of unparalleled income mobility, where the Mikes of the world stood an excellent chance of bettering their lot so long as they made the right decision. A land that made more new millionaires than any nation ever in the history of mankind. Sure, NOW we're in an economic slump (perpetuated and worsened by the very ideals you adhere to), but previous to this, you basically had to be mentally ill to be chronically poor, outside of catastrophic accidents/acts of god.What part of "there are people who pretty much spend their paycheck the second they get it in order to afford the bare necessities of life" don't you understand?
Being poor and having a family counts as bad decisions? Let me paint a picture for you:
I have a co-worker named Mike. Mike is a really good guy, and he's got a work ethic like no one else I know. He rides his bike from 8 Mile and Telegraph to our store at 8 Mile and Haggerty. That's somewhere around 8 miles each way, if he takes the most direct route (which I don't think can be done). In the coldest of winter and the hottest of summer, he rides his bike. Why not drive? He doesn't have a car. Why doesn't he borrow his mom's car? She doesn't have a car. Why doesn't she have a car? She never learned to drive. So he has no reliable access to a car, an almost non-existent pool of people who can teach him to drive, no degree (he's tried, but money is tight and the nearest community college is one mile from our store), and makes a couple of bucks over minimum wage. No choices made by him lead to his state of affairs. It's really easy to paint all poor people with the broad brush of being lazy, immature, etc, but reality disagrees with that.
You're the one bringing race into it. And you're still committing ad hominem. I'm the one dealing with all people as equals, you're the one saying minorities can't be expected to take care of themselves. Who's the racist?And you're arguing that allowing those people living in poverty the right to vote constitutes a threat America's well being. The impoverished being overwhelmingly made of minorities. You essentially want only middle class or higher (predominantly white) people to vote. You're right, I did misrepresent you: you don't care if they're male or own land.
It cost even more. You trying to rebut that you got a job with a college ID is not exactly disproving that the poor don't need an ID to get a job.Yes, but it was not the state-issued form of ID most of these voter ID laws are require.
Hi there...What part of "there are people who pretty much spend their paycheck the second they get it in order to afford the bare necessities of life" don't you understand?
Either you've moved, or you commute a helluva lot more than Mike. Mike lives about 2mi from me, and your store is about 3mi from my work.I have a co-worker named Mike. [...] He rides his bike from 8 Mile and Telegraph to our store at 8 Mile and Haggerty.
Wait, wait, wait.. he gave exact cross streets, and google maps backs him up.Hi there...
Either you've moved, or you commute a helluva lot more than Mike. Mike lives about 2mi from me, and your store is about 3mi from my work.
--Patrick
Yes, and that's why I called him out on it. His description still says "Grand Rapids," not "Farmington/Novi."Wait, wait, wait.. he gave exact cross streets, and google maps backs him up.
Ohhhh I see. Yeah, 136 miles is a hell of a commute even by Texas standards.Yes, and that's why I called him out on it. His description still says "Grand Rapids," not "Farmington/Novi."
--Patrick
So how long's your commute from the state of "Warning" to work?Ohhhh I see. Yeah, 136 miles is a hell of a commute even by Texas standards.
About 1.8 miles.So how long's your commute from the state of "Warning" to work?
38,757,253. That is the number of people that the U.S. Census Bureau (page 27)counted as in poverty as of 2006. 13.3% of the population for which poverty status could be discerned. You're saying that nearly 40 million people in this country are lazy, mentally ill, or makers of poor decisions?Sure, NOW we're in an economic slump (perpetuated and worsened by the very ideals you adhere to), but previous to this, you basically had to be mentally ill to be chronically poor, outside of catastrophic accidents/acts of god.
I'm saying that minorities are disproportionately among the poor and impoverished (FACT). Ergo, any law that will have the greatest effect on the poor an impoverished, for good or ill, will disproportionately impact minorities. Up until the middle part of last century, people in this country were not equals, not under the law or in society. Not even close to it. Now, all people are (supposed to be) equal under the law. Gaining actual equality of opportunity and status under the law, undoing three centuries of stacking the deck against anyone not white and particularly anyone who was black, takes more than two generations. Shock of shocks, I'm sure. Race is still an issue, and will be for a while. Claiming its not will help precisely no one who isn't already doing fine.You're the one bringing race into it. And you're still committing ad hominem. I'm the one dealing with all people as equals, you're the one saying minorities can't be expected to take care of themselves. Who's the racist?
My high school ID would have worked too. For a job, as I understand it, any kind of picture ID will do. For voter ID, you have to have a current State ID card that you need the proper documentation to obtain, all of which costs time and money.It cost even more. You trying to rebut that you got a job with a college ID is not exactly disproving that the poor don't need an ID to get a job.
You know...there really were never any "good old days".I miss the days when we made at least a token effort to make sure that we weren't driving ourselves off a cliff by voting ourselves largesse from the public coffers.
I think it's far more fair to say that 13% of people are too lazy/mentally ill/makers of poor decisions. But i don't think that poverty is a key indicator of that. There are plenty of lazy people with jobs. Plenty of people who make poor decisions and get away with them. And, come on, in some senses mental illness is a pre-requisite for being an A-Type.13.3% of the population for which poverty status could be discerned. You're saying that nearly 40 million people in this country are lazy, mentally ill, or makers of poor decisions?
More than that, probably. That's just the number of those who happen to be poor.38,757,253. That is the number of people that the U.S. Census Bureau counted as in poverty as of 2006. 13.3% of the population for which poverty status could be discerned. You're saying that nearly 40 million people in this country are lazy, mentally ill, or makers of poor decisions?
According to the US Treasury department, half of all US taxpayers moved income brackets between 1996 and 2005. Half those in the bottom bracket moved up, and 75% of those in the top 1% moved down. Also: "Median incomes of all taxpayers increased by 24 percent after adjusting for inflation. The real incomes of two-thirds of all taxpayers increased over this period. In addition, the median incomes of those initially in the lower income groups increased more than the median incomes of those initially in the higher income groups. " Your move.Here's an article from the same time showing the then-growing gap between the rich and poor, including this fascinating quote "In America about half of the income disparities in one generation are reflected in the next. In Canada and the Nordic countries that proportion is about a fifth." Seems like maybe your "America was land of opportunity!" rap isn't so accurate/
That's a recipe for a neverending cycle of victimhood. Since LBJ, we've spent 10 trillion dollars on robin hood fiscal redistribution to eliminate poverty, and not only is there still poverty, there is MORE poverty. Generations of telling them "it's not your fault, you can't be expected to better yourselves" has made these people believe it. But all this is beside the point. You are calling me a racist to attempt to discredit my ideas, when I have not said a single racist thing. My assertions affect poor white people (gasp, they exist!) as well as poor minorities. You are asserting bad logic in saying that anything that affects the poor is racist because there are more nonwhite poor than white. That. Doesn't. Follow. You seem too worked up to argue without falling into fallacies and invective. Maybe you should go have a time out until you're ready to discuss like a grownup?I'm saying that minorities are disproportionately among the poor and impoverished (FACT). Ergo, any law that will have the greatest effect on the poor an impoverished, for good or ill, will disproportionately impact minorities. Up until the middle part of last century, people in this country were not equals, not under the law or in society. Not even close to it. Now, all people are (supposed to be) equal under the law. Gaining actual equality of opportunity and status under the law, undoing three centuries of stacking the deck against anyone not white and particularly anyone who was black, takes more than two generations. Shock of shocks, I'm sure. Race is still an issue, and will be for a while. Claiming its not will help precisely no one who isn't already doing fine.
Did you go to a private high school, or was that high school ID... government issued? Is that an "apple and orange" situation because most high school students aren't of age to vote?My high school ID would have worked too. For a job, as I understand it, any kind of picture ID will do. For voter ID, you have to have a current State ID card that you need the proper documentation to obtain, all of which costs time and money.
I went to a woefully overcrowded public high school and they issued all the kids a photo ID. It's pretty standard issue these days.Did you go to a private high school, or was that high school ID... government issued? Is that an "apple and orange" situation because most high school students aren't of age to vote?
We're not talking about infrastructure, and you know it. The largest federal expenses these days are socialist income redistribution. Medicare/medicaid/social security. The interstates cost 500 billion in 2008 dollars over 40 years, and we're spending 3 trillion a year now (and less than a trillion of that is on the military). Hell, we blew more than the interstates cost on stimulus that didn't work.You know...there really were never any "good old days".
When you look at the Eisenhower days you had large amounts of public spending towards things like the interstate highways, or other remnants/children of the PWA
While I do, on this rare occassion, agree with you (picture IDs are useful and should be mandatory; I probably go a lot further in it than you but whatever), this is a bit uncalled for as an ad hominem, and doesn't really help your point. I's all t rue, up to the last sentence which is just a snark to snark.You are asserting bad logic in saying that anything that affects the poor is racist because there are more nonwhite poor than white. That. Doesn't. Follow. You seem too worked up to argue without falling into fallacies and invective. Maybe you should go have a time out until you're ready to discuss like a grownup?
That was my point, it's a government picture ID.[DOUBLEPOST=1342048281][/DOUBLEPOST]I went to a woefully overcrowded public high school and they issued all the kids a photo ID. It's pretty standard issue these days.
I think I'm entitled to a little snark after all he's called myself and Covar over the last couple pages.While I do, on this rare occassion, agree with you (picture IDs are useful and should be mandatory; I probably go a lot further in it than you but whatever), this is a bit uncalled for as an ad hominem, and doesn't really help your point. I's all t rue, up to the last sentence which is just a snark to snark.
I got to school from the last week of August to the last week of April at GVSU. For two years of community college, and during the summers, I live on the border of Livonia and Redford and work at 8 and Haggerty. What month is it?Yes, and that's why I called him out on it. His description still says "Grand Rapids," not "Farmington/Novi."
--Patrick
A school ID card, I.E. a plastic card with your name on it next to a picture of you, be it a college ID or a high school ID, does not serve the same legal purposes as a state issued ID card or a driver's license (both are things you get from the sec of state or DMV. An employer can choose to accept it as a form of ID for purposes of employment, but it would never get you into a polling place. It simply does not carry the necessary information. I'm looking at my GVSU ID, issued by a state college when I enrolled (took me five minutes), and it has my name, a picture of me, my student number, the school's logo, a picture of the campus, the word "student", and the school's motto on it. My driver's license (cost me $25 plus a $40 road test plus a $20-ish dollar testing permit, plus a lot of hours at the sec of state) has...a shitload of my vital stats on it, including address. High school ID was the same story, but less fancy looking. If the majority of these voter ID laws considered work or school photo IDs to sufficient proof of identity, the fuss about them would be somewhat less.Did you go to a private high school, or was that high school ID... government issued? Is that an "apple and orange" situation because most high school students aren't of age to vote?
I can agree to disagree, but I find it a dangerous precedent. It ends arguments, and nobody wants that. Thank you, however, for returning to civility.GasBandit:
This debate is pointless. I'm of the opinion that we're moving toward the Gilded Age 2.0, and that people with your political views would only push us even further towards that. You're of the opinion that that people with my political views are pushing this country into an economic situation that will eventually tear it apart. We have a fundamental disagreement in our view of society, one that will not be rectified. We're never going to convince each other of anything, we both can find all the studies and expert opinions we want to back up our contentions, it's just not going to lead to anything constructive.
Well, I can't speak for every state but I know my current and previous states (Texas and Colorado) both offer non-drivers-license state picture IDs for a great deal less than what you just quoted (edit- just checked, the fee for a Texas photo ID -not drivers licence- is 6 dollars), and fill any photo ID legal requirement. (I also still say that your GVSU ID cost you way more than that, even in the first semester alone... and they probably were pretty convinced you are who you say you are to issue it). If you want to talk about making school IDs valid for the purpose, I'd be amenable to that and I think so would most other people, granted sufficient levels of oversight. It doesn't HAVE to be a driver's license... there just has to be government verification of identification to vote in a government election.A school ID card, I.E. a plastic card with your name on it next to a picture of you, be it a college ID or a high school ID, does not serve the same legal purposes as a state issued ID card or a driver's license (both are things you get from the sec of state or DMV. An employer can choose to accept it as a form of ID for purposes of employment, but it would never get you into a polling place. It simply does not carry the necessary information. I'm looking at my GVSU ID, issued by a state college when I enrolled (took me five minutes), and it has my name, a picture of me, my student number, the school's logo, a picture of the campus, the word "student", and the school's motto on it. My driver's license (cost me $25 plus a $40 road test plus a $20-ish dollar testing permit, plus a lot of hours at the sec of state) has...a shitload of my vital stats on it, including address. High school ID was the same story, but less fancy looking. If these voter ID laws considered work or school photo IDs to sufficient proof of identity, the fuss about them would be somewhat less.
Open six days a week, of varying hours, constitutes an undue burden? Because they can't be expected to have a day off at any point in the 4 years between elections? How do they make it to the polls on election day?A state ID, equivalent to a driver's license for legal purposes, costs $10 here. Which is a generally affordable price. However, the place where you get them is open 9AM to 5PM, except on Wednesdays which are 11 am to 7PM. 7 locations throughout the state are open on Saturday, from 9am to Noon and 9AM to 7PM on Wednesdays. Those locations are also guaranteed to not close for an hour lunch. Suffice it to say, that makes even getting the $10 ID card a hardship (remember, Detroit is the biggest and poorest metro area in the state and has virtually no public transit) for people. However, we disagree on what constitutes "fair" and on who deserves the vote (I view it as a qualified right, you seem to view it as privilege), so that's fairly moot.
Wait, voting isn't a right? When did that get suggested? It's patently wrong.we seem to have different views on the status of voting as a right, so we will have differing views on what is considered undue obstacles to exercising it.
to be fair, us Belgians are OBLIGATED by law to vote, and our civil halls/city hall/county halls/where we HAVE to go and get our IDs every 5 years don't have opening hours that broad or easy to get to. 09h-12h 4 days a week and maybe 18h-20h once a week in most cities. Not having one is punishable with a pretty bad fine so.... You know, even IF you say it's a right to vote and there shoudn't be too many burdens in between...Those hours are relatively broad. It's not a right but a duty here and even we have to go through more trouble.It is if you have no reliable form of transportation to wherever the nearest office happens to be. But, as I said, we seem to have different views on the status of voting as a right, so we will have differing views on what is considered undue obstacles to exercising it.
Wait, voting isn't a right? When did that get suggested? It's patently wrong.
--Patrick
I may be reading his intent wrong there.Actually, they do have as much of a right, which is to say, none at all. There is no federally provided right to vote.
Wow, that's a LOT cheaper than I expected.We're not talking about infrastructure, and you know it. The largest federal expenses these days are socialist income redistribution. Medicare/medicaid/social security. The interstates cost 500 billion in 2008 dollars over 40 years, and we're spending 3 trillion a year now (and less than a trillion of that is on the military). Hell, we blew more than the interstates cost on stimulus that didn't work.
No, you're not. PatrThom is voicing a belief, not constitutional reality. The US Federal Constitution makes no issue of an individual right to vote - only forms the electoral college and leaves their selection up to the states to figure out. And, how it works out, you're not even voting for a presidential candidate - you're really voting for an elector who has pledged to cast an electoral vote for the candidate you want. And here's the kicker... there's absolutely nothing to stop that elector from changing his mind at any time and completely disregarding/invalidating your vote. And it's all legal, constitutional, and has precedent.I may be reading his intent wrong there.
Edit: And I should point out that 3 (scratch that it's actually like 5 or 6) other ammendments refer to "The right of citizens to vote"Ammendment 24
1. The right of citizens of the United States to vote in any primary or other election for President or Vice President, for electors for President or Vice President, or for Senator or Representative in Congress, shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any State by reason of failure to pay any poll tax or other tax.
2. The Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.
More than 2, but you're misreading them. Here they are, gathered off Wikipedia:Uhmmmm....that's not true:
Edit: And I should point out that 2 other ammendments refer to "The right of citizens to vote"
Or in other words, as long as you're not being stopped from voting for any of the above reasons, you can be kept from voting for any other reason the states deem fit to use. Does that sound like a "right" to you?The "right to vote" is explicitly stated in the US Constitution in the above referenced amendments but only in reference to the fact that the franchise cannot be denied or abridged based solely on the aforementioned qualifications. In other words, the "right to vote" is perhaps better understood, in layman's terms, as only prohibiting certain forms of legal discrimination in establishing qualifications for suffrage. States may deny the "right to vote" for other reasons.
Well, they did that. So the citizen has a federal constitutional right to vote for electors.The individual citizen has no federal constitutional right to vote for electors for the President of the United States unless and until the state legislature chooses a statewide election as the means to implement its power to appoint members of the Electoral College. U.S. Const., Art. II,
And if a state chooses to undo/redo it's criteria for appointing members to the electoral college, what happens to that "right?" It goes away. Isn't that against the very definition of a "right?" Furthermore, as I said... if your "right" can be abridge for any reason that government feels like except a specific list of a half dozen reasons, how is it a right?.However, by identifying places where it is illegal to remove the right to vote explicitly implies a pre-existing right to vote. You can't restrict something that doesn't exist. I think this is one of those rare places where the 9th ammendment comes in as well (although that may be a stretch).
Ed: Also, from your supreme court reference, you missed a part
Well, they did that. So the citizen has a federal constitutional right to vote for electors.
[DOUBLEPOST=1342109147][/DOUBLEPOST]Also, Jesse Jackson Jr. sure thought we don't have a constitutional right to vote... and it spurred him to propose an amendment.The Constitution contains many phrases, clauses, and amendments detailing ways people cannot be denied the right to vote. You cannot deny the right to vote because of race or gender. Citizens of Washington DC can vote for President; 18-year-olds can vote; you can vote even if you fail to pay a poll tax. The Constitution also requires that anyone who can vote for the "most numerous branch" of their state legislature can vote for House members and Senate members.
Note that in all of this, though, the Constitution never explicitly ensures the right to vote, as it does the right to speech, for example. It does require that Representatives be chosen and Senators be elected by "the People," and who comprises "the People" has been expanded by the aforementioned amendments several times. Aside from these requirements, though, the qualifications for voters are left to the states. And as long as the qualifications do not conflict with anything in the Constitution, that right can be withheld. For example, in Texas, persons declared mentally incompetent and felons currently in prison or on probation are denied the right to vote. It is interesting to note that though the 26th Amendment requires that 18-year-olds must be able to vote, states can allow persons younger than 18 to vote, if they chose to.