The voters ID laws is one of those things that just doesn't seem necessary and will must likely cause unnecessary headache. I agree with the protesters, just not the way they handled this.
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Wisconsin College Protest at Special Olympics
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Originally posted by linguist View Postputting the picture on the voter's registration card means setting up stations where people have to show in person in order to have their picture taken, which means spending money for equipment and to staff those stations. this becomes logistically and financially difficult to do while still keeping the voter's registration process a free one.
in any case, charging for the id necessary to vote would put the state in violation of the 24th amendment.
Why is it that people treat the Constitution like it's the Articles of Confederation? The Constitution is a living document. We can change it whenever we want. It's not set in stone.Last edited by Greenday; 06-18-2011, 06:07 PM.Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Originally posted by IDrinkaRum View PostI find it offensive they did this during an athletic outing. Would they have done it at their college's sports event?
Originally posted by blas87 View PostCan't we make a fine line between protesting and stalking, let alone just being plain disrespectful? Why punish the Special Olympic athletes just because you hate the Governor? What kind of assnine bullshit is that?!
Originally posted by Greenday View PostAs long as they get their near free benefits that no one else gets, it's worth it to these people.
2) Actually, those near free benefits are absolutely available. All you have to do is sell your soul to a Fortune 500 company, like I have.
Originally posted by blas87 View Postbut you have to have either no heart at all or no common sense to think it's appropriate to protest a politician you hate at a Special Olympics event. That is LOW, degrading, and disgusting. Whoever did this obviously has no shame and no soul.
If we disallow protesting at the Special Olympics, then to be fair and equal we must disallow it for all sporting events. And if we disallow it for all sporting events, to be fair and equal we should disallow it for all public events. And so on, and so forth. The Supreme Court has agreed, several times over the past century, with this interpretation of events. What is good for the goose is good for the gander. What's good for the Special Olympics is good for every other event or public area in the USA.
So you can either have protesting allowed at the Special Olympics, regardless of whether you like it or not....or you can only have protesting in Special Protest Zones. With a permit. At specified times.
It's the only legal alternative we have been able to come up with.
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Originally posted by FArchivist View PostI'm sorry, but on Constitutional principles I must disagree.
If we disallow protesting at the Special Olympics, then to be fair and equal we must disallow it for all sporting events. And if we disallow it for all sporting events, to be fair and equal we should disallow it for all public events. And so on, and so forth.
A large part of a protest is the message and image you project to those whose opinions you want to sway. Protesting at a Special Olympics event projects the image that you're a bunch of douchebags who couldn't be bothered to pick a better venue for your protest. Any message you wanted to convey has been completely derailed by the visceral outrage that most people feel at the very idea.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Originally posted by daleduke17 View PostYou can keep your permanent residence and have a photo ID from another state. Better yet, like was mentioned earlier, just have the school get their ID cards up to par, then it is a moot point.
I don't see why the college kids get so up in arms over needing to vote in an election for local stuff (outside of the school board, if they are elected) when they're not even going to be there by the end of most terms. Just vote absentee for your home area and be done with it.
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Thank you, Andara. Obviously these clowns know the law, it's a matter of being proper and having some common fucking sense and courtesy.
Anyone who takes the protestors seriously should be ashamed. Now more recently, we have protestors bringing drugs with them to protest (dumb hippies much?!) and idiots chaining themselves to the walls of the capital. REALLY?
Hows about those losers get a job or something better to do?
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Originally posted by blas87 View PostAnyone who takes the protestors seriously should be ashamed. Now more recently, we have protestors bringing drugs with them to protest (dumb hippies much?!) and idiots chaining themselves to the walls of the capital. REALLY?
Hows about those losers get a job or something better to do?
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Originally posted by blas87 View PostAnyone who takes the protestors seriously should be ashamed. Now more recently, we have protestors bringing drugs with them to protest (dumb hippies much?!) and idiots chaining themselves to the walls of the capital. REALLY?
Hows about those losers get a job or something better to do?
Protesting is an important right in America and a powerful social tool. Would you suggest that Gandhi should have "gotten a job" or found something "better to do?"
Plus, it seems to me that if they're college students, they likely already have a full-time pursuit.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostWow. I love the establishment-loving, "dirty hippies" tone of this one.
Protesting is an important right in America and a powerful social tool. Would you suggest that Gandhi should have "gotten a job" or found something "better to do?"
Plus, it seems to me that if they're college students, they likely already have a full-time pursuit.
^-.-^Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Originally posted by Greenday View PostWell, it's not like they'd have to be buying new equipment every year so it'd just be a one time fee.
Plus, if you are too lazy that you can't be bothered to show up in person, then you should be able to vote (even though that was part of your argument).
Why is it that people treat the Constitution like it's the Articles of Confederation? The Constitution is a living document. We can change it whenever we want. It's not set in stone.
in any case, this point is entirely irrelevant. just because the constitution can be changed doesn't mean we shouldn't adhere to it as it currently stands.
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Originally posted by blas87 View PostAnyone who takes the protestors seriously should be ashamed. Now more recently, we have protestors bringing drugs with them to protest (dumb hippies much?!)
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I saw it on my local news which airs on NBC, and it was also in the local newspaper. I have no real idea which side that paper leans to more.
Funny thing, it was right by an article stating that several hundred people still owe hundreds in fines from the riots....ooh I'm sorry, I mean "protests" in Madison back in February/March. You know, the property damage among the more serious offenses, and the drug possessions and disorderly conduct for the more minor offenses.
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Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostHer comment had absolutely nothing to do with what is legal and everything to do with what is proper.
If we want to talk what is "proper", we're talking about morality and ethics, in which case I want an absolute standard of "proper" everyone is required to adhere to. If no one else wishes to propose a standard, I say we adopt Fred Phelps' viewpoint. What he says is "proper" is so, and everyone who disagrees is wrong.
Not very appealing, is it?
Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostA large part of a protest is the message and image you project to those whose opinions you want to sway.
Originally posted by Andara Bledin View PostProtesting at a Special Olympics event projects the image that you're a bunch of douchebags who couldn't be bothered to pick a better venue for your protest. Any message you wanted to convey has been completely derailed by the visceral outrage that most people feel at the very idea.
But I defend to the death their right to do it anyway. It is up to them to decide how they want to provide their message and the means in which they do it.
Originally posted by blas87 View PostObviously these clowns know the law, it's a matter of being proper and having some common fucking sense and courtesy.
Originally posted by Greenday View PostProtesters who protest and smoke drugs while doing it are called...that's right, hippies.
It's really a bad term anyway. Most of these protesters aren't hippies at all, since they didn't become so during the 1960s youth movement. They aren't neo-hippies either, which is the correct sociological term for people who become hippies today.
Most of these college students are instead Social Justice Warriors.
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Or more like college kids who hop on bandwagons, as my mother put it, they are extremely impressionable and easily swayed into causes that they don't know much about.
Similar to school kids around here who were swayed by their teachers to ditch out of school during those "protests".
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Originally posted by linguist View Postplus the continuing expense of maintenance, upgrades, and day to day operation.
Originally posted by linguist View Posti'm having a hard time understanding you here. could you perhaps rephrase?
Originally posted by linguist View Postyou seem to be asserting that the articles couldn't be changed, which is untrue. it required unanimous approval of the states, but it could be done.
in any case, this point is entirely irrelevant. just because the constitution can be changed doesn't mean we shouldn't adhere to it as it currently stands.Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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