Those 20 were the ones who got caught. The left has assured us that the 2020 election was completely clean; no fraud, cleanest election ever. That seems to not be the case — this was just part of it. That’s the trick you guys play; it’s only 20 votes. The audit in Arizona was only a few hundred votes, the Wisconsin shenanigans were not enough to change the result, etc.
The issue is that these are only the cases we know about. Suppose for the sake of argument that the “2000 Mules” scenario is true. Suppose there was a widespread effort to stuff dropboxes with illegal ballots. Given that assumption, what evidence would you expect to see to indicate that this happened? Each ballot in that box would have a signature and would appear legal. There would be no way to tell that these ballots were illegally cast.
Whether or not that scenario actually happened is irrelevant; it could happen. It is easy enough to stop it; no more unmanned drop boxes. Everyone votes in person or by mail. This is just one example; we should work to find other weak points in the system.
Besides, your argument doesn’t seem to work for any other issues. The fraction of guns actually used to commit murders is statistically zero. The vast majority of guns are owned by law abiding citizens who have never and never will use their gun to fire at another human. The idea that there can be zero shootings is naive, right? That doesn’t stop the left from pushing “common sense” gun laws, does it? Why can’t we work similarly toward common sense election laws? Unless you are trying to commit fraud, why would anyone, left, right, or center, oppose measures that will make elections more secure?
Originally Posted by Smarty1
Couple things I want to start with. First off, can you please not act like I'm trying to trick you or something. I'm just looking at this objectively and not trying to lean into hypothetical situations. Like sure we could say that they found a couple of thousand votes out of tens of millions that were illegitimate and that could mean that there was some widespread scheme, but I could also say that every vote in the entire election was illegitimate at that point and it would mean just about the same thing, because they are both hypothetical. Also just assuming that the case presented by 2000 Mules is true just for the sake of argument is still a giant stretch to be making that I feel takes us out of the realm of any kind of measured objectivity. That entire argument hinged on anonymous geolocation data gathered from cell phones, which is not only imprecise, but doesn't really mean anything. Just because a cell phone happened to be within a few meters of a ballot box a handful of times a day doesn't really mean a lot, especially in a city where people are likely to be around the same area a lot throughout the day.
My point here is that I don't necessarily disagree that more security measures CAN be taken, but I think that could be through better surveillance of locations and better enforcement of the rules that we already have. Last time I checked (and maybe I don't know here, because I don't know the voting rules in every state) but if I drop an absentee ballot off in a drop box, it will contain my name, address, and signature at the very least. All of those things need to be validated before my vote is entered into the system against the information that the state has on me. If any of those things are wrong, or they have already been validated before my ballot submission it will be rejected. Is it possible for things to slip through either due to human error, or even potentially malice? Sure. I mean we're talking about tens of millions of forms being processed. That shit is going to happen no matter what we do. Do I think it's the cause to fear some nefarious plot played out under our noses? Nah. There just isn't really any evidence that convinces me otherwise there. I think it would be absurd to claim that any election in our history has been completely clean, that's just statistically impossible. Like even if there isn't any bad actors involved, people still fuck up and make mistakes too. I know that there were a lot of claims that this was one of the cleaner ones though, and I mean that's possible, but I wouldn't personally be comfortable making a claim like that.
As far as other issues are concerned, I mean that's not really what this thread is about, but I feel like it would still hold up. The amount of homicides committed with a gun might be statistically much lower (I don't know the numbers on that, but I'm cool at least pretending that's true), but I mean statistically speaking our country does have a lot more gun related homicides than most developed nations. I don't think we'd ever truly stop all gun related violence, because again that would be an absurd milestone to hit, but we can certainly limit them as much as we can. Hell, I don't even really push for the idea of making guns like illegal or anything (I have some personal opinions on that, but what's good for me isn't good for everyone) but we could be doing shit like buyback programs and stuff to have less of them out there. I bet even a voluntary measure would cause a drop in violent incidents involving a firearm, but if you want to get into that we should make a new thread. I just don't see those two issues really being equivalent to each other, my point is more that I don't think trying to reduce incidents to zero is a reasonable goal.
tl;dr I'm not "the left" I have my own views that aren't formed entirely by the opinions of one group. I just prefer to look at things with some measure of objectivity when I engage in anything political.