Just in case you forgot...

A couple of days ago, there was actually a bit of a change in conditions over the question of stolen elections in not just 2004, but even 2002. Not that we didn't know already that they were stolen, but more than a little bit of circumstantial evidence is building up on the pile. Larisa Alexandrovna and Muriel Kane tell the public:report:
A leading cyber-security expert and former adviser to Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) says he has fresh evidence regarding election fraud on Diebold electronic voting machines during the 2002 Georgia gubernatorial and senatorial elections.
[...]
At a little noticed press conference in Columbus, Ohio Thursday, he discussed his investigation of a computer patch that was applied to Diebold Election Systems voting machines in Georgia right before that state's November 2002 election.
Spoonamore received the Diebold patch from a whistleblower close to the office of Cathy Cox, Georgia's then-Secretary of State. In discussions with RAW STORY, the whistleblower -- who wishes to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation -- said that he became suspicious of Diebold's actions in Georgia for two reasons. The first red flag went up when the computer patch was installed in person by Diebold CEO Bob Urosevich, who flew in from Texas and applied it in just two counties, DeKalb and Fulton, both Democratic strongholds. The source states that Cox was not privy to these changes until after the election and that she became particularly concerned over the patch being installed in just those two counties.
The whistleblower said another flag went up when it became apparent that the patch installed by Urosevich had failed to fix a problem with the computer clock, which employees from Diebold and the Georgia Secretary of State's office had been told the patch was designed specifically to address.
You may remember that a mysterious patch applied mid-election in Volusia County, Florida in 2000 made over 16,000 votes for Al Gore disappear.
Some critics of electronic voting raised questions about the 2002 Georgia race even at the time. Incumbent Democratic Sen. Max Cleland, who was five percentage points ahead of Republican challenger Saxby Chambliss in polls taken a week before the vote, lost 53% to 46%. Incumbent Democratic Governor Roy Barnes, who led challenger Sonny Perdue in the polls by eleven points, lost 51% to 46%. However, because the Diebold machines used throughout the state provided no paper trail, it was impossible to ask for a recount in either case.
[...]
At the Ohio press conference yesterday, the former McCain adviser said Michael Connell, of the Republican Internet development firm New Media Communications, had designed a system that made possible the real-time "tuning" of election tabulators once Ohio Secretary of State Kenneth Blackwell had outsourced the hosting of vote counting on the same server which hosted GOP campaign IT systems. He said he didn't believe Connell was behind the alleged fraud, but that he should be considered a key witness.
Spoonamore also confirmed he's working with Connell on overseas election
Additionally, Steve Heller reports that Cliff Arnebeck named Karl Rove as being likely involved in the election-fixing scheme (and also supplies more details).
Mysteries such as those described above still surround the similarly surprising results of an even earlier Nebraska race:
The respected Washington, DC publication The Hill has confirmed that former conservative radio talk-show host and now Republican U.S. Senator Chuck Hagel was the head of, and continues to own part interest in, the company that owns the company that installed, programmed, and largely ran the voting machines that were used by most of the citizens of Nebraska.
Back when Hagel first ran there for the U.S. Senate in 1996, his company's computer-controlled voting machines showed he'd won stunning upsets in both the primaries and the general election. The Washington Post (1/13/1997) said Hagel's "Senate victory against an incumbent Democratic governor was the major Republican upset in the November election." According to Bev Harris of www.blackboxvoting.com , Hagel won virtually every demographic group, including many largely Black communities that had never before voted Republican. Hagel was the first Republican in 24 years to win a Senate seat in Nebraska.
Six years later Hagel ran again, this time against Democrat Charlie Matulka in 2002, and won in a landslide. As his hagel.senate.gov website says, Hagel "was re-elected to his second term in the United States Senate on November 5, 2002 with 83% of the vote. That represents the biggest political victory in the history of Nebraska."
What Hagel's website fails to disclose is that about 80 percent of those votes were counted by computer-controlled voting machines put in place by the company affiliated with Hagel. Built by that company. Programmed by that company.
Or maybe it's not such a mystery after all, anymore than the incredible results of the 2004 election, in which many of towns got more Bush votes than they had voters, and even Democrats voted 100% for Bush - and the down-ticket races were pretty strange, too. (C'mon, you didn't really believe that Minnesotans gave Paul Wellstone's seat to Norm Coleman instead of Walter Mondale, did you?)
(Thanks to Dwight Meredith for the Raw Story link.)
- Original article
- FILED UNDER: Guest Blogger
- July 21, 2008








What worries me the most
What worries me the most about this upcoming election is the Republican cheating factor. The fact that Republicans run the companies that make the election machines is scary indeed.
Will we have another stolen election? Is our democracy lost forever?
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed." Dwight Eisenhower
- Email this page
By MichtouJuly 21, 2008 - 5:06pmAnd the second half of that question...
Will the Dem Congress have the 'nads to put up a fight? Demand an investigation? I'm thinking it would just be another four years of the DLC playing bitch boy to McBush.
You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.
---Ray Bradbury
- Email this page
By LiberalIconoclastJuly 21, 2008 - 5:15pmNot with the number of states decertifying Diebold machines
The story was up on Slashdot a few days ago...the "patch" didn't actually PATCH anything. Instead, it provided a parallel data path, one that bypassed the logging facilities on the machine. A computer scientist has asked for the source code under FOIA, but Diebold has been stonewalling him, claiming "intellectual property" and refusing to allow him access to a machine for examination even under a NDA.
Windows® should be more than adequate proof that "security through obscurity" does NOT work in the IT field. That goes double for such an important arena as government, triple for government by elected official.
If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error. ~~~John Kenneth Galbraith
- Email this page
By nonexistent manJuly 21, 2008 - 5:30pmGood questions
Greg Palast says the election has already been stolen.
But what I really want to know is whether the Republicans really want to win this time. I'm sure Bush, Cheney, and Rove do, but with the economic crap that's coming down, they may want to be able to blame it all on the Dems.
AC
More liberal media at The Sideshow.
- Email this page
By AvedonJuly 21, 2008 - 8:14pmBy Avedon July 21, 2008 - 8:14pm
... but with the economic crap that's coming down, they may want to be able to blame it all on the Dems.
BINGO! Like Mike Malloy said, they want to leave a big steaming bag of poop for the Dem president to try and clean up.
If there is tampering, it will be done on the state level....just enough to ensure that the "do nothing Dem congress" remains such.
- Email this page
By roadgoddessJuly 22, 2008 - 7:12amDo you understand that we
Do you understand that we aren't a democracy now to lose? We are a constitutional republic based on laws, not on the majority or mob rule.
- Email this page
By bebeholmesJuly 22, 2008 - 9:43amIf that attitude is typical
If that attitude is typical of the GOP'ers, it explains a lot!
By the way, which laws of the Constitution do you mean? Certainly not the 4th Ammendment.
-- McCain = Four more years of the same --
- Email this page
By dtaylo75July 22, 2008 - 12:15pmThey are pissed that it is even a shadow of a democracy
at this point. The behaviors I have seen from Rove and Cheney, with talk of a permanent repub majority and a unitary executive smells a lot more like what is usually seen in totalitarian regimes, such as the USSR, China, Nazi Germany, North Korea, etc. I'm betting that if it were a dem administration that was talking of a permanent dem majority, and a dem unitary exec with the powers Bush asserts he has, repubs would be up in arms.
- Email this page
By UffdaguyJuly 22, 2008 - 12:40pmIt used to be a
It used to be a representative democracy, structured as a republic so that majority rule does not overwhelm minority rights. In other words, we voted for (democratically) our representatives, who are supposed to carry out our will. It is not a direct democracy, but it is still a democracy.
However, of late, it is a corporacracy, where big companies rule everything.
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed." Dwight Eisenhower
- Email this page
By MichtouJuly 22, 2008 - 12:28pmAn investigation?
Investigate this:
Who is the idiot that approved using machines that can't provide a recount?
- Email this page
By richaduJuly 21, 2008 - 9:23pmAs a Democrat and a U.S.
As a Democrat and a U.S. citizen, I have EVERY RIGHT to be angry at the screw-ups of THIS administration! Election fraud is just another can on the heap.
- Email this page
By gg4usaJuly 21, 2008 - 11:03pmWhat makes you think they're mistakes?
I don't think the Republicans expend all that effort to keep people from voting by accident.
AC
More liberal media at The Sideshow.
- Email this page
By AvedonJuly 22, 2008 - 6:52amA week or tow ago there was a vote in the house to fund ballots
The bill would have funded providing paper ballots in areas they are not available yet. It was a quick vote at the end of the day. I watched it on a stream of the span. The republicans overwhelmingly voted nay.
- Email this page
By f u bush2July 22, 2008 - 1:05amElection fraud and voter Stupidity
The same old two excuses you commies use when you lose and election.
- Email this page
By AuburnDonJuly 22, 2008 - 4:44amCalling us "commies"
The same fearful, desperate move you pussies have used since 1950, whenever things aren't going your way.
Run along home now and duct-tape yourself to your TV.
You don't have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them.
---Ray Bradbury
- Email this page
By LiberalIconoclastJuly 22, 2008 - 4:14pmSticks and stones may break our bones
but Stalin can never hurt us! LOL
- Email this page
By UffdaguyJuly 22, 2008 - 4:27pmYou wouldn't want to strain your brain now, would you?
It's so much easier to dismiss the case than to actually look at the mounting evidence, isn't it? That means all you have to do is repeat a few well-worn propaganda phrases and not think.
"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed." Dwight Eisenhower
- Email this page
By MichtouJuly 22, 2008 - 4:48pm