Thursday, November 02, 2006
(Just got an article on this happening today from Mark Crispin Miller)
Stealing Elections Texas Style: Mrs. Blankenship goes out to vote.
by Melinda Pillsbury-Foster
Mrs. Marilyn B. Blankenship noticed what a lovely day it was as she went into vote early at the Renner-Frankford Branch Dallas Public Library at 6400 Frankford Rd. two blocks from her home in Collin County, Texas near Dallas. Mr. Arthur Edwards, the widower of her oldest friend from the 4th grade, accompanied her on the short ride to the Library; he waited in the car for her to finish her brief civic obligation. A native Texan, Mrs. Blankenship appreciated the mild autumn weather. Growing up in Texas, the daughter of two strong parents, had left its mark on her. She had learned self discipline from both of them, along with a strong sense of honesty.
Exercising her civic obligations was something Mrs. Blankenship took very seriously as a Texan and as an American.
After finishing college she had begun teaching school in 1952. Over
her career as an educator she had watched the school system of Texas
change in troubling ways. Children, she believed, need not just
information, they need to acquire inquiring minds so they can think for
themselves.
Mrs.
Blankenship went into the familiar interior of the Library and picked up
her ballot. A long time Republican this time she was determined to vote
for change. Taking her ballot she went into the voting booth and
inserted her card into the Diebold Voting Machine. Diebold is a local
company in Texas; one of their facilities was just down the street.
When she voted for the first couple of candidates the 'X” showed up
just where she wanted it. This time she had decided not to vote for any
Republicans, even those she had supported in the past. She came to the
list of judges. Judges are a partisan position in Texas. Mrs.
Blankenship looked at her notes. She had decided that this time her
vote would go to the Libertarian candidates and one or two Democrats of
whom she approved. One by one she tried to vote for her choice. Each
time the machine, moved the vote to the Republican candidate. Mrs.
Blankenship exclaimed in exasperation, leaving the booth to complain to
one of the several ladies who was working at the polling place. One of
the workers came and watched as again the machines changed her votes.
Shaking with distress Mrs. Blankenship left the Library. She could not
be sure if her votes had been counted as she wanted. Now she did not
notice the nice weather. Mr. Edwards could see she was upset and asked
her what had happened; he advised her to call the F. B. I.
Mrs. Blankenship believes in standing up for the right thing. During
the Monica Lewinsky scandal she had gone to the Library and copied down
the names and addresses of 100 individuals in Congress who she hoped
would vote to censure President Clinton for his deceitful behavior in
lying to the American people. A trickle of responses has come back to
her, mostly advising her to limit her complaints to her own
representatives.
Stealing an election – and her own vote - struck her as far more serious than the misbehavior of Bill Clinton.
Mrs. Blankenship's concerns over the moral character and the intentions
of those in power had been growing over the decades. She had watched
as the quality of education offered to the children she taught had
become truncated, the focus moving away from the core of essential
literacy and understanding of civics and history to a candy coated
curriculum that neither prepared the students for real life or
established a life time love of learning. It was not a partisan issue,
it went much deeper. The advent of Governor Bush has only accelerated
the deterioration of the education offered to the children of Texas.
Where would it end? Didn't they want the children to know anything?
The question lingered in her mind, worrying her.
And now she was filled with a sense of violation. Did they expect that
she would just walk out of the polling place and do nothing? Mrs.
Blankenship opened the door of her home, sat down at her desk and began
to write letters.
October 24, 2006
I
am contacting in writing the Election Bureau of Collin County to
continue the paper trail I have created concerning the voting
irregularity I experienced on October 23, at 11:45 a. m. at Precinct 74
located at the Renner-Frankford Library in Dallas, Collin County. I
filed a complaint by telephone on the day of the irregularity with Jan
Lay in McKinney. She suggested I write to my federal representatives who
passed the law requiring voting machines to be used which I have done. I
have also talked by telephone with the Secretary of State’s office and
sent a summary letter along with a copy of my letter to the elected
federal persons representing me to Austin.
You
will note that I am enclosing two articles of national concern that the
Diebold voting machine which I used is not secure. Why are officials
dragging their feet on making the computers create a paper trail so that
voters like me can be sure that their votes were not stolen by a
machine? There is proof that problems in Texas have occurred where votes
were added that were never cast and other examples where votes have
been credited to candidates not chosen.
The machine I was using recorded a vote for a Republican three times instead of the Libertarian I chose in three cases
for individuals.listed in succession on the screen. I was so shocked I
spoke out-loud that the machine was not recording my votes, but giving
my votes to a candidate I did not choose. I had to make three corrections in successive order to correct these three errors.
I was even more shocked when the summary appeared. I saw that Perry,
Dewhurst and Combs were being credited with votes I DID NOT CAST FOR ANY
OF THEM! I am positive who I chose for those offices and Chris Bell was being denied the vote I cast.
These three errors in the summary were corrected by me before the
ballot was submitted and my card withdrawn. I will forever believe that
the machine I was using was rigged to switch votes to Republicans.
Collin
County is known to be a Republican strong-hold , but I do not vote for a
party. I vote for each individual candidate. If there is no opposition
candidate and I do not want the lone candidate, I do not cast a vote at
all in that category. I choose the candidates I support as an
independent person who uses my vote as the Constitution intended it to
be used. I have been voting regularly since 1952 when I cast my first
votes in the presidential election.
Please
take seriously my complaint about voting on a rigged Diebold machine
and please do not pass this off as a glitch in the machine I was using. I
do not think a glitch caused what I experienced in early voting October
23, 2006. I consider the errors as fraud on the part of someone who
tampered with the computer in that machine.
Marilyn B. Blankenship
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete