Anonymous wrote:We were not talking about felon voter rights after they are convicted. If there are voter rights for felons by state, then the laws in those cases have already been established.
I was also pointing out that just because someone was a felon, it doesn't mean he/she didn't register BEFORE he/she committed their initial crime and there is information to be gleaned from there are as well. That data needs to be taken into account.
Example:
I am a registered Republican and have voted for years. Were I to be convicted of a crime in the future, I would then be a convicted felon BUT anyone who researched can see that I was a registered Republican. That data does not go away with my conviction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes we can't tell for the life of us who owns a gun we find at a murder scene, but we can instacheck historical voter registration records in 50 states with the criminal justice computers nationwide for our political amusement.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Registered violent criminal democrats outnumber republicans 75-1
Violent criminals cannot vote. How on earth could your statistic ever be even theoretically true?
Perhaps they were registered before they committed a crime?
Do you not get a voter card in the mail?
You should look at your statement. Criminal Justice computers? How hard is it to look up someone on a public record?
Great, then I'm sure you have the data to support your claim. Let's see it.
So what you are saying is that (1) there is no such thing as online public records (2) there is no voter registration records to tap into and (3) there is no record of convicted felons.
Or are you saying that those who are now convicted felons never registered to vote?
I am saying that if violent criminals are 75-1 Democrats, then show the data to prove that. Isn't that where this discussion started?
Were I the one who posted that article, I'd show you the data. What I was refuting was your point that it was impossible to see how convicted felons vote because felons don't vote. You did not take into consideration that they might have voted before being convicted felons. I don't really give a darn HOW they voted - your point of argument was incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes we can't tell for the life of us who owns a gun we find at a murder scene, but we can instacheck historical voter registration records in 50 states with the criminal justice computers nationwide for our political amusement.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Registered violent criminal democrats outnumber republicans 75-1
Violent criminals cannot vote. How on earth could your statistic ever be even theoretically true?
Perhaps they were registered before they committed a crime?
Do you not get a voter card in the mail?
You should look at your statement. Criminal Justice computers? How hard is it to look up someone on a public record?
Great, then I'm sure you have the data to support your claim. Let's see it.
So what you are saying is that (1) there is no such thing as online public records (2) there is no voter registration records to tap into and (3) there is no record of convicted felons.
Or are you saying that those who are now convicted felons never registered to vote?
I am saying that if violent criminals are 75-1 Democrats, then show the data to prove that. Isn't that where this discussion started?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes we can't tell for the life of us who owns a gun we find at a murder scene, but we can instacheck historical voter registration records in 50 states with the criminal justice computers nationwide for our political amusement.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Registered violent criminal democrats outnumber republicans 75-1
Violent criminals cannot vote. How on earth could your statistic ever be even theoretically true?
Perhaps they were registered before they committed a crime?
Do you not get a voter card in the mail?
You should look at your statement. Criminal Justice computers? How hard is it to look up someone on a public record?
Great, then I'm sure you have the data to support your claim. Let's see it.
So what you are saying is that (1) there is no such thing as online public records (2) there is no voter registration records to tap into and (3) there is no record of convicted felons.
Or are you saying that those who are now convicted felons never registered to vote?