It is a distinctly crazy thing to believe, especially in regards to Alabama. In the 2012 election, the popular vote for President in Alabama favored Mitt Romney by over 460,000 votes. How much in-person voter fraud can you possibly believe is happening that is going to sway those results? And it's not like that is an isolated case; the Republican governor of Alabama juuuuuust squeaked by with a 320,000 vote margin of victory. You have to be completely delusional to assume that in-person voter fraud is going to have a shred of impact on elections in Alabama. And the strangest thing is werepossum has already said repeatedly in this thread that Alabama is in the wrong here for refusing to sufficiently fund their voter ID law, so he clearly sees the disconnect in what the state is doing. I just don't understand how anyone could possibly think that in-person voter fraud happens in sufficient numbers to impact anything. It's the same level of paranoid delusion that convinces people that there are millions of people using abortions as birth control or quitting their jobs to collect welfare. It's the right-wing bogeyman, and it's based on bullshit.
Either openly allow everyone who wanders by to vote, as many times as they wish, or have standards and laws and enforce them. This is true for everything. I don't CARE if it's statistically significant and/or costs "my side" anything, if we have a law on the books we should either enforce it or get it off the books. Period. Geez, is this really so hard to understand?
then how do they get to work, the store, mcdonalds.
boo fucking hoo. I live in the largest county in Colorado and the closest DMV office in my county is 45 miles away. the second closest is 47 miles away in another county.
try getting your license in California. its easy half day event. gee i wonder what the poor there do?
For the first, these working poor people generally live close-in where there is public transportation. For work, they often car pool with fellow workers. For the non-working poor that live outside public transportation hubs - and there are a surprising number of them - they either bum rides to where they need to go or they use charity services that provide limited free or heavily subsidized rides. (Usually this is limited to the elderly, the disabled, or the mentally ill, but in practice this is often overlooked.)
I recommend you get to know the people who clean your building or buildings where you commonly have business, or mentor high school kids at inner city schools. Find out how they get to work. The working poor build alliances, helping each other out in turn, because that's what it takes to get by. Doesn't always work out for everybody (I have a friend who gave his coworkers rides home because he's lucky and his grandmother is relatively well off (janitorial worker plus entrepreneur who owns her own janitorial company on the side) and bough him a car, he got pulled over one night and having nothing to hide, told the cop of course he could search the car. His coworker had stuck a joint down between the seat cushions to avoid being popped, and since his "friend" wouldn't own to it, my friend got busted and had to do a community service pre-trial diversion plus a year of probation to get it dropped.) but it's necessary to make the system work. It's possible for these people to get to a far-off DMV, but it's not easy and it represents a significant diversion of scarce resources. Also, a lot of the working poor are single parents/grandparents and work two menial jobs to get by. Not only do they not get benefits as a result, but it's doubly difficult to schedule time off as a result, and triply difficult to schedule rides since both jobs aren't generally shared by the car pool group.
I'm not saying we owe these people anything in particular; they have to pull their own weight like everyone else, with whatever skills they can bring to the table. I AM saying that if we are going to do something, even something I support - ESPECIALLY something I support - then we should not do it on their backs. I have to go to the DMV to get my license and tags; I'm fine with them doing the same for a federal or state photo ID card, but only if the DMV is within a reasonable bus ride within the city or at least county. I understand that you have a forty-five minute drive to the DMV anyway, but not being drivers this is something new for them and it should not be onerous if we're doing it for the reason we say we're doing it. A forty-five minute drive to the DMV is a HELL of a lot different from a bus ride over the same distance, with the bus stopping every block or three to pick up or let off.