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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 17, 2022

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It's probably also worth mentioning the 1997 Miami mayoral election, which was found by a judge to be fraudulent enough to throw out the election results. From that article:

In his written decision the judge said the absentee ballots cast in the election included those from people who did not vote, did not live in Miami or the district in which their ballot was cast, and did not qualify as unable to vote at the polls. Several ballots were even doctored to alter a vote for Mr. Carollo into one for Mr. Suarez, the judge noted.

''This scheme to defraud, literally and figuratively, stole the ballot from the hands of every honest voter in the city of Miami,'' Judge Wilson wrote.

In a similar case in 1993, a state judge also threw out the results of a mayoral election in the nearby city of Hialeah and ordered a new vote.

I don't have particular evidence that serious fraud has happened in the last decade, but the idea that American elections have always been sacrosanct and nobody could ever question their validity is IMO laughable.

This is the part that really gets me.

No, the United States is not a Banana Republic where incumbents routinely win with 105% of the vote.

No, most elections in Florida are not ultimately decided by 'the margin of fraud.'

But it is not a deniable fact that some elections in the U.S. HAVE been decided by fraud. Florida has had its share of pain in this regard.

So what possible justification is there for ignoring the risk that a fraudulent election could pop up in a key race and throw it all into doubt?

Disagree with the methods used, fine. But deny the underlying problem? Silly.