Mar 30
Mar 28
Since our founding fathers had declared freedom for the US, our country has had growing pains that should have caused anarchy and mayhem till the country was shattered and unrecoverable. Through civil and global wars, our country has stood the test of time for over two centuries. One of the things that have made this country great is its ability to shape laws over time to reflect social norms, unforeseen subject matter, and technology; this ability to adapt to modern times has allowed our country to thrive through the best and worst times throughout our history.
But with the great ideas that the US has been built upon, there are still great injustices, mass corruption, and lethargic participation from the majority of Americans. We do not have to continue down this path, and I feel that the time has come to re-examine our election process and rights some wrongs that have come into play over the years. I started a thread in the Soap Box of ArsTechnica to flush out some ideas and the results below are a list of some items I think we can implement in our lifetime with hard work and a strong united voice.
Registration
There are a number of conflicting state laws that defines eligibility of its citizens to vote. From purging of voters off registration rolls to barring ex-felons to vote for life, we need a set of standard laws for the states to adhere to. I would also argue that any US citizen of voting age with a valid SSN should be eligible to vote. It could also be argued that the voting age be lowered to 16 (which unfortunately would require a Constitutional Amendment) since a lot of what is happening in the world will directly affect them and they have no voice. Maybe with the lowering of the voting age schools will focus a bit more on civics and our political landscape.
Debates
Debates for the highest seat of power have been somewhat of a farce. The audience is filtered or silenced. News reporters tend to ask soft or irrelevant questions. It’s time we conduct real Town Hall debates where the candidates are asked the tough questions and answer them beyond 30 second sound bites.
Vote by mail
Our elections have become more complex over time, and as it’s been proven in the past voters can be easily confused by a hard to follow ballot. I propose that for the Presidential Election we implement a secured paper ballot (example here), and have a federal agency and independent auditor overview the process. Open source optical ballot readers can verify the initial count, and then all ballots are hand counted. If there is a 0.05% deviation from the automated count and the hand count, steps would need to be taken to ensure that the election is valid.
Popular Vote
While the Electoral College is built into the constitution, some clever legislation called the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact has been circulating around the states and has become law in MD and NJ. The NPVIC keeps the EC intact, but they pledge their EC votes to the National Popular Vote winner.
Closed Primaries
The two-party system has stagnated ideas and has placed a stranglehold on compromise. While the two-party system can’t be banned why not force the Democrats and Republicans to choose their candidates without state interference. Other parties can do the same and they should submit their winners to the FEC no later than June 1. To get on the ballot you need more than 0.5% of eligible voters support, which should remove “Mickey Mouse” off the ballot.
Stage 1 Election
The winners of their parties are placed on a ballot with other parties that have. There should be a two week period to vote for your candidates though preferential voting (choose your top three candidates in order). My example ballot shows what that could look like.

The top two winners face off in the General Election.
Stage 2 Election - Top Two Run Off
The top two winners of the Stage 1 election face each other. The winner receives the majority National Popular Vote.
These are just some examples of solutions we can achieve to reform our election process.
Mar 23
So almost everyone has seen by now the 3AM ad that Hillary used to give the perception that she is ready by using fear politics. Well do you know that the girl in that ad is all grown up and is a precinct captain for the Obama campaign? Here is her “endorsement” ad for Obama:
Mar 22
I wonder if Hillary has pondered this equation. If she wins by some Super-delegate grab, she is likely to alienate the most dependable voting group in America, African-Americans because, let’s face it, she is now trying to win on the pillar of entitlement. She has not won in any bracket other than Super-delegates, and if the election is stolen, African-Americans will look at this moment as a coup for their support. Seriously the first serious African-American candidate to be in the lead, who has inspired millions, and if she takes that away, that is it. HRC would never win the nomination for the simple fact most African-Americans will not vote for her. Hell the repercussions could last many years, decades, or even longer.
Thinking of this makes me wonder if she cares one iota for the party. I mean hell she was a Republican before she switched. Will her friendship with McCain be great enough, and her dismay at Obama be strong enough, that she will risk the lifeblood of the party so she can lose or so she can hand the presidency to McCain?
The same thing would happen if Obama was trailing like her, many women would feel outraged and could not vote or split. No let me correct myself, if Obama was in the same position as Hillary is right now, he would be a footnote, he would be long forgotten already. But Hillary has the name brand recognition and the deep ties into many in the party, so they keep her campaign on life support when it should have been abandoned by now.
If Hillary continues to go on, she will lose, she will divide the party further, and she will taint any good she has done. At the beginning the battle was for who has the best policy and since SC it’s been how much damage the campaign can do to Obama. Negative campaigning may work for some people, but at at terrible cost. There is a reason Obama has inspired people, a reason that crosses even into some of the Republican party, the partisan bickering and endless swift-boating needs to stop. Hillary has ignored that, and her campaign has spread lies and innuendo (NATFA and the Obama garb pic) just to name two small instances. Why? Your lies will get caught, as they were in the debate and now in your WH papers.
If this was a positive campaign I would say rock on Hillary. Even if the stakes were against you work your best. But instead you have shown the worst side of politics, the desire to win at any cost. That is a shame, I once held you in high regard. I know no politician is perfect but you have sunk to the depths I don’t know you can ever recover from.
Mar 19
Mar 18
Obama gave an amazing speech today to help qwell the controversy of Pastor Wright, and hit on some many profound points that should move anyone who sees it or reads it.
The problem is for those that do not read it or see it, they will be greeted by a headline like this on CNN a couple minutes after it was delivered, and after a few minutes was replaced with a second image:
![]()

This positive speech by Obama, that lasted quite a while, has been reduced to a snippet of it that on the face seems very negative. Just another example that the Media is an antagonist for chaos. The tone of that headline in no way reflects the profound positive message that he delivered. Shame on you CNN!
Mar 14
It seems the media has a love affair with reporting some erroneous claims about Domestic spying. The AP and NY times continue to say that the program started after the September 11th attacks, but in reality the NSA approached Qwest and AT&T many months prior to 9/11. So not only does this lie of “terrorism surveillance program” come from the White House, but the media is just as complicit to publish incorrect information about the program.
So when you continue to hear the debates about FISA and how the Democrats in power right now refuse to go along with retroactive immunity (even though Bush says they didn’t break the law, but yet they need retroactive immunity) let’s pause and look at the facts. They spied on Americans without a court order, they did this in lieu of the FISA law that allows them to tap people for 72 hours without a court order in the first place, and this violates our constitutional rights, PERIOD. There should be no debate. Hell we should be prosecuting Bush for not upholding the Constitution of the US, something every president swears to do.
Bush is not worried about the capture of intelligence via a revised FISA law. He is only worried about giving legal protection to telecommunication companies that have broken the law.
Mar 12
A few months ago I gave a tryout to a free inventory management tool called Spiceworks. I had always been hesitant trying out freeware but it was worth a look at and since then I haven’t looked back. While it is not perfect (I still wish it had AD integration) you can’t beat it for the price, especially in today’s dwindling IT budgets.
Well I just stumbled upon another tool (thanks 4sysops) called Spotlight on Windows. This looks like a dream tool to manage your system’s health, monitor Event Logs, etc. I hope this is as good as Spiceworks!
Mar 10
Apparently part of the Clinton strategy is to come up with an attempt to make her position seem close to Obama and at the same time Hillary is to try to discredit Obama’s wins… by… creating a new category of delegates.
First we of course we have pledged delegates and superdelegates. Well now, according to the world of Hillary, we have “caucus delegates”. This self-interpretation is an apparent attempt to give less value to caucus states and more value to primary states. This was augmented by Gov Rendell stating that caucuses are “undemocratic”. Of course this is a desperate plea to the Superdelegates that somehow she is still relevant but the unfortunate truth is the Superdelegates hold all the keys in this election.
So not only is she now attempting to belittle Obama at every turn but she is also deliberately devaluing potential states that could swing in the Democratic favor someday. This also exposes the fact that the only way Hillary will win in November if elected is to win with the Gore/Kerry state count +1. If Obama wins he has a greater chance to pick up the red and purple states and can win with a larger Electoral Vote count.
On the trail today Obama caught a new inroad into the hypocrisy with the Clinton’s call for him to be VP.
“I don’t know how somebody who’s in second place is offering the vice presidency to the person who’s in first place,” Obama said. He went on to note the apparent double standard created by Clinton’s “commander in chief” attacks and noted that former President Bill Clinton said in 1992 his only criteria for picking a running mate was selecting someone who would be immediately ready to take over in the Oval Office.”If I’m not ready, how is it that you think I would be such a great vice president. Do you understand that? … They are trying to hoodwink you,” he said. “You can’t say he’s not ready on day one, unless he’d be your vice president, then he’s ready on day one.”
The Clinton response? I’m paraphrasing… “He’s rot ready now, but he could be ready after Hillary is nominated” Just amazing! Every day brings a new topic that is more radical than the day before. By the time we get to Colorado she will be claiming that Kang and Kodos will be her Secretary of State and Labor Secretary choices.
Mar 8
Back on the voting trail. Today is caucus day in Wyoming and I find it very peculiar that the press is now ignoring (for the most part) WY and just focusing on PA. Something tells me that if Obama wins today (WY is a caucus state so he has an advantage out of the gate) that his win will not have any perceived “momentum killer” for Hillary as it rightfully should. Actually today’s headlines should read “Obama wins WY and TX” since he leading in the pledged delegate count there. With 12 pledged delegates at stake Obama could nearly negate any delegate win Hillary had with a big win.
Another interesting thing to consider. Right now Obama leads in the Popular Vote and Pledged Delegates and Number of States. A fourth category not mentioned is Wins by Percentage which Wikipedia now has as their top graphic on the Dem race page.

click here to view a larger image
Clinton has had 2 whole states where she has won beyond 20% of the vote, where Obama has won 19. Why isn’t the press talking about this? Ah yeah I remember they are more interested in a prolonged fight to help out their ratings now and in that they are regurgitating every Clinton “were gonna win” angle. As usual the Main Stream Media is doing a major disservice to the country. (UPDATE: I stand partially corrected, MSNBC just put on main story the Wyoming race so kudos to MSNBC)