Voting Booths and Slot Machines
Who put the mafia in charge of U.S. elections?

You have probably heard every voting fraud story already:

  • Early 2000 Florida election calls made house wives not vote.
  • Gore doesn't count absentee military ballots.
  • Bush fakes absentee military ballots.
  • Gore's chad is dimpled.
  • Bush's chad is pregnant.
  • Pat Buchanan stole Lieberman's butterfly ballot votes.

  • You probably even know about South Dakota Indian Reservations
    and $12,867 bribes for Democrat votes.1

  • You may have even heard how thousands of blacks were denied
    a vote because their name was similar to a felon's name.2

  • How about Dallas, where companies get paid to personally
    assist absentee ballots make their way in, whether you vote or not?3

    Well, you may still be missing the best story of all:


    Pull the voting machine arm,

    and you might win your candidate,
    or maybe not!

    Why was the mafia put in charge of U.S. elections?
    Electronic voting machines are made in New Jersey,
    in same place they make slot machines! it gets worse.

  • The Real Scandal Is the Voting Machines Themselves - NY Press
  • Firm admits errors in counting votes for Hawaii, Venezuela - AP
    "Dozens of protesters have chanted "Gringos get out!" at ES&S technicians working in Venezuela's election offices"
  • Reno's camp may sue over touch screens used in Florida primary - Knight Ridder Newspapers
  • Santa Clara County postpones buying electronic voting booths - Mercury News
  • If You Want To Win An Election, Just Control The Voting Machines - CommonDreams
  • See many more articles concerning voting machines on newsmine.org!

    This is just the beginning, the national news is ignoring hundreds of incidents of locally detected fraud,
    and national voting fraud on a level never thought possible.

    Take a look into an investigative
    documentary on where your votes really go:

    Top executives of the election companies responsible for the Florida Vote Snafu have been convicted of multiple election-rigging felonies, the show charges, and “look more like extras on the TV series The Sopranos than people we’ve entrusted with the sacred American right to vote,” snorts producer Daniel Hopsicker. “The big question, of course, is, ‘what happened in Florida? We found the answer in New Jersey.”


    The scariest part of this, in 2002 elections aren't
    the names on the ballot, which all look the same, a wash with a big money;
    Its the dictatorial laws which are all over the ballots this year

    States like Maryland, which have had a Democrat Governor since 1969,
    all of a sudden get Ehrlich, a Republican Governor.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2342-2003Feb25.html
    Ehrlich Applies Pressure for Slots
    By Craig Whitlock Wednesday, February 26, 2003; Page A01
    "Maryland Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. yesterday threatened to slash the state budget unless lawmakers legalize slot machines in the next few weeks..."

    1
    http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/articles/2002/10/18/news/local/news03.txt
    $12,000 paid to person in voter fraud probe
    By AP and Journal Staff

    The South Dakota Democratic Party reportedly paid the person at the center of a voter fraud investigation more than $12,000 in the last three months.

    The news marks the latest development in a widening controversy over voter registration and absentee ballots in and around American Indian reservations in South Dakota.

    2
    http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/ptech/01/24/unregulated.databases.idg/index.html
    Unregulated databases hold personal data
    January 24, 2002 Posted: 8:50 a.m. EST (1350 GMT)
    By Jennifer Disabatino

    (IDG) -- In the 2000 presidential election, Florida disqualified thousands of voters because a computerized database search identified them as felons who were ineligible to participate in the election.

    Many of those voters weren't, in fact, felons. They had been charged with misdemeanor crimes and should have been eligible to vote.

    For more information on this, Greg Palast does good research.

    3
    http://www.dallasobserver.com/issues/2001-08-30/feature.html/1/index.html
    Originally published by Dallas Observer Aug 30, 2001

    Hey, Mr. Zillionaire Developer, got a big public project you want to sell? Black Dallas has the votes you need--dirt cheap.
    By Jim Schutze

    Here's an offer you can't refuse: For less than $12,000 paid to the right people, you can buy the early and absentee ballot vote in eight precincts in Southern Dallas--just enough votes, it turns out, to win you a $125 million taxpayer subsidy for your new sports arena or a $246 million city bond issue for your next big public-works construction job.


    Return to Corporate Welfare