0 points

ACAB

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109 points

Every accusation is a confession. Every single one. No exceptions.

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-26 points

Lol this might actually be the biggest overstatement I’ve ever seen stated plainly on the internet

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16 points

Not at all. The modern GOP is built on astounding levels of projection about their issues, their behavior, and their secrets.

If someone’s ranting about voter fraud, it’s probably someone like the guy in this article who committed a lot of it.

If someone’s ranting about how horrible taxes are, it’s probably someone who happily takes government handouts without a hint of shame or hypocrisy awareness.

If someone’s ranting about the temptations of gay sex, his name’s probably Larry “Wide Stance” Craig.

Seriously, every accusation they make is a confession. No exceptions.

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-10 points

Lol goddamn “every accusation is a confession, no exceptions” is seriously the most braindead, brainwashed take. I mean, fuck, just say “often these accusations are confessions” and you won’t sound so hyperbolic and your statements would ring true. Leaving ZERO room for nuance is just such a bad take, man.

So literally every anti-gay Republican is a closeted homosexual. Not a SINGLE one is just a rabid Christian, or just a bigot. Right? Lol jesus christ

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38 points

At least when a Republican makes the accusation

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19 points

Yup. Always. They can’t see that everyone doesn’t think and act like them.

I guess deflecting/projecting is a common manipulation technique that slimebags learn.

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Just dropping this here

Surely, his sentencing will exceed hers right? Right?

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21 points
*

Haha - oh no, no. No, there are certain . . mmmmm nuances that distinguish that case from this case. Hahaha. You know these cases, they’re- they’re complex, right . . . it’s not just BLACK or WHITE, right? Haha right Texas?! Hahaha - yeah . . Texas gets it.

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76 points

he pleaded guilty, admitted he made a “stupid mistake”

The string of conscious decisions over the length of time it took him to do that are in no way a “stupid mistake”.

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19 points
*

This just in, one of these was (finally) acquitted in appeals court, there has to be evidence they knew they weren’t eligible (and being told you’re eligible is pretty strong evidence to the contrary)

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/mar/28/crystal-mason-texas-woman-acquitted

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30 points

People in positions of power or authority should be held to a higher standard, not an equal or lower one. He should get the book thrown at him and several years to think about why fucking with the elections is a bad idea.

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48 points

6 years for voting when it’s also claimed to be a democratic right is insane. USA is a very dysfunctional democracy. Starting with first past the post, which is to blame for the undemocratic 2 party system.

Preventing people in conflict with the law from voting, is an obvious undemocratic and oppressive policy too. Like saying you can only vote if you agree.

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21 points

When you abuse the system to cheat at voting (as multiple GOP folks have been proven in court), I think it’s completely fair and correct to temporarily restrict your ability to participate. You’ve shown that you don’t treat it with the proper degree of responsibility.

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27 points
*

The 6 years was for voting when the person believed he could. But it was punished harshly to oppress and create fear among black voters.
The White guy knowingly committed voter fraud, and only got probation.

Yes it would be fair in the 2nd case to issue punishment for voter fraud, but not in the first, since the unfairness clearly is that the person was prevented in performing his democratic right. Except USA is only barely a democracy, and democratic rights are trampled routinely.

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If it was democratic right, major elections would be a national holiday

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122 points

“When he came to Georgia, he was aware that he was registering to vote illegally. He knew when he went in all nine times and signed that voter certificate, he was voting illegally,” he said last February.

Administrative Law Judge Lisa Boggs agreed, and issued Pritchard a $5,000 fine, and ordered that he receive a public reprimand from the State Election Board.

Surely, you jest?!

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2 points

Holy fuck that’s depressingly ridiculous. This is how our democracy ends? Really, idiots getting away with the dumbest shit and lightly scolded at worst.

I fucking hate it here. I need to leave.

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14 points

Of all the Republican faces…

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11 points

he looks like he smells of deli meat

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4 points

Deli meat and old cigarette smell, like what sticks to old tech that hasnt been near a cigarette for over a decade but it still lingers.

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1 point

Looks like he doesn’t wash his asshole because it feels too good to him and he’s supposed to fight those feelings.

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26 points
*

I wonder whether he believed the lie that the election was rigged. If he justified it to himself by saying “well, the other side is doing it.” Horrific.

Edit: I made a false assumption that this was 9 votes in the same election, where it was actually 9 different instances where he would have been allowed to vote, were it not for prior conviction. See the comment below (or the article- my bad) for clarification.

Edit 2: removed the piece in my edit about probation, it wasn’t applicable.

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16 points

RFTA. It’s so short, FFS.

He didn’t vote 9 times in the 2020 election (or since then). He was on probation in PA for a felony and couldn’t legally vote in GA, but did anyway. I would assume in 9 different elections. He claims he thought it was legal for him to do so. Had he not been on probation in PA, all his votes would have been legal. (In fact, I believe he should have been able to vote, as I don’t think being convicted of a crime should remove this fundamental right. But that’s kind of besides the point here)

He broke the law and should be punished for it, especially for being one who claims that the people were voting illegally, but even guessing that he was doing this because he thought the 2020 election was stolen makes absolutely zero sense, because the bulk of these times (if not all of them) happened before then.

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4 points

To be honest, the headline is really misleading. Yes, people should definitely RTFA, but not everyone has the time to do that and a headline should be specific enough to avoid spreading misinformation.

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5 points

The title is never going to be specific enough to remove all ability to misinterpret it. The title just tells you what the article is about. The article itself gives you all the necessary details. I agree that it shouldn’t be misleading, and in the case I think it could be improved, but that doesn’t change the fact that one should refrain from passing judgment about what happened based on a headline. If you don’t have the time to read the article, you also lack the time to form an valid opinion about what happened.

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5 points

Thank you for the correction. I’ll edit my comment.

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1 point

NP, thanks for being nice about it despite me being a cock.

That being said, all of the voting happened before 2011 even, when the probation was actually up.

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1 point
*

This headline could be clearer. They’re not paying for ink, y’know? “Official who whined about stolen election voted illegally in nine elections.”

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