
Originally Posted by
drone
Large scale fraud through sketchy electronic voting machines? That's the real way to steal an election.
Don't get me started. Every single voting machine should use open source code that our brightest geeks can inspect. Since the introduction of electronic, paperless voting, there has been a real and measurable shift in voting outcomes, which historically correlated pretty closely with exit polls. Since the introduction of these voting machines, reputable exit polls no longer track with outcomes. Instead, they shift Republican, hence the term "redshift." Go figure. The paper I linked earlier goes pretty deep into the statistical math, but here's a (somewhat hysterical, but plain-English) article. (I suppose you could make the argument that voters began lying in exit polls around the time these machines were introduced, and they just happened to start lying in the small percentage required to change election outcomes. I would find such an argument a bit iffy.)
Unadjusted exit polls are the gold standard in uncovering election fraud. Ohio’s 2010 unadjusted election exit poll results showed incumbent Governor Strickland defeating John Kasich by 50.1% to 47.4% of the vote. However, when Kasich won the actual vote on the voting machines provided and serviced by private Republican-connected vendors, then the exit pollsters adjusted the exit poll numbers to match the machine vote count.
Overwhelmingly, the adjustments are red, or Republican, in terms of a beneficial shift in what voters are saying when they exit the polls and what the Republican-connected voting equipment company machines are reporting.
Despite public pressure for universal automatic voter registration and hand-counted paper ballots, the unverifiable electronic voting system remains intact in Ohio and proliferates throughout the nation.
The source code for these machines is not available for public scrutiny. Nor is there a reliable paper trail provided individual voters or independent monitors.
For further reading, here's a link to a spreadsheet by a mathematician who has been playing with the numbers. Of interest to statisticians such as @CountArach.
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