The ACLU indicated that the groups most directly impacted by the photo ID requirement were the blacks, the elderly, the homeless and the poor. For a long time they went to the polls and voted or not as they saw fit. Now a new obstacle has been set in their path to the polling booth, poll taxes having been declared unconstitutional. Because of alleged fraud by others, on a level which has never been quantified except episodically, these already disadvantaged folks are being asked to run an obstacle course to the polling booth which it seems from the material in the ACLU brief, many of them will not complete.
Make no mistake about it - - the demand for voter photo ID does not come from any of the groups most likely to be disenfranchised by it. But as victims of the demand, THEY are expected to put themselves to the additional effort, all to satisfy the fears of those who claim to be worried about voter fraud. OF COURSE, if the legislation is enacted, those who have asked for it have no concern about the difficulties faced by the target groups. Let them, the victims of the leglislation, try their damndest to get the photo ID. With no help at all from anyone in a position to help them. Least of all from a government that is spending half a trillion dollars and thousands of Amerikkkan lives so that Afghans and Iraqis can vote. For U.S. citizens to vote, of course, they should not lift a finger. Isn't that really the whole point of the legislation? To make it as hard as possible for the target groups to vote?
sirs, thank you for your most illuminating post. Once again you have managed to demonstrate exactly why we should be concerned about this transparently undemocratic disenfranchisement attempt by showing in exquisite detail how it is intended to operate and what its actual objectives are. I think maybe I have misjudged you - - possibly you are a closet liberal after all.