Are you really that fucking stupid? It's bver arguing WE DON'T NEED voter I.D and me saying we do.
No.
It's me answering your question about using voter ID laws to skew the results.
Try to follow the thread.
I even quoted what you said so that you wouldn't get lost.
And as to the rest, student I.D is NOT GOVT ISSUED I.D. Gun permits are. So that was a really bad Strawman on your part. Like really bad, stupid and you need to do much better.
Also, a student at a school needs to change their voter registry. All the weird state rules and all that. It's all about residency. No different Than in Canada when they ask my address and proof of it it's to ensure I am voting in the correct riding.
It really isn't complicated. Or really that political. It's basic common sense.
Might want to try to get yourself s ome
My reply wasn't about GOVT ISSUED ID.
It was about using Voter ID laws to skew the voting pool.
You know, the thing I quoted so you wouldn't get confused
I am not going to be around - (lots to do before the 21st, obviously) - so I'll walk you through it.
You mentioned the Canadian system and implied you thought it was good.
So when I vote in Canada I am required to bring photo I.D., my voter card, and proof of address. Why is this so onerous? It's a very simple thing to produce. They give you multiple options to use.
Why would only producing it once be sufficient? Do you think the poll workers remember every voter every 2 and 4 years?
That's ridiculous. Are you saying the basic requirements of pretty much every Western nation are to stringent for only the USA?
I responded that the Canadian system wasn't designed to try and use ID to skew the vote.
Canada isn't using Voter ID to try and skew the vote, though.
Try a simple thought exercise.
"They give you multiple options to use."
(They even let you vote without ID here in Canada.
https://www.elections.ca/content.aspx?section=vot&dir=ids&document=index&lang=e)
What if they didn't?
What if they were very careful to restrict the options you could use?
I pointed out that one of the things you explicitly called out as a good thing in the Canadian system ("They give you multiple options to use") was at the heart of the issue.
You then feigned shock and ignorance about that being possible.
How does it skew the vote? Are you trying to say certain demographics are Incapable of presenting I.D? Other nations don't. Please explain.
I then explained that this is done by selectively targeting specific IDs.
Now, since then in the thread you have pointed out that you actually
don't like the Canadian system, since it offers too many options to identify yourself, including non-government IDs.
So I freely admit that I was wrong to take your example of the Canadian system and its multiple options as praise and not criticism.