Over 372,000 inactive voters have been removed from its rolls. Took a lawsuit.
Marvin J. Schiller
mjschiller said:
Over 372,000 inactive voters have been removed from its rolls. Took a lawsuit.
mjschiller said:
Over 372,000 inactive voters have been removed from its rolls. Took a lawsuit.
zephyr88 said:
Hmmmm... Trump lost to Harris by 350,718.
BMX Bandit said:zephyr88 said:
Hmmmm... Trump lost to Harris by 350,718.
None of these 372,000 voted in that election
mjschiller said:
Over 372,000 inactive voters have been removed from its rolls. Took a lawsuit.
BMX Bandit said:zephyr88 said:
Hmmmm... Trump lost to Harris by 350,718.
None of these 372,000 voted in that election
ts5641 said:BMX Bandit said:zephyr88 said:
Hmmmm... Trump lost to Harris by 350,718.
None of these 372,000 voted in that election
Or didn't they...
Quote:
Inactive records: If a voter's record is in Inactive status, it means that, through one or more of the processes described below, the County Clerk has learned that some portion of the voter's information (usually their address) is out of date or needs confirmation. Although the County Clerk doesn't have enough information to cancel the voter's record, the Clerk requires action from the voter before they can get a ballot in the mail or vote in person. Therefore, a voter in Inactive status will not receive a ballot in the mail or be allowed to vote in person until they provide updated information to the County Clerk.
outofstateaggie said:
Colorado has been overrun by illegals.
BTKAG97 said:
The CO SOS FAQ pages are useless in regards to what constitutes a Inactive Voter in that state so I'm providing a 3rd party link.
https://www.clerkandrecorder.org/voter-accuracyQuote:
Inactive records: If a voter's record is in Inactive status, it means that, through one or more of the processes described below, the County Clerk has learned that some portion of the voter's information (usually their address) is out of date or needs confirmation. Although the County Clerk doesn't have enough information to cancel the voter's record, the Clerk requires action from the voter before they can get a ballot in the mail or vote in person. Therefore, a voter in Inactive status will not receive a ballot in the mail or be allowed to vote in person until they provide updated information to the County Clerk.
Quote:
My question, If this was operating as intended, then why did it take a lawsuit to get them removed?
BMX Bandit said:ts5641 said:BMX Bandit said:zephyr88 said:
Hmmmm... Trump lost to Harris by 350,718.
None of these 372,000 voted in that election
Or didn't they...
They didn't.
If they did, then they wouldnt be removed as "inactive"
Quote:
Voters in New York State are identified by two identification numbers. This study has discovered strong evidence that both numbers have been algorithmically manipulated to produce steganographically concealed record attribute information. One of the several algorithms discovered has been solved. It first utilizes a mechanism nearly identical to the simple 'Caesar Cipher' to change the order of a group of ID numbers. Then, it interlaces them the way a deck of cards is arranged to create a 'stacked deck'. The algorithmic modifications create hidden structure within voter ID numbers. The structure can be used to covertly tag fraudulent records for later use.
Quote:
This study examines algorithmic patterns in Harris County, Texas (U.S.) voter registration data, revealing a sophisticated base-8 modular algorithm controlling ID assignment for 2.3 million voters. Analysis of 18 million state records shows this algorithm employs bifurcated distribution patterns that deviate from standard practices and mirror patterns identified in Ohio. Comparative analysis with Tarrant County confirms Harris County's patterns represent deliberate implementation rather than natural database behavior. The algorithm enables covert record attribution while providing no legitimate benefits in public databases. These findings raise concerns under the National Voter Registration Act of 1993's transparency requirements and meet SEC materiality standards, affecting more than 5% of records with engineered modifications that would alter integrity assessments. This research shows how information warfare may target democratic institutions through seemingly benign database management practices.
Quote:
That may be dismissing the significance too quickly.