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Author Message
25 new of 594 responses total.
richard
response 565 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 17:44 UTC 2003

I have entered item #221 about Johnny Cash.  I listened to Johnny Cash's music
all my life.  And no its not sad really, Johnny had been sick for a long time
and I don't doubt he was ready to go, since June had died.  The Man in Black
lived a full life.  People used to say that if God had a voice, a singing
voice, it would be the deep soulful voice of Johnny.  His was a voice that
haunts...
lynne
response 566 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 20:47 UTC 2003

IBB now all I'm going to remember about Johnny Cash is that cover he did of
the NIN song 'Hurt'.  It irritated me mightily (largely because they played
it literally once every 30 min on Boston stations.)
happyboy
response 567 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 12 20:50 UTC 2003

*huggles*
jaklumen
response 568 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 13 00:30 UTC 2003

John Ritter died?  How sad.  No more voice of Clifford, either.
scott
response 569 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 16 13:20 UTC 2003

Comcast internet is down - at least there's still Grexmodems.
other
response 570 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 17 04:10 UTC 2003

http://www.michigandaily.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2003/09/16/3f6697dc60608
michaela
response 571 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 17 10:04 UTC 2003

Re #570 - oh wow... that's terrible. :(
vidar
response 572 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 17 12:01 UTC 2003

IBB it seems that forbidden love is the only kind I fall into.

IABB I am having difficulty finding the balance between doing what is 
honorable and doing what is healthy for me.
slynne
response 573 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 00:54 UTC 2003

IBB I ate something that produced some kind of supernatural poo that 
has clogged my toilet beyond any plunging. 
tod
response 574 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 03:28 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

lynne
response 575 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 18 14:09 UTC 2003

IBB I've entered the time zone where I should be hearing from Amgen about an
interview.  Nothing yet, and I'm very antsy--I really, really would like to 
work there.
tpryan
response 576 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 20 16:10 UTC 2003

        I'm being bombarded by bunch of virus email on my 
earthlink account.  
        Glad that mail here is clear.
jaklumen
response 577 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 20 22:09 UTC 2003

A friend of mine is suffering, and there is little to nothing I can do 
to help.  As I have put it, I cannot reach out to one posturing like 
an armadillo.
russ
response 578 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 21 15:08 UTC 2003

IBB it looks like the IEEE, driven by interests such as Diebold,
is about to ram through an endorsement of un-auditable,
un-accountable electronic voting systems.

http://www.eff.org/Activism/E-voting/IEEE/
scott
response 579 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 21 17:35 UTC 2003

Ick.  The current companies in electronic voting machines are definitely
worrisome.
gelinas
response 580 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 03:30 UTC 2003

IBB another coach has to learn how to explain a failure that isn't really his.
gull
response 581 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 14:21 UTC 2003

It's especially worrisome given stuff like this:
http://www.ohiocitizen.org/moneypolitics/2003/controversy.htm

'Columbus - The head of a company vying to sell voting machines in Ohio
told Republicans in a recent fund-raising letter that he is "committed
to helping Ohio deliver its electoral votes to the president next year."

'The Aug. 14 letter from Walden O'Dell, chief executive of Diebold Inc.
- who has become active in the re-election effort of President Bush -
prompted Democrats this week to question the propriety of allowing
O'Dell's company to calculate votes in the 2004 presidential election.'
tod
response 582 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 15:28 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

gelinas
response 583 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 15:50 UTC 2003

No, because the Bible-makers won't be in any special position to falsify the
results of the election.  Diebold *is* in such a position because, as has been
reported elsewehere, their vote-counting software cannot be audited: there
is no way to know that the vote it counts is the vote the voter cast.  Maybe
someone _else_ should read "The Stainless Rat for President."
tod
response 584 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 17:27 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

katie
response 585 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 17:47 UTC 2003

My friend was kicked out of the "Ann Arbor Gospel Chorale" because of
his sexual orientation.
tod
response 586 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 18:00 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 587 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 18:16 UTC 2003

Re #585: people can be really vicious. Doesn't sound "Christian" to me. 
tod
response 588 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 18:53 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

scg
response 589 of 594: Mark Unseen   Sep 23 20:25 UTC 2003

Electronic voting machines should be pretty easy to test beforehand --
simulate lots of elections, keep very close track of how many votes were cast
for which candidates, and audit the results.  My understanding is that the
Diebold machines aren't quite so easy to test, as part of the Diebold election
program involves Diebold having remote access to the voting machines while
the election is going on, so they could at least in theory be issued commands
during the real election that wouldn't have been issued to them during the
tests.

That said, there are plenty of rich and/or influential people who make
promises to deliver a state to a certain candidate, generally through the use
of endorsements or fundraising, who have no control over the voting process.
Sometimes such people actually succeed.  Sometimes they fail (John Engler's
promises to deliver the Michigan Republican Primary to George Bush in 2000,
for example).  While Mr. Diebold is in an interesting position to fulfill his
promises through sinister means, I don't think we can conclude that his intent
is to do so.  On the other hand, the lack of an audit trail also opens up lots
of possibilities of fraud by local election officials.  Reset the machine in
the middle of the day, input the right number of votes to match the number
of voters who came through that morning, and you won't have any risk of
somebody noting that more ballots were used than counted, or of your ballot
boxes being found floating in the Bay (San Francisco, a few years ago).

It seems to me that all the usability of the touch screen voting machines
(ignoring that they're not actually all that easy to use) could be gotten
along with an audit trail, by having the voting machines print out a completed
ballot that could be looked over and placed in a ballot box, after each voter
finished voting.  If nobody was suspicious of the results, the counting could
be done easilly via the machine's internal counting features.  If the results
looked wrong, or somebody wanted to challenge them, a handcount of paper would
still be possible.  If what was being printed on the paper was different than
what was being entered into the voting machines, presumably somebody would
notice.
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