@mewmew @matrix @djsumdog @sjw
While I'm very strongly for voter ID requirements at the same time I do recognize the real reason people are against them, and its simple.. IDs cost money, time and effort to get. So the poor and homeless are less likely to be able to vote. This tends to effect minority communities more strongly than others.
The solution in my mind is simple. Make IDs free and offer better services for people to go through the hoops needed to obtain them, but doing away with vote IDs all together seems like the wrong way to go.
I agree though, letting people who are not citizens vote is not the motive in the least.
@mewmew @matrix @sjw @freemo but let's face it, this isn't Europe. If you're a member of the working poor, in most of America, you're driving. You need an ID to buy alcohol, apply for a lot of state benefits .. one of the services a lot of homeless and day centers provide is helping people get their IDs (the one in my home town has an Social Security person come in weekly to help people; she even got her own office). I don't think ID is as big a barrier today as before.
It isnt just the "working poor" who has a right to vote, the non-working poor does too. also while most/many of the working poor do have an ID there is a huge portion that dont. Especially in cities there are HUGE numbers of people with no drivers license or ID who work under the table.
Well thats not an argument against IDs its an argument for ensuring any ID law is inclusive of all types of photo ID, and as I said we need to make these free and accessible to make it work, which these laws never do. So while I support the laws in theory there must be other changes that happen first.
@mewmew @matrix @sjw @jeder @freemo Because all Europeans (at least in EU member states) have IDs and they also function as visas. American can't even agree to have citizen identification numbers (SSN should have never been used to identify people. The IRS just didn't want to track their own Tax IDs .. also Tax IDs in most other countries are not used as secrets).
If you are homeless it most absolutely is... sure more people can afford it, some can not and those who cant still have a legal right to be able to vote.
Waiting in line isnt really the big issue in terms of hardship. The issue is homeless and many poor don't have their birth certificates, it is a long drawn out process to get that fixed and can cost quite a bit.
My close friend is a citizen nad has a technical issue on her birth certificate where it has teh wrong name, would cost her over 1000$ to fix it. Not that she is typical. But there are issues beyond a 10$ fee as well for some.
Putting aside for a second that there is no evidence that any such "massive fraud" exists, more importantly, I support ID laws, bu you need to fix the underlying issue first.. Its pretty simple, make IDs free and provide better assistance for people who need to obtain IDs and have difficulty. If you do that then I see no issue having ID laws.
Yes, we want all US citizens who have a right to vote to be able to exercise that right. If you want to change that, then make an amendment to the constitution, good luck passing it.
I for one would never support a law that seeks to exclude anyone with a legal right to vote from being able to do so, no matter how trivial.
@mewmew @matrix @sjw I think it goes back what we learned about Jim Crow era stuff, but that stuff doesn't apply today.
Having minimum requirements for guaranteeing 1-man-1-vote and citizenship for voting rights seems very reasonable. I mean it doesn't truly matter; our voting system in non-representative and beyond fucked up, but that's the basic idea.
I also don't understand why peeps are against' border security. What's the point of passports if you can't at least try to secure your State?