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Thursday, January 01, 2026

The U.S. Postal Service has adopted a new rule that could create doubt about whether some ballots mailed by voters by Election Day will receive postmarks in time to be counted.

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The United States Postal Service (USPS) finalized a rule on postmarks to reflect changes in its mail pickup processes that could cause an uptick in blown deadlines for documents sent by post, including mail-in ballots. www.democracydocket.com/news-alerts/ ...

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-- Marc Elias (@marcelias.bsky.social) Dec 30, 2025 at 12:55 PM

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The U.S. Postal Service has adopted a new rule that could create doubt about whether some ballots mailed by voters by Election Day will receive postmarks in time to be counted. A USPS rule that took effect on Dec. 24 says mail might not receive a postmark on the same day the agency takes possession of it.

Bathhouse Bill must be ecstatic.

#1 | Posted by reinheitsgebot at 2026-01-01 02:38 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 1

That ass-eating --- can burn in ------- hell.

#2 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2026-01-01 09:10 PM | Reply

How does this effect 15 April?

#3 | Posted by fresno500 at 2026-01-02 11:38 AM | Reply

Here in CO, where we have an extremely reliable and trustworthy mail-in ballot system, regardless of what Tina Peters imagines, most of us already know that the best way to assure that our votes are counted on time is to use the election drop-boxes.

This change is going to have much more effect than just elections. There is a lot of mail in the US that is time sensitive and dependent upon the postmark, such as tax payments. This SHOULD be causing a significant and nonpartisan outcry.

#4 | Posted by Whatsleft at 2026-01-02 12:37 PM | Reply

Taxes filed by paper are assumed filed at the time of postmark. Delayed delivery is moot.

Not anymore.

Now, delayed delivery, whether purposeful or accidental, is the fault of the filer, and not the responsibility of the USPS.

It's a huge change, and an extremely stupid change. This will allow fraud anytime a favorable postal clerk decides to muck with the timing. More actual fraud than BJ ever pretended.

#5 | Posted by Danforth at 2026-01-02 01:19 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

If it were up to me, I wouldn't have allowed the postmark rule in the first place with mail-in ballots. People who mail-in can recognize the importance of the delay in mailing it in and just get their ballots in the mail before election day. Spare me the constitutionality of voting rights. Mail in votes should be in by election day. we're already giving a grace period which is fine but the USPS is cutting where they can and that includes not postmarking ballots the day they are in their possession.

#6 | Posted by eberly at 2026-01-02 01:21 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

-Now, delayed delivery, whether purposeful or accidental, is the fault of the filer, and not the responsibility of the USPS.

exactly. Now change the word "filer" to "voter".

#7 | Posted by eberly at 2026-01-02 01:23 PM | Reply | Funny: 1

" Mail in votes should be in by Election Day."

They are, currently.

This changes the goalposts from when YOU CHOOSE TO VOTE , to when someone else DEIGNS TO DELIVER.

HORRIBLE idea.

#8 | Posted by Danforth at 2026-01-02 01:32 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 3

What makes you think mail-in ballots will still be a thing?

#9 | Posted by john_savage1 at 2026-01-02 02:24 PM | Reply

#9 What makes you think mail-in ballots will no longer be a thing?

It has only been around since before this country was founded.

#10 | Posted by A_Friend at 2026-01-02 02:27 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

Trumps post master is changing the rules.

#11 | Posted by Alexandrite at 2026-01-02 02:30 PM | Reply

time.com

Even the scattered examples of absentee voting (the terms are often used interchangeably) that can be traced to the colonial era tend to fit the pattern: In 17th-century Massachusetts, men could vote from home if their homes were "vulnerable to Indian attack," according to historian Alex Keyssar's book The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States, and the votes of some Continental Army soldiers were presented in writing "as if the men were present themselves" in Hollis, N.H., in 1775 during the American Revolution.

#12 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2026-01-02 02:31 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

www.cnn.com

If you rely on postmarks when casting your ballot, filing your taxes or paying bills, a new US Postal Service rule makes it clear that you should plan ahead.

Postmarks " which include a date stamp from the USPS " can offer proof that a piece of mail, such as a ballot, was turned in by a legal deadline.

But the new rule, which went into effect last week, clarifies that a postmark does not "necessarily" reflect the date the USPS "first accepted possession" of the piece of mail.

#13 | Posted by Alexandrite at 2026-01-02 02:32 PM | Reply

The ---------------- of America Continues....

#14 | Posted by Effeteposer at 2026-01-02 02:36 PM | Reply

"But the new rule, which went into effect last week, clarifies that a postmark does not "necessarily" reflect the date the USPS "first accepted possession" of the piece of mail."

Well, it's certainly the last possible moment it COULD'VE been accepted.

Also, there's no way to "first accept" unless you first HAVE.

This is insanity; does the USPS EVER...just...give an envelope back, after they've postmarked it???

#15 | Posted by Danforth at 2026-01-02 02:38 PM | Reply

A client of mine got a notice his taxes were filed late. It was impossible, I know the guy beat the midnight deadline; in fact, I think he mailed it a few days early.

The IRS marked it late when it arrived on 4/16. This was particularly important, because it was a 3-yr-prior filing, and the deadline for getting a 4-figure refund would've expired.

My client asked them how in the world could they get it delivered by the 16th, if he hadn't mailed it, at the latest, on the 15th.

Then eventually relented. He sent me a screenshot of the IRS check.

#16 | Posted by Danforth at 2026-01-02 02:43 PM | Reply

^Then eventually relented

should be

THEY eventually relented.

#17 | Posted by Danforth at 2026-01-02 03:08 PM | Reply

@#13 ... But the new rule, which went into effect last week, clarifies that a postmark does not "necessarily" reflect the date the USPS "first accepted possession" of the piece of mail. ...

A couple three years ago when I mailed-in my ballots, I would go to the service desk in the Post Office.

I would then ask for the envelope to be postmarked.

The person behind the counter would then manually stamp a postmark on the envelope and show me the date that was stamped.

Any time I mail something where I need a valid postmark, I always do the same thing as above.



#18 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 03:08 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2

This isn't really anything new. The USPS has been consolidating their processing centers for years now. Some letters don't even get postmarked at all.

#19 | Posted by sentinel at 2026-01-02 03:10 PM | Reply

David (Dave) Steiner is the 76th Postmaster General of the United States and Chief Executive Officer of the U.S. Postal Service. He was appointed by the organization's Board of Governors and began his tenure on July 15, 2025. In his role as Postmaster General, Steiner also serves as a member of the Board of Governors.

Steiner is the former chief executive officer (CEO) of Waste Management, a $20.4 billion revenue waste and environmental services company operating throughout North America, with nearly 50,000 employees. He was CEO from 2004 until 2016.

Waste Management LOL

Postal worker in Southeast DC allegedly caught dumping undelivered mail in a dumpster, prompting an investigation by the Office of the Inspector General.

Viral video shows a postal worker throwing mail into a dumpster in Nashville.
www.wsmv.com

USPS driver caught dumping mail into dumpster in Memphis, TN, leaving residents without important deliveries.

Hmmm... DC, Nashville, Memphis
Reminds me of the old joke:
What does the Post Office and JC Penny have in common?

#20 | Posted by john_savage1 at 2026-01-02 03:13 PM | Reply

What,

"Here in CO, where we have an extremely reliable and trustworthy mail-in ballot system"

That's not a factual claim you can state.

Colorado has used universal mail-in ballots since 2013. Under Colorado law, a mandatory recount of all ballots is required when the margin is 0.5%. In statewide and presidential elections since universal mail-in voting was implemented, that threshold has never been reached, because margins have been well above it. Colorado is a Democrat controlled state.

As a result, Colorado's mail-in voting system has never been tested under a triggered recount.

Audits, procedural checks, and expert assurances may provide confidence, but they are not the same as a full recount conducted required by law. In a genuinely close election, only a mandatory recount of all ballots will verify the outcome, without relying on assumptions or statistical expert opinions.

For that reason, it is inaccurate to claim that Colorado's universal mail-in ballot system has been proven "extremely reliable and trustworthy."

It may be functioning as designed by all appearances, but it has not been validated under the conditions required to demonstrate that claim is a fact.

The same applies to many Democrat controlled states that automatically mail ballots to all homes. Large election result margins mean recount thresholds are rarely reached, leaving claims of system accuracy unproven by their own stress testing.

So again, the claim that wide scale mail-in ballots work smoothly is just made up "facts".

#21 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 06:24 PM | Reply

"only a mandatory recount of all ballots will verify the outcome"

You say mailing ballots isn't secure.

How does recounting them after they're mailed secure them?

#22 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 06:31 PM | Reply

Snoofy,

"How does recounting them after they're mailed secure them?"

If I understand what you're asking, the answer is, "it doesn't".

From the beginning of computer data systems, a popular phrase has been GIGO.

"Garbage In, Garbage Out".

Recounting incomplete or inaccurate data, won't make it more accurate the 2nd time.

For that reason, I support voting systems that scan your ballot on the spot, and not shipping uncounted ballots on trucks and airplanes.

#23 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 06:42 PM | Reply

"the claim that wide scale mail-in ballots work smoothly is just made up "facts"."

Well, if they didn't, there would be AT LEAST SOME people coming forward, simply due to the scale of millions of voters. Tens of millions if you're counting all five Universal Mail-In ballot states.

Are you saying Republicans don't complain when their votes are stolen in Blue States???

#24 | Posted by Danforth at 2026-01-02 06:45 PM | Reply

Dan,

"Are you saying Republicans don't complain when their votes are stolen in Blue States???"

Once again, you are attempting to reframe the conversation into something I'm not saying.

At no point did I infer "stolen" or "fraud". That's for another thread.

Go find that one.

#25 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 06:51 PM | Reply


"only a mandatory recount of all ballots will verify the outcome"

You say mailing ballots isn't secure.

#22 | POSTED BY SNOOFY

Verifying doesn't mean something isn't secure.

How does recounting them after they're mailed secure them?

Then using this incongruence you make a wild leap ...

Your entire rhetorical strategy is just pretending you don't know things and praying people are too scared of being mean to explain them
It's just this one move, over and over and over
The whole system breaks down as soon as people start responding honestly.
These aren't difficult questions, literally everyone in the world knows the answers.

#26 | Posted by oneironaut at 2026-01-02 07:06 PM | Reply

Sighhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

#27 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2026-01-02 07:07 PM | Reply

Securing Your Mail Ballot
vote.utah.gov

... Utah has been voting by mail for over a decade, and it has proven to be a secure and accessible way to vote. Keep reading below for more information: ...

#28 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 07:16 PM | Reply

One,

"praying people are too scared of being mean to explain them"

No...I'm just assuming people have the ability to understand what I'm saying.

Some are afraid to admit to themselves they are just wrong. They might understand very well what I'm saying and they don't like it because it makes sense.

The reality is mail-in ballots are not secure enough for reliable elections. You may believe they are because the results may not have been stress tested, but you're just kidding yourself if you tell yourself otherwise.

You can't turn a sows ear into a silk purse and you can't make mail-in ballots as secure as ballots counted on the spot, regardless how much you design in checks and balances and hire armies of people to count them.

Elections may boil down to a hand full of votes some particular year.

#29 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 07:21 PM | Reply

Nearly 1 million ballots are in the mail as Utah's voting begins
archive.sltrib.com

... Let the voting begin.

County clerks mailed out an estimated 920,000 ballots Monday for the June 28 primary election.

All-by-mail voting is occurring in 20 of Utah's 29 counties and will involve about three of every four registered voters in the state. ...



#30 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 07:22 PM | Reply

www.brennancenter.org

Voting by mail and using drop boxes are safe and trustworthy ways to vote thanks to numerous security features that protect against fraud.

#31 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2026-01-02 07:30 PM | Reply

Lamp,

Interesting you brought up Utah. There are 8 states that use universal mail-in ballots.

Utah is the only Republican controlled state.

Since they put in universal mail-in ballots in 2013, they haven't had a presidential election recount either.

That being said, I'm not focusing on one state or another. My concern is the potential for a nationwide disaster in the future as more states move in this direction, especially before these systems have been tested by genuinely close elections that require mandatory recounts that verify accuracy and validity.

#32 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 07:34 PM | Reply

praying people are too scared of being mean to explain them
#29 | Posted by BillJohnson

But you can't explain it. And it's not because I'm mean.
It's because you can't explain it.
Not to mean old intimidating Snoofy, not to Danforth, not to anyone.

I'm going to keep asking you for evidence that mail in ballots aren't secure.
You've going to keep not having any.
You're going to keep thinking your emotions count as evidence.

Until you have evidence, you're selling snake oil.
It's just this one move, over and over and over.

"you can't make mail-in ballots as secure as ballots counted on the spot"

How can I address such nonsense?
When mail-in ballots get counted, that room is where mail-in ballots are counted on the spot.

#33 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 07:35 PM | Reply

Laura,

Nothing I wrote makes sense to you, does it?

Drop boxes are the least of the problems I'm concerned with.

#34 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 07:36 PM | Reply

Snoofy,

Same to you.

Nothing I write makes any sense to you.

I'm not about to reexplain it.

#35 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 07:37 PM | Reply

Nothing I wrote makes sense to you, does it?
Drop boxes are the least of the problems I'm concerned with.

Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 07:36 PM | Reply

You're just against mail in voting because the more people voting the less likelihood Republicans win their campaigns. That's all there is to it.

#36 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2026-01-02 07:40 PM | Reply

"especially before these systems have been tested by genuinely close elections that require mandatory recounts that verify accuracy and validity."

You still haven't explained how re-counting ballots that showed up in the mail changes the outcome of the election.
If the ballots were tampered with, by the time you're recounting them, it's too late.

Nobody is saying there shouldn't be recounts in close elections.
Everybody knows there have been elections, that went to recount, where plenty of the ballots were mailed in.

What kind of test can you devise that would demonstrate the safety and security of voting by mail?
Because until you can say what standard it's failing to meet, you don't have a real complaint that deserves to be addressed.

#37 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 07:40 PM | Reply

Nothing I write makes any sense to you.
I'm not about to reexplain it.
#35 | Posted by BillJohnson

You can't explain it to begin with.
It only makes sense to you as a "gut feeling."
Something you can only explain with analogies.
Never with real examples from real elations.

It's not a thing you can point at data and say "look, people with more education tend to vote a certain way" or "people with a certain skin color tend to vote a certain way.

You can't explain it to yourself, let alone us.

#38 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 07:42 PM | Reply

"Drop boxes are the least of the problems I'm concerned with."

Then list the other things.
Actual election things.

Here, I'll help
Noteworthy recounts in the United States
ballotpedia.org

#39 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 07:44 PM | Reply

@#32 ... That being said, I'm not focusing on one state or another. ...

I've noticed that. Always trying to pivot away from Utah.

... My concern is the potential for a nationwide disaster in the future as more states move in this direction, especially before these systems have been tested by genuinely close elections that require mandatory recounts that verify accuracy and validity. ...

Yet, in the past, when I have asked for such evidence, I was greeted by crickets.


So, let me ask once again, what evidence does your alias have of such widespread election fraud that it seems to assert?


thx.

#40 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 07:44 PM | Reply

@#34 ... Drop boxes are the least of the problems I'm concerned with. ...

Yet, here in Connecticut, there was a significant issue with drop-boxes.

Bridgeport election probe expands; four more operatives charged (July 2025)
ctmirror.org

... The state criminal investigation involving election crimes in Bridgeport grew Wednesday with the arrests of four more people, nearly two years after a judge tossed out the results of the city's 2023 Democratic mayoral primary because of widespread allegations of absentee ballot fraud.

Robert Anderson, Maria Hernandez, Elsie Mercado and Silvia Ramos turned themselves in Wednesday at the Connecticut State Police barracks in Bridgeport.

They were charged with illegally taking possession of voters' absentee ballots during the primary between Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim and his Democratic challenger John Gomes. ...


There is even video (widely shown on CT TV news) of ballots being stuffed.

4 charged with absentee ballot misconduct in 2019 Bridgeport election (June 2024)
www.ctpublic.org

... Four campaign workers are facing charges of misuse of absentee ballots in connection with Bridgeport's 2019 mayoral primary election, including a high-ranking member of the city's Democratic Town Committee.

Chief State's Attorney Patrick J. Griffin announced Tuesday that inspectors from his office arrested the four on charges of unlawful possession of absentee ballots and other election-related criminal offenses.

Those charged include Wanda Geter-Pataky, the vice chairwoman of the Bridgeport Democratic Town Committee, and Alfredo Castillo, a member of Bridgeport's city council, along with campaign workers Josephine Edmonds and Nilsa Heredia, according to Griffin's office.

"Integrity of our voting process is vital to our democracy," Griffin said in a written statement. "I appreciate the attention and time the Statewide Prosecution Bureau put into these investigations. I hope these prosecutions will send a message that deters tampering with election results in the future in Connecticut."

The four defendants are scheduled to appear in Bridgeport Superior Court on June 24. A lawyer representing Geter-Pataky did not immediately respond to requests for comment. It was not immediately clear whether the other defendants had hired legal representatives.

News of the arrests comes more than four years after Bridgeport's closely-contested 2019 mayoral race, in which incumbent Mayor Joe Ganim was reelected to another term.

However, allegations of absentee misconduct prompted an investigation by the State Elections Enforcement Commission, which referred the case to the state's top prosecutors after conducting a probe that lasted more than three years.

In the interim, allegations of election misconduct surfaced again in Bridgeport, this time garnering national attention. A judge ordered the city to redo its 2024 mayoral election after a video surfaced that appeared to show Geter-Pataky stuffing papers into a ballot drop box.

An investigation into the video is still underway. The charges announced Tuesday pertain only to the race four years earlier. ...


fwiw, Bridgeport politics are known here in CT to be, ummm, I'll be kind, different from the rest of the state.


#41 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 07:54 PM | Reply

Snoofy,

"let alone us"

Speak for yourself.

It's just you.

I taught college level for years part-time in evenings and some days.

I'm pretty good at explaining things simply.

I had all sorts of sorts of students.

If I had you as a student I'd think you're belligerent and dense.

Thank goodness you're not.

#42 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 07:56 PM | Reply

@#36 ... ... You're just against mail in voting because the more people voting the less likelihood Republicans win their campaigns. That's all there is to it. ...

Georgia's GOP House Speaker says vote-by-mail system would be 'devastating to Republicans' (April 2020)
thehill.com

..."... a multitude of reasons why vote by mail in my view is not acceptable," [Georgia state House Speaker David] Ralston went on, before adding "the president said it best, this will be extremely devastating to Republicans and conservatives in Georgia." ...

"The things they had in there were crazy. They had things, levels of voting that if you ever agreed to, you would never have a Republican elected in this country again," [fmr Pres] Trump said...


#43 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 07:58 PM | Reply

Lamp,

Since you want to discuss Utah, I'd trust their election results before any Democrat controlled state.

#44 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:00 PM | Reply

@#44 ... I'd trust their election results before any Democrat controlled state. ...

... stated with no evidence of why that opinion is held.

So, let me ask, why?



#45 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 08:03 PM | Reply

I'm pretty good at explaining things simply.
#42 | Posted by BillJohnson

Not this thing.

"If I had you as a student I'd think you're belligerent and dense."

Funny,that's how you come off not being able articulate something you're so confident of.

Especially a thing you don't even have examples of it ever happening!

If you werey professor, I'd call you a kook.

#46 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 08:04 PM | Reply

Don't procastinate and don't be a whining baby over every little thing. The USPS has to cut costs.

#47 | Posted by visitor_ at 2026-01-02 08:14 PM | Reply

Lamp,

Think about this.

What happens if an aircraft carrying hundreds of thousands of uncounted mail-in ballots crashes two weeks before Election Day?

The election cannot be delayed under the Constitution. There's no clear legal way to prove which ballots were lost.

Audits and recounts don't help, because you can't recount ballots that never arrive.

That's the concern. It's not one state or another.

It's the systemic risk created when elections depend on mass pre-election ballot distribution that cannot be paused or repaired in time if something goes wrong.

But you're the eternal optimist and have decided this could never happen.

I see things differently and believe we need to be prepared for worst case scenarios.

#48 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:18 PM | Reply

Think about this.
What happens if an aircraft carrying hundreds of thousands of uncounted mail-in ballots crashes two weeks before Election Day?
The election cannot be delayed under the Constitution. There's no clear legal way to prove which ballots were lost.
Audits and recounts don't help, because you can't recount ballots that never arrive.
That's the concern. It's not one state or another.
It's the systemic risk created when elections depend on mass pre-election ballot distribution that cannot be paused or repaired in time if something goes wrong.
But you're the eternal optimist and have decided this could never happen.
I see things differently and believe we need to be prepared for worst case scenarios.

Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:18 PM | Reply

#49 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2026-01-02 08:21 PM | Reply


@#48 ... What happens if an aircraft carrying hundreds of thousands of uncounted mail-in ballots crashes two weeks before Election Day? ...

So, tell me, what does happen?

Also please give evidence of the likelihood of that happening and justification of why your alias' imagined outcome might happen.

That aside?

Why would mail-in ballots even be on a plane?

Ballots re usually town-level things, within a single state.

From what I've seen of USPS tracking of my mailings, they all seem to be land-based.

So, I have to ask again, why is mail-in voting so bad?

At this point, all your alias seems to be doing is making up stuff.

OK, so I will admit, your current alias has a good imagination.

But, getting back to reality, what is the issue with mail-in voting?


#50 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 08:27 PM | Reply

What happens if an aircraft carrying hundreds of thousands of uncounted mail-in ballots crashes two weeks before Election Day?

Can you describe where these ballots were being shipped, from where, and why?

#51 | Posted by REDIAL at 2026-01-02 08:28 PM | Reply

Think about this:
Ballots aren't carried by aircraft.
Also, you don't think they think of things like that?

Come on, man.
This is just a hangup you have, because you consume too much right wing propaganda.
That's how crazy reels you in. They keep running crazy idea after crazy idea past you, until you take the bait.

You took the bait.
You think it was your idea to take the bait.
You don't understand that you are being groomed.

#52 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 08:29 PM | Reply

@#48 ... It's the systemic risk created when elections depend on mass pre-election ballot distribution that cannot be paused or repaired in time if something goes wrong. ...

Utah?

... I see things differently ...

I'll leave that one alone ...


#53 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 08:30 PM | Reply

"It's the systemic risk created when elections depend on mass pre-election ballot distribution"

Every election depends on that.

#54 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 08:31 PM | Reply

"Why would mail-in ballots even be on a plane?"

Ballots on a MOTHER FUCKIN plane.
And there ain't a god damn thing you can do about it.
--Samuel L BillJohnson

#55 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-01-02 08:32 PM | Reply

@#52 ... This is just a hangup you have, because you consume too much right wing propaganda. ...

Like the GOP comments quoted in #43?

#56 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-01-02 08:33 PM | Reply

- we need to be prepared for worst case scenarios.

No one expects the Spanish Inquisition! OR the Traitor Trump Presidency!

The latter prolly being by far the worst case scenario for America.

First they came for the Immigrants and the Trans and the Muslims... and then the Voters!

#57 | Posted by Corky at 2026-01-02 08:33 PM | Reply

Redial,

Where is immaterial.

They took off from there to arrive here to be counted.

They didn't arrive.

What does it matter where they were from?

#58 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:34 PM | Reply

I'm done. This thread is scrapping the bottom.

#59 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:37 PM | Reply

I'm done. This thread is scrapping the bottom.

Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:37 PM | Reply

Don't go now we're just getting started.

#60 | Posted by LauraMohr at 2026-01-02 08:39 PM | Reply

Absurdity fills the space between billjohnson's ears.

#61 | Posted by Angrydad at 2026-01-02 08:39 PM | Reply

What does it matter where they were from?

If they came from overseas you are never going to stop that process.

If they came from the same county, they were never on a plane.

I'm done.

CYA, Forrest.

#62 | Posted by REDIAL at 2026-01-02 08:40 PM | Reply

Redial,

"If they came from overseas you are never going to stop that process."

Those would likely be absentee ballots. Not much can do about that.

#63 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 08:58 PM | Reply

Redial,

I think I explained my concern being more and more states going this route.

You're choosing to not see my point.

#64 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 09:00 PM | Reply

Redial,

Scrapping the bottom even worse.

No point in taking anyone's questions serious now.

Just wanting to find exceptions and nitpic instead of seeing my point that is a legitimate question.
.

#65 | Posted by BillJohnson at 2026-01-02 09:04 PM | Reply

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