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Stop voter fraud: Start with the lawyers Posted: October 21, 2004 1:00 a.m. Eastern By Craige McMillan
© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com
New York Observer There aren't many people I'd like to see run through Saddam's infamous plastic shredders, beyond perhaps the terrorists themselves. I might, however, make an exception for Kerry-Edwards' merry band of lawyerly election thieves the ones now assembling in the shadows of Nov. 2 and beyond.
As Mark Pulliam's piece on the Florida 2000 election aftermath makes clear, Al Gore's legal team, acting in concert with a corrupt, Democratic Party-controlled Florida judiciary, very nearly stole the 2000 presidential election:
The Constitution assigns lawyers no role in elections not one beyond their own measly little ballot. It never assigned to them the "hanging chads" from an army of ballot spoilers. Nor does it assign to them the task of deciding if elections are fair or free. That task is left to state legislatures and chief executives, whose recurring elections make them closest to the will of the people, provided it can be heard over the shrieks of lawyers chasing ambulances, channeling dead malpractice plaintiffs or ascertaining the will of cemetery-bound Chicago voters. As their website makes clear, Kerry-Edwards have embarked on an ambitious plan to "educate" voters at the polling places on how the equipment and process works. (Here, ma'am, you just touch this little box on the screen marked "Kerry-Edwards.") This is what in Democrats' minds seems to pass for democracy: busloads of newly registered voters driven from precinct-to-precinct by felons, where at each stop an officer of the court (lawyer) instructs them on voting. Illegals, felons, potheads and anarchists tricked into registering while signing phony cannabis-legalization initiatives. This is the "democracy" of the left the one George Soros has dumped his millions of ill-gotten currency speculation gains into, and the one America's Hollywood elites seem to think the nation needs to "re-establish its direction." So what is the cost to lawyers for breaking the law? Mr. Pulliam, himself an attorney, tells us:
Thomas Jefferson warned us that violence would at times be necessary to ensure that the tree of liberty remains well-watered. By sitting as both advocates and arbitrators, lawyers have stacked the deck against both the legislative and executive branches of government. If the abuses continue, we may have reached the point that Jefferson foretold. http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=41028 Craige McMillan is a commentator for WorldNetDaily. |