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Author Topic: *Newsweek/SLATE: ME/NV/IA Voter Frauds were FALSE FLAGS to 'KILL THE CAUCUSES!"  (Read 2150 times)
Dig
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« on: February 15, 2012, 01:38:08 PM »

SLATE Magazine has exposed the true agenda of the obvious fraud in the Iowa, Nevada and the Maine caucuses...

BILDERBERG IS TIRED OF ALL THE ENERGY IT TAKES TO FIX 50 SEPARATE STATE PRIMARIES SO THEY ARE FALSE FLAGGING THE CAUCUS STATES WITH OVERT VOTER FRAUD AND SHADY DEALINGS WITH ELECTORAL OFFICIALS THAT END UP RESIGNING IN SHAME.

SLATE EXPOSES THE TRUE REASON FOR THESE FALSE FLAG OPERATIONS...

THE ELITE NEED TO TAKE OUT ALL OF THE LOCAL ELECTORAL PROCESSES WHICH SEPARATED THE UNITED STATES FROM EVERY OTHER COUNTRY WHERE VOTING IS DONE QUICK WITH TOTAL CENTRAL CONTROL AND ZERO POWER TO LOCAL TERRITORIES.

ROTHSCHILDS HAVE BEEN PUSHING THIS FOR A DECADE IN WHAT THEY CALL 'DIRECT DEMOCRACY' WHICH WILL END THE POWER TO LOCAL ELECTORATES AND ALLOW OVERSEAS MANIPULATION OF OUR ELECTIONS WITH ZERO PAPERTRAIL AND ZERO EVIDENCE AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC.

ALL OF THE STATES SO FAR IN THE gop 2012 PRIMARY HAVE HAD FRAUD, BUT THE MEDIA IS BEING PAID TO COVER UP THE 10X GREATER FRAUD IN FLORIDA AND SOUTH CAROLINA (ELECTRONIC VOTING STATES) WHILE EXPLOITING THE CAUCUS STATES VOTER FRAUD TO FEED THE ANTI-AMERICAN NARRATIVE THAT SERVES THE OFFSHORE BANKSTERS' INTERESTS.

HERE IS THE SLATE ARTICLE WHICH EXPOSES IT, EVEN THOUGH THEY EXPOSE IT UNINTENTIONALLY, YOU CAN PLAINLY SEE THEY ARE PUSHING THE BILDERBERG NARRATIVES:



SLATE: Bilderberg Using Their Voter Fraud To "Kill the Caucuses!"
BILDERBERG NARRATIVE: "Maine, Nevada, and Iowa were embarrassing. It’s time to make primaries the rule."


http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2012/02/congress_should_kill_the_republican_and_democratic_state_caucuses_and_mandate_primaries_instead_.html
By Richard L. Hasen|Posted Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2012, at 2:34 PM ET

In the last few weeks, the Keystone Kops have taken over the Republican presidential caucuses.  First Mitt Romney was declared the winner of the Iowa caucuses by a scant eight votes, and then Republican Party officials in Iowa said that there were so many local reporting problems that a winner could not be declared even though Rick Santorum was 34 votes ahead. Oops, they declared Santorum the winner anyway. In Nevada, Republican officials decided to hold a special late-night session of their Saturday caucus to accommodate Orthodox Jews and Seventh-day Adventists.  This caused an uproar when Ron Paul supporters objected to requiring the late-comers to sign a statement that their religious obligations prevented earlier attendance, saying that people who had to work during the day should have the right to vote at the late-night caucus, too.  Adding to the tumult, it took election officials in one Nevada county an extra day to count a small number of votes and deal with a “trouble box” of disputed ballots. Now comes news from Maine that Mitt Romney may not have won the Maine caucuses by 200 votes as initially reported, because some ballots have gone uncounted.

All of this is an embarrassment for the GOP, but it’s not a Republican problem. Four years ago, I wrote a Slate column describing the problems with the Democratic caucuses as Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama battled for their party’s nomination: That time around, in the Iowa caucuses voters had no right to cast a secret ballot; and in the Nevada caucuses rural votes counted more than urban ones. Hillary Clinton got more popular votes in the state than Barack Obama did, but got 12 delegates to Obama’s 13. Then came Texas-sixed problems with that state’s hybrid primary-caucus: long lines, unclear rules, the tailing of an election official to a police station when she took home caucus sign-in sheets to “correct” them, and even reports of three physical confrontations at Dallas caucus sites. Clinton got more votes in the primary, but Obama got more delegates because he got more votes in the caucuses.

None of this should actually be a surprise. This country has a hard enough time with competently run elections when professional election administrators are in charge.  Caucuses are run by political party volunteers once every four years, without the normal safeguards (for example, while the GOP has supported voter identification laws, they were not required for the Republican Party caucuses).  Without adequate procedures for ensuring that votes are properly cast, counted, and audited, a drumbeat of mistakes is inevitable.
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Caucuses hark back to an earlier era, when they were a way for the parties to organize and provided a space for small-scale deliberations about which candidate deserved support. A deliberative process seemed especially appropriate in Iowa, where voters get to see the candidates up close and serve as proxies (supposedly) for the rest of us.

But none of these rationales any longer make sense.  Parties organize more effectively through conventions, voter registration drives, and get-out-the-vote efforts than by serving as amateur vote-counters twice a decade.  Caucuses are now a place for aggregating votes, not for real deliberation.  Mostly people just come and vote. In fact NPR’s Bryan Naylor reports that Iowa would like to use voting machines in the next round of caucuses—it’s just that they’re worried that New Hampshire, with its first-in-the-nation primary, will squawk.
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« Reply #1 on: February 15, 2012, 04:24:51 PM »

Wouldn't surprise me a bit if that wasn't true! They want everyone on CHEATING DIEBOLD ELECTRONIC MACHINES, so they can steal future elections out of the public eye. These caucuses make it easier to spot cheating, and Bilderberg boyz just don't like their deeds being exposed. They prefer to work behind the scenes in the dark, which is what every SCUMBAG LOWLIFE OPERATES!

WELL, SORRY, BILDERBERG AND ALL THE OTHER MINIONS WHO AID AND ABET THEM. YOUR LIES AND DECEIT ARE PUBLIC, AND THERE IS NO GOING BACK NOW!


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The Great Deception - Forum/Library - My Research
http://z4.invisionfree.com/The_Great_Deception/index.php?showforum=110
Dig
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« Reply #2 on: February 15, 2012, 10:31:09 PM »

ALERT!

NEWSWEEK'S DAILY BEAST IS USING THE VOTER FRAUDS TO SABOTAGE US ELECTORAL/CAUCUS SYSTEMS IN FAVOR OF GLOBALIST REMOTE CONTROLLED FAKE ELECTRONIC VOTING MACHINES WHICH WILL END THE UNITED STATES ENTIRE REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT SYSTEM FOREVER!

THIS IS DECADE OLD DOCUMENTED BILDERBERG PLAN EXPOUSED BY LYNN DE ROTHSCHILD ON AT LEAST 100 SEPARATE OCCASSIONS AND WHICH HAS THE BACKING OF BILLIONAIRE FALSE FLAG PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGNER JOHN HUNTSMAN, JUNIOR


NEWSWEEK: Maine, Iowa, Nevada Caucus Mishaps Were Required to End Representative Government in the United States
These False Flag Operations Allow People to be Tricked Into Accepting Rothschild's Electronic System to Stop Futue 'Ron Paul' Candidates Whom Bilderberg Does Not Control

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/02/15/maine-iowa-caucus-mishaps-prove-it-s-time-for-a-better-system.html
by John Avlon Feb 15, 2012 11:11 AM EST

It’s déjà vu as missing precincts mean Mitt Romney may not have won Maine after all. This year’s mistaken outcomes are not surprising when you consider how flawed the entire caucus system is. There’s got to be a better way, writes John Avlon.

Romney was named the narrow winner in Maine on Saturday over Ron Paul—gaining him a triumphant top-of-the-fold photo in the Sunday New York Times—but it now appears that several counties that held caucuses were not calculated in the “final” tally. According to the Bangor Daily News, there is growing pressure on the state GOP to reassess the votes and at least potentially declare a new winner.

There’s got to be a better way to pick a presidential nominee.

The high-stakes nature of each early caucus state—giving the initially declared winner momentum, media attention, and money—makes these apparently rampant bureaucratic errors unacceptable.

In addition, the caucus system is fundamentally unrepresentative, disproportionately dominated by semiorganized bands of activists, and leads to low turnout.

Even after the endless media hype surrounding the GOP primary contests this year, turnout was essentially flat in the Iowa caucuses between 2008 and 2012, despite the absence of a Democratic contest to siphon off participants. Turnout was dramatically down in caucuses in Nevada, Minnesota, and Colorado. In Maine, fewer than 6,000 voters bothered to participate—roughly 2 percent of the registered Republicans in the state. Overall, caucus turnout is averaging about 10 percent of registered Republicans in each state.

Moreover, those 10 percent who do turn out tend to be the most ideological and hyperpartisan—meaning that the winner of a caucus is increasingly a bad barometer of who might actually carry the state in a general election by being able to win over independents and centrist swing voters.

Primaries inspire a much higher turnout—and a more representative sample of the state electorate if it is an open primary—at least in part because of the minimized hassle factor. You get a secret ballot and swing by your polling station at any time on Election Day—or participate in early voting where it is available, or cast your ballot absentee. After all, unless you’re a political consultant, the point is to have as many people vote as possible, right?

“It is time to end the caucus system,” says Richard L. Hasen, professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, who writes the Election Law blog. “It has outlived its usefulness, and it is run by amateurs. Turnout is low, and they are no longer the site for meaningful deliberation.”

Look, I love the romantic notion that comes with the caucuses—neighbors meeting town-hall style in gyms, firehouses, and living rooms, making the case for the candidate they like best, engaging in not just civic participation, but civic persuasion. It is grassroots democracy at its best, Norman Rockwell–style.

But that romantic vision is colliding with reality, and the results are both ugly and impactful. At the very least, we need a digital means of transmitting the votes from each caucus precinct to the state GOP headquarters on election night, minimizing human error. It is nothing short of insane that the vote total in eight Iowa caucus precincts will never be known because they have been lost.

“The dog ate my homework” doesn’t work in second grade—it shouldn’t work when picking a president in the 21st century.

But some experts are calling for more wholesale reform.

“It is time to end the caucus system,” says Richard L. Hasen, professor of law and political science at UC Irvine, who writes the Election Law Blog. “It has outlived its usefulness, and it is run by amateurs. Turnout is low, and they are no longer the site for meaningful deliberation.”

The Iowa and Maine mistakes this time only add credibility to the call, and Professor Hasen is quick to point out that problems dogged the 2008 caucuses as well.

In essence, the hyperlocalized nature leads to idiosyncratic rules and combined with human error end up undercutting the basic promise of one man/one vote.

It also compounds the problem of polarization by making it more difficult for a center-right candidate to rise in the early states, because they spend months auditioning before an Iowa caucus electorate that is 88 percent conservative and 60 percent evangelical—in a state where registered independents outnumber Republicans or Democrats.

In addition, the current compact calendar makes it more difficult for candidates to adjust for caucus mistakes. In 1980 Ronald Reagan won 49.6 percent of the New Hampshire primary vote after losing the Iowa caucus to George H.W. Bush in large part because he had a month to regroup and make his case to local voters. Now there is just a week between the two, and Mitt Romney was seen as the winner going into the Granite State, despite the small fact that it wasn’t true.

We are way overdue for fundamental election reform in America. Open primaries and redistricting reform—currently being screwed up in a state near you—would be important steps in healing the harsh but artificial polarization of American politics. We should also have a serious civic conversation about more wholesale reformation of the presidential primary process, such as having 10 states—representing different regions and populations—vote one month apart for five months, until a nominee is picked. This might inspire better general-election candidates to make the calculated risk that comes with running for president.

Likewise, we should take a good look at general-election reforms like the Fair Elections Act proposal that would lead to a national popular vote, removing the archaic process of the Electoral College. These are just a few ideas that deserve a hearing.

The goal we should all be able to agree upon is increased participation and a more open process that produces more representative candidates. But the two parties often stubbornly stand in the way of reforms for no better reason than this is the way it has always been done. The status quo has reflexive defenders, but these rules were made by men and women, and they can be replaced when they have lived past their logic or usefulness. At the very least, the caucuses have been put on notice.

John Avlon is senior columnist for Newsweek and The Daily Beast. He coedited the new anthology Deadline Artists: America’s Greatest Newspaper Columns and is the author of Independent Nation: How Centrists Can Change American Politics as well as Wingnuts: How the Lunatic Fringe Is Hijacking America, published by BeastBooks. Previously, he served as chief speechwriter for New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and was a columnist and associate editor for the New York Sun.  He is a CNN contributor.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #3 on: February 15, 2012, 10:41:50 PM »

Newspeek is calling for the end of the Republic. A call for direct democracy is anarchy. We don't need a uniformed voting system. Each individual State, with it's own rules and regulations shows at it's very core what states rights look like. If it weren't for the Caucus it would have been nearly impossible to show vote tampering and election fraud.
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