My question is whether they were stamped, printed, or marked automatically with Dominion voting machines (Yes, they have that capability). Also, if it was done by an automated process, which it appears to have been, I wonder what they're reasoning was for not filling in a few other democrat bubbles down ballot, to make it seem a little less obvious?
And then we have the whole Dominion/Hammer & Scorecard vote switching digitally. Perhaps the printed ballots were made to cover the added digital votes?
Also, if it was done by an automated process, which it appears to have been, I wonder what they're reasoning was for not filling in a few other democrat bubbles down ballot, to make it seem a little less obvious?
Filling out down ballot elections might make fraud even more obvious because you're subdividing and subdividing the population more and more and more the more races you vote in. Makes it much easier to accidentally have extreme voter overcounts in some elections because you added too many fake ballots to one election.
Does anybody know if you have to fold a Georgia mail-in ballot to fit it into the envelope? I've never seen what a Georgia mail-in ballot actually looks like and the envelop that comes with it. Maybe someone this site mailed their ballot in and knows. If it turns out the only way to fit the ballot is to fold it, then the lack of a crease is an undeniable legal issue.
That's make total sense to me. Ballots usually have tons of other elections, propositions, etc. on them. Every ballot I've ever seen has been ridiculously oversized to the point it can't possible fit into an envelope without folding it.
Even just a normal piece of paper (8.5'' X 11'') is not something you can fit in an envelope without folding. There's no way Georgia's ballot would fit without folding.
Edit: And in case you are unaware, even if the ballot only had one thing on it, it would still be a full-sized piece of paper. Of course for a general election, there would be tons of things on the ballot, and probably several pages. But I'm just pointing that out. I have voted for miscellaneous elections with only one issue on the ballot. It's still a full-sized piece of paper, not a little index card.
My question is whether they were stamped, printed, or marked automatically with Dominion voting machines (Yes, they have that capability). Also, if it was done by an automated process, which it appears to have been, I wonder what they're reasoning was for not filling in a few other democrat bubbles down ballot, to make it seem a little less obvious?
And then we have the whole Dominion/Hammer & Scorecard vote switching digitally. Perhaps the printed ballots were made to cover the added digital votes?
Filling out down ballot elections might make fraud even more obvious because you're subdividing and subdividing the population more and more and more the more races you vote in. Makes it much easier to accidentally have extreme voter overcounts in some elections because you added too many fake ballots to one election.
Agreed. But at least the senate or governor in relevant states? But yeah, you're right about all those other non-state-wide races.
Does anybody know if you have to fold a Georgia mail-in ballot to fit it into the envelope? I've never seen what a Georgia mail-in ballot actually looks like and the envelop that comes with it. Maybe someone this site mailed their ballot in and knows. If it turns out the only way to fit the ballot is to fold it, then the lack of a crease is an undeniable legal issue.
I have voted in Washington for years and yes, you have to fold. I can't imagine any state that would send people 8.5'' X 11'' return envelopes.
9x14
That's make total sense to me. Ballots usually have tons of other elections, propositions, etc. on them. Every ballot I've ever seen has been ridiculously oversized to the point it can't possible fit into an envelope without folding it.
Even just a normal piece of paper (8.5'' X 11'') is not something you can fit in an envelope without folding. There's no way Georgia's ballot would fit without folding.
Edit: And in case you are unaware, even if the ballot only had one thing on it, it would still be a full-sized piece of paper. Of course for a general election, there would be tons of things on the ballot, and probably several pages. But I'm just pointing that out. I have voted for miscellaneous elections with only one issue on the ballot. It's still a full-sized piece of paper, not a little index card.
8.5" x 17"
You mean like with a Sharpie?
No, the Dominion machines. Part of the documentation said they can reproduce a ballot.
Sorry, my poor attempt at sarcasm, in deference to the Bleachbit scandal.