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Wednesday, November 10, 2004

[+/-]
 Evidence mounts that the vote was hacked

Dick Morris, the infamous political consultant to the first Clinton campaign who became a Republican consultant and Fox News regular, wrote an article for The Hill, the publication read by every political junkie in Washington, DC, in which he made a couple of brilliant points:
"Exit Polls are almost never wrong," Morris wrote. "They eliminate the two major potential fallacies in survey research by correctly separating actual voters from those who pretend they will cast ballots but never do and by substituting actual observation for guesswork in judging the relative turnout of different parts of the state."

He added: "So, according to ABC-TVs exit polls, for example, Kerry was slated to carry Florida, Ohio, New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, and Iowa, all of which Bush carried. The only swing state the network had going to Bush was West Virginia, which the president won by 10 points."...

"This was no mere mistake. Exit polls cannot be as wrong across the board as they were on election night. I suspect foul play."

I work in the tech industry, and I can hack. However, the Diebold vote tabulators are so easily hackable it doesn't take someone like me to do it. Check out this video of Howard Dean hacking one. It took him 90 seconds.

Dean's hack left no tracks whatsoever. It would be nearly impossible for the election software – or a County election official - to know that the vote database had been altered.

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