Subj : Cleaning Registrations Up To : ALAN IANSON From : Mike Powell Date : Thu Aug 29 2024 11:14:00 > > Projects to remove deceased (and moved away) voters are often blocked by > > Democrats. > That is regular maintenance, or at least it should be. They should be but Democrats don't like them so they usually are not. > > In the example above, the project AG Bashear blocked was attempting to > > notify voters, before removing them, that they needed to update their > > information. He blocked it anyway even though, in past, the state (under > > Democrat control) had removed people *before* notifying them. > There is no need to notify dead people, go ahead and remove them. > It is OK to keep addresses and what not current, but living voters should not > be removed. In the USA, if a voter MOVES they are REQUIRED to re-register because they are likely no longer in the same district, and especially if they move out-of-state. If they do not re-register, it is not the government's fault but their own fault for not following directions. Voting in a district that is not your own is *ILLEGAL*. The only way you can do so legally is if you notify the poll workers so they can give you a very restricted ballot where the only race you can vote in is for President -- and that may not be legal in every state. That is why it is important to attempt to notify and remove people who might still be alive but who have stopped voting for a specified period. They could be dead, they could be moved-away, or they could just not be exercising their rights. Notification allows them to verify that they are still where they say they are and still want to remain registered. If people followed the reqirements to re-register, there'd be no need for any of that. * SLMR 2.1a * "High as a kite, everybody! Goofballs!!"-Chief Wiggum --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) .