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In reply to the discussion: Voter ID horror story: NC poll workers forced brown-skinned couple to take a ‘spelling test’ [View all]appalachiablue
(44,024 posts)How outrageous what the WWII Veteran of Iwo Jima recently experienced in Wisconsin under the state's new voter suppression laws. Elderly people who live in nursing homes or their own homes but don't drive or have a photo ID, now must obtain birth certificates and Non Driver IDs in states like Wisconsin because of new rules although they never needed special IDs to vote in the past.
Several years ago a man in Wisconsin who always drives a bus to take seniors to vote on election day called a radio program saying the people would have to go through a lot of effort to obtain new IDs in time for the upcoming election. People don't always know that new voter restriction laws have been put in place, and what's going on locally and nationally until they find out when they go to vote, unfortunately.

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"A 90-YEAR-OLD IWO JIMA VETERAN COULDN'T VOTE IN SCOTT WALKER'S WISCONSIN", This Should Be A Message to the DNC. Will Debbie Wasserman Schultz Hear It? By Charles Pierce, Esquire, Feb. 25, 2016.
Life's tough and getting tougher out in that Midwest subsidiary formerly known as the state of Wisconsin, where goggle-eyed homunculus Scott Walker remains the managing director. Now, it seems casting your ballot in a state election has become harder than surviving the slog up Mount Suribachi was.
In her letter, Bradley said her uncle had fought at IWO JIMA, the bloody World War II battle that was immortalized in a photo of the U.S. flag being raised on the tiny Pacific island. Tuesday marked the 71st anniversary of the 1945 flag raising. Bradley's uncle, Leo Olson of Reedsburg, tried to use his VETERANS ID CARD to vote in last week's primary for a seat on the state Supreme Court, but that form of identification can't be used under the state's voter ID law. Olson does not have a driver's license. That could soon change because of legislation the state Senate is to take up next month. Even if approved, it may not be in place for the April 5 election, when voters will decide the state Supreme Court race and cast ballots in the presidential primaries.
"He considers voting part of his patriotic duty," Bradley wrote to Walker.
"Yet, last week this proud patriot of 90 years of age was embarrassed and confused when he went to the polls and was denied his right to vote. Then he presented his veterans administration card with his picture on it, he was told that the card was not listed as 'acceptable' proof of his identity. He responded: "YOU MEAN VETERANS CAN'T VOTE?'"
I guarantee you that there are hundreds of examples of things like this out there. VETERANS. GRANDPARENTS. HONOR STUDENTS. COPS. NURSES. Each one of them could be used to shame the people who are writing and passing VOTER-SUPPRESSION LAWS ALL OVER THE UNITED STATES. These examples could provide an endless stream of campaign commercials that would have the advantage of actually being true. However, this would require competent, forward-thinking leadership at the DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE which is, at the moment, being run by someone whose primary concentration apparently is ensuring herself good seats at the 2017 inauguration.http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/news/a42451/scott-walker-voter-id-veteran/