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Showing posts with label drumpf / trump-vance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drumpf / trump-vance. Show all posts

03 November 2024

KNOW YOUR VOTING RIGHTS & A Virginia principal went to vote. She was asked whether she was a citizen. 1&2NOV24


 CLICK the link for the voting toolkit from the ACLU, download it to your phone if you think you are going to need it. DO NOT BE AFRAID TO STAND UP FOR YOUR RIGHTS, do not leave without voting, call the ACLU first. The article from the Washington Post shows why every voter needs to be ready to fight to vote!!!!!


The incident played out at as Donald Trump and many Republicans are falsely claiming that waves of noncitizens are voting.
Michael Laris is a reporter on The Washington Post’s local enterprise team. He previously covered national transportation issues and was a reporter in Beijing. @mikelaris

Updated November 2, 2024 at 7:33 p.m. EDT|Published November 2, 2024 at 4:54 p.m. EDT


As a public school educator who was once declared principal of the year, Liza Burrell-Aldana talks to young people about their responsibility to this country.

So it shook her Thursday evening, she said, when a poll worker at an early-voting site in Fairfax County, Virginia, looked at her driver’s license and asked her, twice: “Are you a citizen?”

She said she was. The worker then asked whether Burrell-Aldana had proof of citizenship in her purse, she recalled.

“Who asks that question? I was like, ‘Why would I carry that with me?’” Burrell-Aldana said.

Burrell-Aldana, who immigrated from Colombia in 2002 and became a U.S. citizen in 2011, hadn’t been asked such questions when she voted in three previous presidential elections, and said the political climate seems to have given license for people to ask.

The incident played out as Donald Trump and many Republicans have falsely claimed that waves of noncitizens are voting, stoking fears. Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) has embraced the issue, pushing for a daily scrub of voter rolls. Voting rights activists throughout the country, meanwhile, are worried that this rhetoric will lead to eligible voters being harassed or afraid to cast their ballots.

It is a violation of Virginia law for a poll worker “to require or even to ask a voter to provide anything more than” a form of identification when they check in to vote, said Ryan Snow, a voting rights attorney at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

It is a violation of Virginia law for a poll worker “to require or even to ask a voter to provide anything more than” a form of identification when they check in to vote, said Ryan Snow, a voting rights attorney at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

On Saturday, elections officials in North Carolina felt compelled to issue basic reassurances about who is allowed to vote. “It does not matter if you were born a U.S. citizen or were naturalized or acquired citizenship. And it does not matter if you are a citizen, but your family members are not. Citizenship is citizenship, and it pertains to you,” according to the statement.

Attempts by noncitizens to vote are extremely rare. An audit by Georgia’s Republican secretary of state, released last month, showed 20 noncitizens were registered to vote — out of 8.2 million citizens on the state’s voter rolls.

Snow said rhetoric to the contrary is dangerous because it can lead to incidents such as the one in Virginia, or worse. “It ends up being a barrier to voting,” Snow said.

Burrell-Aldana, in considering why her citizenship was questioned this year and not in past years, noted an environment where demeaning jokes about Latinos and others seem to be thrown around easily — as they were at a recent Trump rally at Madison Square Garden.

“I do look like a Latina and I sound like a Latina,” Burrell-Aldana said. “I think that was the reason why.”

Whatever the reason, officials at Fairfax County’s Office of Elections said the poll worker at the Franconia Governmental Center has been removed.

The worker “acted unilaterally and in violation of check-in procedures by improperly questioning a voter’s citizenship,” the Office of Elections said in a statement in response to questions from The Washington Post.

Such actions violated the training given to workers, according to the statement, “and we find any deviation from these standards unacceptable. Effective immediately, the election officer will no longer serve in this election.”

Burrell-Aldana said the poll worker pointed to a “restriction” noted on her driver’s license as a basis for the questioning, but a poll manager turned the license over to establish that the restriction concerned the need to wear corrective lenses at night. After the manager intervened, Burrell-Aldana was allowed to vote.

According to the Virginia Department of Elections, acceptable forms of identification, among others, include current or expired Virginia driver’s licenses, employee or student IDs with a photograph, or current utility bills or bank statements.

If a voter forgets identification, they can sign a statement affirming their identity and vote with a regular ballot, according to the department.

A spokeswoman for the department, Andrea M. Gaines, said she could not comment on the incident with Burrell-Aldana but said Virginia law directs election officers to ask voters for their full name and current address and to provide a form of identification.

Under state code, Gaines added, “any qualified voter may, and the officers of election shall, challenge the vote of any person who is listed on the pollbook but is known or suspected not to be a qualified voter.”

Burrell-Aldana was named The Post’s 2023 Principal of the Year for her work in Alexandria and now heads Arlington County’s Claremont Immersion Elementary School.

Burrell-Aldana said her partner, Brandon Broughman, who served in the Air Force for 30 years, was silent as they drove from the polling place after hearing what happened. He soon turned around and insisted they lodge a complaint with a site manager.

“That’s the beauty of becoming a citizen, that you get to vote,” Burrell-Aldana said. “That’s your responsibility. You owe it to the country and you owe it to yourself.”

She worried a newer voter could have given up or had their vote influenced in the same situation. Running into such behavior even in Northern Virginia, a place characterized by its diversity, also made her concerned about what might be happening elsewhere in the commonwealth, she said.

But being singled out also strengthened her sense of duty, she said.

“It’s hard to see that and to hear it and to experience it,” she said. Now, she added, “I appreciate it even more. … I’m going to tell every immigrant, every child who was born here, we have to vote.”


22 October 2024

How hurricane falsehoods are dividing the Republican Party & Debunking Helene Response Myths 10&8OKT24


 WHILE Pres Biden and VP Harris are working with local and state government to get aid to the people who need it from the damage of hurricanes Helene and Milton the drumpf / trump-vance campaigns and a few republican government officials are politicising these efforts by spreading lies and misinformation about the government efforts. Some Republican government officials are actually challenging and correcting the gop / greed over people-republican propaganda campaign ( SEE VIDEO BELOW ) while others are too cowardly to tell the truth about the federal governments recovery efforts. This is a very sad example of how low some will go for their own personal gain, and it is another example of  how the drumpf / trump-vance ticket should not be elected for president and vp. from the Washington Post.....

How hurricane falsehoods are dividing the Republican Party

As the country digs out, Republicans in storm-battered states appear torn between the need to curb dangerous misinformation and fear of drawing a rebuke from Trump just weeks before the election.
Maxine Joselow is a staff writer who covers climate change and the environment. @maxinejoselow
Mariana Alfaro is a reporter for The Washington Post's breaking political news team. The El Salvador native joined The Post in 2019. Before that, Mariana interned at the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Insider, and The Texas Tribune.  @marianaa_alfaro

October 10, 2024 at 12:38 p.m. EDT

As Donald Trump and his allies spread false claims about Hurricanes Helene and Milton, the Republican Party has split into two camps: those who try to dispel the falsehoods, and those who are doubling down on them.

Helene made landfall Sept. 26, tearing through parts of Florida and Georgia before devastating much of western North Carolina, ultimately causing more than 230 deaths. Milton made landfall Wednesday evening near Sarasota, Fla., bringing powerful windstornadoes and deadly floodwaters.

As the country digs out, Republicans in storm-battered states appear torn between the need to curb misinformation and fear of drawing a rebuke from Trump just weeks before the election. Many lawmakers and officials have sought to counter these rumors without directly criticizing the former president or their party.

One of the most prevalent falsehoods spread by Trump is the claim that the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, has used some disaster-relief funds to help migrants. Though the emergency agency and migrant-relief programs are both part of the Department of Homeland Security, their funds are in separate accounts, and money earmarked for hurricane costs can’t be transferred to cover aid to migrants.


REPUBLICANS SLAM HURRICANE FALSEHOODS SPREAD BY TRUMP, GOP

Local Republicans have criticized other Republicans in recent days for spreading misinformation about hurricane relief efforts. (Video: JM Rieger/The Washington Post)


Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.), a Trump ally, has also spread the baseless claim that the government controls the weather — a theory with roots in antisemitic tropes about Jewish people manipulating world events.

Far-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones — who in June was ordered to pay $1.5 billion in damages to the families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims after claiming it was a hoax — has spent a few weeks promoting unfounded claims about FEMA and hurricanes on his platform Infowars. His live stream shared Wednesday — in which he claimed that Helene was a government-controlled weapon used against Americans — received nearly 600,000 views on the social media platform X.

Some Republicans have sought to discredit such conspiracy theories, warning that they could erode trust in FEMA and other officials offering lifesaving advice during disasters.

“Hurricane Helene was NOT geoengineered by the government,” Rep. Chuck Edwards, a Republican from North Carolina, said in a statement Tuesday. “Nobody can control the weather.”

North Carolina state Sen. Kevin Corbin was among the first GOP officials in the hard-hit region to speak out against the rampant misinformation, decrying the “conspiracy theory junk” in a Facebook post last week. Mayor Glenn Jacobs of Knox County, Tenn., also urged his followers last week to “quit spreading those rumors as they are counterproductive to response efforts.”

Edwards, Corbin and Jacobs refrained from criticizing Trump or even mentioning the former president. In contrast, Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) specifically slammed Trump on Tuesday for amplifying falsehoods about Haitians eating pets in Springfield, Ohio, and FEMA using disaster money on migrants.

“Trump told us that people in Springfield are eating dogs and cats. He likewise said that FEMA money, our emergency money, instead of helping people that were hit by the hurricane is being used to help illegals,” Romney said during a discussion at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. “I mean, he just makes it up.”

Falsehoods about FEMA

Trump has repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that FEMA ran out of money for the Helene response because it used the funding on people “who came into the country illegally.” The White House has slammed Trump’s false claim as “poison.”

Asked for comment on Trump’s false claims, Trump campaign spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt repeated them. “The only misinformation is coming from the Biden-Harris administration,” Leavitt said in an email. “White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre lied to the nation Friday when she said it is ‘categorically false’ that FEMA funds are being used to support illegal immigrants.”

House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), who visited storm-ravaged areas of North Carolina on Wednesday alongside Edwards and the state’s two Republican U.S. senators, Thom Tillis and Ted Budd, defended Trump’s statements in a news conference Wednesday evening. The speaker said the former president “is expressing his frustration about the lack of resources being provided here,” and he repeated the false claims about migrants.

In the same news conference, however, Edwards said that he attributes the “rumors that are out there” about FEMA funding to “good old-fashioned storytelling.”

On Tuesday, Edwards issued a lengthy fact sheet dispelling falsehoods about Helene and FEMA. The fact sheet noted that FEMA “has NOT diverted disaster response funding to the border or foreign aid,” and that NOAA official Charles Konrad has “confirmed that no one has the technology or ability to geoengineer a hurricane.”

Johnson was among the lawmakers who shared Edwards’s fact sheet on X. FEMA also set up a webpage disputing the claims, stating clearly that “no money is being diverted from disaster response needs.”

Weather-control conspiracy theories

Greene, for her part, has continued to promote her unfounded theory that “they control the weather.” She wrote Wednesday that some of the individuals who allegedly control the weather are “listed on NOAA,” referring to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

In response, Rep. Carlos A. Gimenez (R-Fla.) shot back: “Humans cannot create or control hurricanes. Anyone who thinks they can, needs to have their head examined.”

Asked for comment, Greene spokesman Nick Dyer said the congresswoman was not suggesting that Helene was engineered by humans. He said Greene was merely trying to bring attention to what he called “weather manipulation.”

“Every one of Congresswoman Greene’s critics ... want to ignore the science-based factual evidence she has shared,” Dyer said. “They are the ones peddling conspiracy theories about her.”

Greene has apologized for previously embracing the conspiracy theory that the Rothschild family used lasers from space to start wildfires. The Rothschilds, a famous European business dynasty, have repeatedly been subjected to antisemitic allegations that they and other Jews clandestinely manipulate world events for their advantage.

President Joe Biden, during a White House briefing Wednesday, chided those sharing misinformation.

“For the last few weeks, there’s been a reckless, irresponsible, relentless promotion of disinformation and outright lies that are disturbing people,” Biden said. “It’s undermining confidence in the incredible rescue and recovery work that has already been taken and will continue to be taken. It’s harmful to those who need help most.”

On Thursday, Biden spoke on the phone with Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, a Republican from Florida who has been sharing the falsehood about migrants. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters that the conversation focused on how the federal government could help Florida officials respond to Milton, adding that the president “has been very public about how he feels about misinformation.”

Climatologists and weather experts have expressed dismay at the spread of once-fringe conspiracy theories about hurricanes into the mainstream.

“Yesterday, my mother told me I needed to do ‘deep research’ because everything I know and learned about hurricanes is wrong,” University of Miami climatologist Brian McNoldy, who has long tracked storms in the Atlantic Ocean, wrote on X. “I can’t even process the ignorance and brainwashing.”

  • Election 2024

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