Vote Fraud: Another ‘Science Is Settled’ Issue
Vote Fraud: Another ‘Science Is Settled’ Issue
Why is the left so insistent that voter fraud isn’t real?
Perhaps the left’s greatest contribution to public discourse is to threaten anyone who disagrees with them with financial ruin, slander, embarrassment, condemnation, homelessness and prison—and then announce the existence of a “consensus.”
Their signature consensus-by-threat technique has been used to prove the truth of global warming, Russian interference with the 2016 election, Covid-19 lockdowns, Hunter Biden’s laptop as Russian disinformation, and—especially important today—the nonexistence of voter fraud.
Dissenters from the liberal position on all these issues are slyly compared to Holocaust conspiracy theorists by calling them “deniers”—“climate deniers,” “Covid deniers,” “mask deniers,” “global warming deniers,” “science deniers,” and “election deniers.” Until very, very recently, “denier” was a word that referred exclusively to Holocaust deniers.
Although I’m sure it’s fun, browbeating people into a terrified, cowering silence isn’t proof of anything. In fact, it kind of suggests beliefs of such dainty substance that raising the slightest objection could make the whole thing fall apart.
Ask Soviet scientists who were sent to the gulag for refusing to renounce Lysenkoism about it. Oh, you can’t. They’re dead.
Today, we’ll examine the left’s “consensus” on the question of voter fraud. With the SAVE (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility) Act under debate—which would merely require proof of citizenship to vote—we’re getting a lot of categorical, sweeping statements for which there can be no proof, such as, “the 2020 election was the most secure in U.S. history!”
Seventeen intelligence agencies agree! Wait—no, that was about Putin hacking the 2016 election to elect Donald Trump.
To the extent liberals bother trying to marshal any proof that voter fraud doesn’t exist, their evidence is:
1) Promiscuous use of words like “without evidence,” “misinformation,” “conspiracy theory,” “lies,” and “you’re more likely to be struck by lightning.” (All those are from a single New York Times article on voter fraud.) It’s like lefty Tourette’s. Shohei Ohtani hit a towering home-run to center field, without evidence.
2) Name-calling—extremely effective among kindergarteners and New York Times readers; and
3) Citing the rarity of voter fraud convictions.
The Entire Media Blabosphere: THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS VOTER FRAUD!
Can we look?
The Entire Media Blabosphere: ARE YOU A DENIER? THERE’S NO SUCH THING AS VOTER FRAUD!
Thus, a Times opinion piece proved that voter fraud is a “myth” by citing the book The Myth of Voter Fraud. Not sold yet? Just wait. The book noted that, in 2005, there were more prosecutions for migratory bird law violations than voter fraud. (Perhaps liberals wouldn’t be so glib about migratory bird prosecutions if they knew that 90 percent of the cases are brought against oil companies.)
I was previously unaware of the “No Convictions, No Crimes” mathematical proof. Now that I know about it, I’ve got a banger. This should at least win me a Booker Prize, if not a Nobel.
I can prove that there were no lynchings in the Old South from 1877 to 1950. Convictions for lynchings were vanishingly rare, and punishment rarer.
There, I’ve just eliminated about 30 percent of universities’ core curriculum.
Remember back in 2006 and 2007 when President George W. Bush fired seven of his own U.S. attorneys for not investigating voter fraud, and all hell broke loose?
About a decade earlier, in an unprecedented act, Bill Clinton had fired all 93 U.S. attorneys a few months into his presidency—including one who was about to bring criminal charges against Clinton’s crucial ally, Representative Dan Rostenkowski (D-IL). It was a legit prosecution: The following year, Rostenkowski pleaded guilty and went to prison.
Not a peep of protest. But when Bush fired eight of his own U.S. attorneys for nonperformance on—what was it again?—voter fraud cases, there were congressional investigations, an inspector general’s report and hysterical denunciations from the media.
The Times alone ran a dozen editorials, calling the firings a “scandal,” a “political purge” a “cover-up,” and demanded the resignation of the Bush Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. If that isn’t proof that there’s no such thing as voter fraud, I don’t know what is.
The science is settled! Voter fraud does not exist.
When Trump put (now) Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach in charge of his Commission on Election Integrity in 2017, left-wing groups promptly filed a dozen lawsuits against the commission’s work—more than had ever been brought against any presidential commission in history.
The lawsuits were nonsense, but responding to them consumed all of the commission’s time, preventing it from, you know, looking into voter fraud. Kobach had no choice but to shut down the whole thing and head back to Kansas.
And that’s how we know for a fact that there’s no such thing as election fraud. It’s as fake as Hunter Biden’s laptop. As bogus as natural immunity. As phony as lynchings in the Jim Crow South.
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