GasBandit
Staff member
So if we subsidized the $10 to get an ID, you'd have no objection to requiring a photo ID to vote?[DOUBLEPOST=1342109547][/DOUBLEPOST]Even that aside, there's got to be a limit here. The price of gas to go to the polls, the personal cost of having to take time off work to vote, all these things cost money and impact the poor more than the rich, but you have to do them to vote. Must a naked man be allowed to vote, because clothes cost money, so requiring him to buy clothes is a poll tax?I don't disagree that the state can abridge your right to vote. And really the argument of whether or not it is a fundamental right to be able to vote is a bit beside the point, because there is one place where it is explicity stated that it can't be abridged. In a poll tax. If the voter ID system costs money to vote ,it's a poll tax.
And I know you think that the 10-20$ that a voter ID is insignificant. But that's pretty much exactly the cost the old poll taxes were that started these things. Really the argument is "How is this NOT a poll tax?" It's the same amount of money. It disproportionately affects certain groups.
The thing is, based on your repeated statements, I think that you don't really have a problem with a poll tax. Which is a valid opinion.
Except that's it's unconstitutional.