QUOTE
"The electoral system in Ohio worked well on Nov. 2. Every eligible
voter who wanted to vote had the opportunity to vote. There was no
widespread fraud, and there was no disenfranchisement. A half-million
more Ohioans voted than ever before with fewer errors than four years
ago, a sure sign of success by any measure.
Despite 27 separate lawsuits, hordes of special-interest group "swat
teams" descending on polling places and a circus of Michael Moore-
inspired camera crews, our bipartisan election system - and the order,
integrity and transparency integral to it - prevailed."
voter who wanted to vote had the opportunity to vote. There was no
widespread fraud, and there was no disenfranchisement. A half-million
more Ohioans voted than ever before with fewer errors than four years
ago, a sure sign of success by any measure.
Despite 27 separate lawsuits, hordes of special-interest group "swat
teams" descending on polling places and a circus of Michael Moore-
inspired camera crews, our bipartisan election system - and the order,
integrity and transparency integral to it - prevailed."
http://washingtontimes.com/op-ed/20041116-085742-1497r.htm
According to Michael Moore and the free press:
QUOTE
"A cheer rings out when the cavalry arrives, by tour bus. A roiling mass of boom mics, cameras, and floodlights emerges and lurches toward the school. At the center is filmmaker Michael Moore, a slouching mound of indignation in New Balance sneakers. The General Patton of the Left has come to rouse the troops.
Moore asks for a field report. Grim expressions tell the story. The problem is long lines, one man says. "There's people I personally spoke to who waited three hours to vote."
Moore nods attentively. "Where's our camera?" he barks. "Make sure we get this on camera, 'cause we're not just looking for fraud. We're also looking for ineptitude."
"Are you making a movie about the election?" someone asks.
"The videotape exists as evidence," he says. "It's not to appear in your cineplex. It's to appear in a court of law!"
Moore leads a stumbling charge into the school to capture the long lines, but blocking his path is Michael Vu, Cuyahoga County's election director. He looks like a little boy in a grown-up suit, plucked from a college civics course and thrust into the role of Evil Bureaucrat in Mr. Moore Goes to Cleveland. "
Moore asks for a field report. Grim expressions tell the story. The problem is long lines, one man says. "There's people I personally spoke to who waited three hours to vote."
Moore nods attentively. "Where's our camera?" he barks. "Make sure we get this on camera, 'cause we're not just looking for fraud. We're also looking for ineptitude."
"Are you making a movie about the election?" someone asks.
"The videotape exists as evidence," he says. "It's not to appear in your cineplex. It's to appear in a court of law!"
Moore leads a stumbling charge into the school to capture the long lines, but blocking his path is Michael Vu, Cuyahoga County's election director. He looks like a little boy in a grown-up suit, plucked from a college civics course and thrust into the role of Evil Bureaucrat in Mr. Moore Goes to Cleveland. "
http://www.clevescene.com/issues/2004-11-1.../feature_7.html
One of them's telling the truth the other one's lying: Can't have it both ways :o :o :o :o
Hmm who could it be?