Random dogs running around Capitol grounds.
Must have heard about the efforts to weaken voter registration laws!
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Monday, March 5, 2012
GMOs
There are so many things wrong with Rep. Miller's campaign to be the first in the nation to require labeling of GMOs. For example, he states that GMOs are not God's work, as though anything done solely as a result of nature should be acceptable, whereas acts of man are not. Why didn't he believe that beavers could be adapted to Viney Brook Preserve? He had them trapped and drowned, their furs sold. Weren't they just God's creature doing what nature intended them to do? His outrage with corporations that are trying to improve the world's supply of food through genetic engineering, creating disease resistant foods or insect resistant crops, rings hollow when we know his actions in the past have been anti-nature. And what constitutes GMOs? Is selective breeding not a process resulting in GMOs? What are we supposed to do? Eat only heirloom fruits and vegetables? And what about the cross fertilization that happens naturally? Is that somehow not a GMOS result? Isn't evolution itself the process of ongoing genetic modification? What should be put on these labels? Any product sold today is likely to be the result of some hybridization or modification of an original food source. This is nonsense.
Labels:
CT food safety,
CTsafety,
food costs,
Gmo,
Property ownership,
Rep. Phil Miller
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Rep. Phil Miller
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alT6F3yAJ4E&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Labels:
CT food safety,
CTsafety,
food costs,
Gmo,
nanny state,
Property ownership,
Rep. Phil Miller
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Jeri comments on CT Voter Laws proposed changes
Voter fraud is proved (when it's pursued) AFTER the fact - ballots are counted and elections are certified many times years before the fraud is proved. It's too late to turn back.
Nationally, the overwhelming majority of ineligible voters who evade detection arise out of - you guessed it- Election Day Registration. The area of voter activity that gives rise to the runner-up for voter fraud arises out of Absentee Ballot abuse. Election Day Registration has NO mechanism to detect or prevent ineligible voters before the vote. The primary source of available evidence of false identity in voting comes from the returned postal verification cards AFTER THE FACT and prosecution is impossible after the fact, the election has already been called! In North Carolina, where we have heard about the impressive increase in voting as a result of Election Day Registration, it was discovered that there were 24,821 invalid driver's license numbers, 700 invalid Social Security numbers, 380 people who appeared to have voted after their deaths and a handful of votes cast by 17-year-olds. (Gaps in Voter Registration Process Raises Concerns of Fraud http://lincolntribune.com/?p=178) So, the idea that there was an increase in the number of votes cast is technically factual but the data would be more completely reported with the factor of actual qualified votes cast!
Why add more uncertainty to the question of voter integrity when, according to the PEW report released on 2-14-2012 which found -
-24 million (1 out of 8) voter registrations in the US are no longer valid or are significantly inaccurate
-More than 1.8 million deceased individuals are listed as voters
-Approximately 2.75 million people are registered in more than one state.
If you are serious about addressing voting rights...distinguish between disenfranchise and misenfranchise and focus on each equally. Make sure that each eligible voter who votes does not have that vote compromised by the admission of ineligible votes. Address the current abuses before even thinking of expanding the means, methods and opportunity for those with motive to corrupt the process.
The statement made earlier that there is no evidence of voter fraud in Connecticut is simply wrong. Look at the Connecticut Post article of 10/22/2011 which covers just the fraud associated with Absentee Ballots in Bridgeport. Imagine if all the varieties of voter fraud (multiple votes cast per person, dead people voting, stealing another person's identity) and all the communities in Connecticut were covered - we'd have an entire BOOK of evidence of voter fraud in Connecticut!
If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? If voter fraud occurs and no one detects it, does it affect an election?
Labels:
CT food safety,
CT voter registration,
CTsafety,
Property ownership,
Proposed voter law changes,
Voter fraud
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