Tuesday, April 30, 2019

The Reality Of Mind-Reading: Neuroscientists Can Predict Your Choices 11 Seconds Before You Make Them

From Zero Hedge.com (Mar. 19):

Researchers at the Future Minds Lab at UNSW School of Psychology in Australia were able to predict basic choices participants made BEFORE they consciously declared their decisions. Their findings were published last week in the journal Scientific Reports.

For the experiment, the researchers asked 14 participants to freely choose between two visual patterns – one of red horizontal stripes and one of green vertical stripes –  before consciously imagining them while being observed in a functional magnetic resonance imaging machine (fMRI).

They were given a maximum of 20 seconds to choose between the patterns. Once they’d made a decision, they pressed a button and had 10 seconds to visualize the pattern as hard as they could. Next, they were asked “what did you imagine?” and “how vivid was it?” They answered these questions by pressing buttons.

The results were unsettling.

Scientists were able to predict which pattern people would choose before their thoughts even became conscious.

Here is an explanation of the results, from the UNSW press release:

Not only could the researchers predict which pattern they would choose, they could also predict how strongly the participants were to rate their visualizations. With the assistance of machine learning, the researchers were successful at making above-chance predictions of the participants’ volitional choices at an average of 11 seconds before the thoughts became conscious.

The brain areas that revealed information about the future choices were located in executive areas of the brain – where our conscious decision-making is made – as well as visual and subcortical structures, suggesting an extended network of areas responsible for the birth of thoughts. (source)

Professor Joel Pearson said we may have thoughts on ‘standby’ based on previous brain activity, which then influences our final decisions without us being aware:

“We believe that when we are faced with the choice between two or more options of what to think about, non-conscious traces of the thoughts are there already, a bit like unconscious hallucinations.

As the decision of what to think about is made, executive areas of the brain choose the thought-trace which is stronger. In, other words, if any pre-existing brain activity matches one of your choices, then your brain will be more likely to pick that option as it gets boosted by the pre-existing brain activity.

This would explain, for example, why thinking over and over about something leads to ever more thoughts about it, as it occurs in a positive feedback loop.” (source)

The subjective strength of future thoughts was also dependent on activity housed in the early visual cortex, an area in the brain that receives visual information from the outside world. This suggests that the current state of activity in perceptual areas (which are believed to change randomly) has an influence on how strongly we think about things, the researchers explained. [read more]

Interesting but kind of unsettling.

Monday, April 29, 2019

Ben Carson’s 3 Ambitious Agenda Items for Reforming Public Housing

From The Daily Signal.com (Mar. 18):

Here are three agenda items the HUD secretary says he is working on during 2019:

1. Work Requirements for Rental Assistance

……………….

Under Trump’s budget proposal for HUD, able-bodied adults getting rental assistance would be required to work at least 20 hours per week or attend job training or education classes. The requirement doesn’t include the elderly or disabled.

………………

2. Private-Sector Help to Rehabilitate Public Housing

Under Carson, a public-private partnership program to get private funds to renovate dilapidated public housing structures has reached more than 100,000 units and drew $5.8 billion in private investment.

Carson said that HUD has accelerated the Rental Assistance Demonstration program, begun in the Obama administration, because it has been a good deal for taxpayers while increasing affordable housing for the needy.

………………………

3. Deregulating a Path to Affordable Housing

Carson has been talking to local government leaders about scaling back land-use regulations that drive up housing costs. He said HUD has been looking at tying federal grants to local governments with deregulation.

That includes zoning regulation, rent control, and environmental rules.

“In terms of what we’re talking about, regulatory and zoning restrictions for single-family homes, you’re adding 25 [percent to] 27 percent to the cost,” Carson said. “So, that’s huge. For multifamily, you’re talking 32.1 percent on average; in a quarter of cases, up to 42 percent. So, you’re talking huge numbers here.” [read more]

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Smarter Faster Better Notes

Five Key Team Norms:

  1. Teams need to believe that their work is important.
  2. Teams need to feel their work is personally meaningful.
  3. Teams need clear goals and defined roles.
  4. Team members need to know they can depend on one another.
  5. But, most important, teams need psychological safety.

To create psychological safety, Laszlo Bock said, team leaders needed to model the right behaviors. There were Google-designed checklists they could use: Leaders should not interrupt teammates during conversations, because that will establish an interrupting norm. They should demonstrate they are listening by summarizing what people say after they said it. They should admit what they don’t know. They shouldn’t end a meeting until all team members have spoken at least once. They should encourage people who are upset to express their frustrations, and encourage teammates to respond in nonjudgmental ways. They should call out intergroup conflicts and resolve them through open discussion.

…………..

If you want to become a broker and increase the productivity of your own creative process, there are three things that can help: First, be sensitive to your own experiences. Pay attention to how things make you think and feel. That’s how we distinguish clichés from true insights.

Second, recognize that the panic and stress you feel as you try to create isn’t a sign that everything is falling apart. Rather, it’s the condition that helps make us flexible enough to seize something new. Creative desperation can be critical; anxiety is what often pushes us to see old ideas in new ways.

Finally, remember that the relief accompanying a creative breakthrough, while sweet, can also blind us to seeing alternatives. It is critical to maintain some distance from what we create. Without self-criticism, without tension, one idea can quickly crowd out competitors. But we can regain that critical distance by forcing ourselves to critique what we’ve already done, by making ourselves look at it from a completely different perspective, by changing the power dynamics in the room or giving new authority to someone who didn’t have it before.

…………..

The creative process is, in fact, a process, something that can be broken down and explained.

“Creativity is just problem solving,” Ed Catmull told me [the author]. “Once people see it as problem solving, it stops seeming like magic, because it’s not. Brokers are just people who pay more attention to what problems look like and how they’ve been solved before. People who are most creative are the ones who have learned that feeling scared is a good sign. We just have to learn how to trust ourselves enough to let the creativity out.”

Source: Smarter Faster Better: The Transformative Power of Real Productivity (2016) by Charles Duhigg.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

The Internet Knows You Better Than Your Spouse Does

From Scientific American.com (Mar. 14):

If you enjoy computerized personality tests, you might consider visiting Apply Magic Sauce. The Web site prompts you to enter some text you have written—such as e-mails or blogs—along with information about your activities on social media. You do not have to provide social media data, but if you want to do it, you either allow Apply Magic Sauce to access your Facebook and Twitter accounts or follow directions for uploading selected data from those sources, such as your history of pressing Facebook’s “like” buttons. Once you click “Make Prediction,” you will see a detailed psychogram, or personality profile, that includes your presumed age and sex, whether you are anxious or easily stressed, how quickly you give in to impulses, and whether you are politically and socially conservative or liberal.

Examining the psychological profile that the algorithm derives from your online traces can certainly be entertaining. On the other hand, the algorithm’s ability to draw inferences about us illustrates how easy it is for anyone who tracks our digital activities to gain insight into our personalities—and potentially invade our privacy. What is more, psychological inferences about us might be exploited to manipulate, say, what we buy or how we vote.

SURPRISING ACCURACY

It seems that our like clicks by themselves can be pretty good indicators of what makes us tick. In 2015 David Stillwell and Youyou Wu, both at the University of Cambridge, and Michal Kosinski of Stanford University demonstrated that algorithms can evaluate what psychologists call the Big Five dimensions of personality quite accurately just by examining a Facebook user’s likes. These dimensions—openness to experience, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness and neuroticism—are viewed as representing the basic dimensions of personality. The degree to which they are present in individuals describes who those people are.

The researchers trained their algorithm using data from more than 70,000 Facebook users. All the participants had earlier filled out a personality questionnaire, and so their Big Five profile was known. The computer then went through the Facebook accounts of these test subjects looking for likes that are often associated with certain personality characteristics. For example, extroverted users often give a thumbs-up to activities such as “partying” or “dancing.” Users who are especially open may like Spanish painter Salvador Dalí.

Then the investigators had the program examine the likes of other Facebook users. If the software had as few as 10 for analysis, it was able to evaluate that person about as well as a co-worker did. Given 70 likes, the algorithm was about as accurate as a friend. With 300, it was more successful than the person’s spouse. Even more astonishing to the researchers, feeding likes into their program enabled them to predict whether someone suffered from depression or took drugs and even to infer what the individual studied in school.

The project grew out of work that Stillwell began in 2007, when he created a Facebook app that enabled users to fill out a personality questionnaire and get feedback in exchange for allowing investigators to use the data for research. Six million people participated until the app was shut down in 2012, and about 40 percent gave permission for the researchers to obtain access to their past Facebook activities—including their history of likes.

Researchers around the world became very interested in the data set, parts of which were made available in anonymized form for noncommercial research. More than 50 articles and doctoral dissertations have been based on it, in part because the Facebook data reveal what people actually do when they are unaware that their behavior is the subject of research. [read more]

What the AI Overlords could do with this data!

Monday, April 22, 2019

7 Reasons Why the Equality Act Is Anything But

From The Daily Signal.com (Mar. 14):

Most Americans don’t want a nationwide bathroom requirement, health care mandate, or “preferred pronoun” law based on gender identity, but congressional Democrats seem to think it’s time to impose them.
Nancy Pelosi delivered Wednesday on her promise to introduce the so-called Equality Act, which would elevate sexual orientation and gender identity to protected classes in federal anti-discrimination law.
Although that may sound nice in theory, in practice sexual orientation and gender identity policies at the state and local level have caused profound harms to Americans from all walks of life.
How might a sexual orientation and gender identity law on the federal level, as introduced in the House and Senate, affect you and your community? Here are seven ways:
  1. It would penalize Americans who don’t affirm new sexual norms or gender ideology.
  2. It would compel speech.
  3. It could shut down charities. A federal sexual orientation and gender identity law could force any social service organization to open up private facilities—including single-sex bathrooms, showers, and sleeping areas—to members of the opposite sex.
  4. It would allow more biological males to defeat girls in sports.
  5. It could be used to coerce medical professionals.
  6. It could lead to more parents losing custody of their children. The politicization of medicine according to gender ideology will create more conflicts among parents, doctors, and the government. A federal sexual orientation and gender identity law would jeopardize parental rights nationwide.
  7. It would enable sexual assault. A complaint under investigation by federal education officials alleges that a boy who identifies as “gender fluid” at Oakhurst Elementary School in Decatur, Georgia, sexually assaulted Pascha Thomas’ 5-year-old daughter in a girls’ restroom. The boy had access to the girls’ restroom because of Decatur City Schools’ transgender restroom policy.
…………..
The Equality Act defies the purpose of anti-discrimination laws. The original Civil Rights Act was enacted to protect African-Americans from being denied access to material goods and services.
The Equality Act, by contrast, would be used as a sword to attack people and force them to adopt new ideologies about human sexuality. [read more]
This is insane legislation. Then again what do you expect from the insane? This act is anything but equal.
More articles about this act:

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Dangers to avoid when dealing with Scripture

  • Unnecessary Elective Surgery –not teaching the whole counsel of God
  • Watered-Down Wine –reducing the authority of Scripture
  • Hearing Without Hearing –not being attentive to the words of the Bible
  • Cold, Dead Orthodoxy – missing the lifestyle that should result from reading God’s Word
  • Arrogant Reading – intentionally or unintentionally interpreting the Bible for our own purposes
  • Doctrine-less Discipleship – practicing discipleship without knowing the teachings of Scripture
  • Christian Pole-Sitting – reading God’s Word in isolation from a supportive community of believers

Source: “Can You Trust the Bible?” Course: Week Seven from DTS.edu.

    Tuesday, April 16, 2019

    Finland's Government Collapsed Under Weight Of Socialized Healthcare

    From Zero Hedge.com (Mar. 13):

    Healthcare costs, which are high because of governments, have caused the collapse of the Finnish government. Prime Minister Juha Sipila and the rest of the cabinet resigned after the governing coalition failed to pass reforms in parliament to the country’s regional government and health services, the Wall Street Journal reports.

    Finland, like much of the developed world, faces an aging population, with around 26 percent of its citizens expected to be over 65 by the year 2030, an increase of 5 percent from today.  The strain on the socialized medical system is impossible to ignore, and cannot be fixed by more government interference.

    And the problems with socialism continue, as money is taken from some and given to others, eventually, the takers will outnumber the makers.

    The only reform that could possibly help these failing systems is to have the government step back and let competition and the free market thrive. Of course, that’s the one thing governments cannot and will not do because it means giving up power and control over people’s lives.

    Reuters reports that soaring treatment costs and longer life spans have particularly affected Nordic countries. It isn’t just Finland.  Sweden and Denmark face similar bleak outlooks for their socialism as well. [read more]

    Monday, April 15, 2019

    Tax Lessons

    • There is no such thing as a free lunch. Except in very special circumstances, cutting tax rates does not stimulate the economy to increase revenues.
    • Taxes collected do not measure the social cost of government; spending is a much better metric. If the government cuts tax collections without restraining spending, all it’s done is put off the reckoning of who will bear the cost.
    • Tax policy changes create winners and losers, both within and across generations. Talking about this is not class warfare.
    • Taxes entail economic cost. They replace the incentive to work, save, and invest, and encourage taxpayers to engage in unproductive tax shelters. Centuries of experience proves that taxpayers do respond to those incentives, but there is considerable disagreement about how much they respond. Nonetheless, it is apparent that the all-in economic cost of a dollar of government services is significantly more than a dollar.
    • If we value services the government provides more than their cost, we should grow up and tax ourselves to pay for them. If not, they should be eliminated.*
    • A large and growing number of spending programs are now run through the tax system. Policymakers should apply the same scrutiny to those “tax expenditures” as to traditional spending. If they are not worth the cost. they should be eliminated.* And if they would work better as a traditional spending program, they should be removed from the tax code.
    • The tax code could be made simpler and more efficient by eliminating preferences and loopholes, consolidating tax subsidies with similar aims (such as the vast array of education credits and deductions), and eliminating the ultra-complex AMT. This is easy for tax policy experts to say and hard for politicians to do (because those preferences and loopholes all have powerful constituencies).

    Source: Taxes in America. What Everyone Needs to Know (2013) by Leonard E. Burman & Joel Slemrod.

    A couple of article on taxes:

      *Like that would happen. Taxes laws have too much power in them.

      Wednesday, April 10, 2019

      Christian Faith and Reason

      Militant atheists and secular progressives think that faith and reason are polar opposites of one another. This is far from the truth. If anything they are complementary of one another.

      Below are Bible verses that show reason isn’t a foreign concept in Christianity. The italics are my emphasis.

      • But these speak evil of those things which they know not: but what they know naturally, as brute beasts, in those things they corrupt themselves.* (Jude 1:10)
      • And Jesus said to him, "You shall love Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind." (Matthew 22:37) (Deut. 6:5)
      • And according to Paul's custom, he went in to them and reasoned with them from the Scriptures on three Sabbaths, opening and setting forth that the Messiah must have suffered and to have risen from the dead, and that this is the Messiah, Jesus, whom I preach to you. (Acts 17:2-3)
      • If I do not do the works of My Father, do not believe Me. But if I do, even if you do not believe Me, believe the works, that you may perceive and may believe that the Father is in Me, and I in Him.^ (John 10:37-38)
      • Do not quench the Spirit.
        Do not despise prophecies.
        Prove all things, hold fast that which is good. (1 Thessalonians 5:19-21)
      • Come now and let us reason together, says Lord: Though your sins are as scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they are red as the crimson, they shall be like wool. (Isaiah 1:18)
      • Get wisdom, get understanding; do not forsake and do not turn away from the words of my mouth. (Proverbs 4:5)

      A good book on faith and reason is Dr. Michael Guillen’s book Can a Smart Person Believe in God? (2009). He says yes.

      H/T to the book Forensic Faith: A Homicide Detective Makes the Case for a More Reasonable, Evidential Christian Faith (2017) by J. Warner Wallace.

      One final thought. Even militant atheists have to have faith. They fly on airplanes of course. How do they know the plane they are flying on won’t have a malfunction in midflight? Or a bird flies in an engine? Or if the pilot is drunk or overly tired? The answer is they don’t.

      *In other words, don’t let your passions overrule your common sense.

      ^Actions speak louder than words. Jesus doesn’t exclude Himself from this proverb.

      Tuesday, April 09, 2019

      Here Are 5 Hysterical Environmentalist Claims in Modern History

      From The Daily Signal.com (Mar. 11):

      Peddlers of the Green New Deal know that the only way for their radical agenda to become reality is if Americans buy into the wildest claims of climate extremists.

      ……………

      Here are five of the biggest misses:

      1. Population Bomb to Cause Global Famine by 2000

      The first Earth Day, in 1970, was filled with hyperbole and exaggerations about mankind’s future. Much of the craziness was unearthed in a remarkable exposein 2000 by Reason contributor Ronald Bailey.

      One of the most common ideas, in a throwback to Malthus, was that the global food supply simply couldn’t keep up with population growth.

      Peter Gunter, a professor at North Texas State University—now named the University of North Texas—wrote about how mass starvation was in the world’s near-term future.

      Ah, yes, all the scientists agree that the world will end by the year 2000.

      ………………

      2. Air Pollution Will Be So Bad That City Dwellers Will Have to Wear Gas Masks

      Another grand prediction at Earth Day 1970 (it was full of doozies) was that the air pollution problem common to many American cities would continue to get exponentially worse without widespread government control of the American way of life.

      …………………..

      3. Entire Nations Could Be Wiped Out by 1999

      Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez, D-N.Y., a self-avowed socialist, recently claimed that the world would end in 12 years if we don’t radically transform our economy to combat climate change.

      The decade long window of pronounced doom seems to be a favorite among climate alarmists.

      …………………

      4.  Ice Caps Will Melt Away

      Predictions about the polar ice caps melting have been common. Dramatic pictures of polar bears floating on tiny icebergs have been some of the iconic images of the climate change movement.

      Former Vice President Al Gore said at a conference in 2009 that a scientist predicted a “75 percent chance that the entire polar ice cap during some of the summer months could be completely ice free within five to seven years.”

      In 2014, the ice caps were still there. In fact, it’s 2019 and the ice caps are still there.

      …………………..

      5.  The Coming Ice Age

      In 1958, Betty Friedan, one of the leading thinkers of radical, modern feminism, wrote an article in Harper’s magazine describing the “coming ice age.”

      It seems the mixing of climate science and radical left-wing politics is nothing new.

      Friedan based her article on the work of two scientists, geophysicist Maurice Ewing, director of Columbia University’s Lamont Geological Observatory, and geologist-meteorologist William Donn.

      She explained how these scientists foresaw American port cities being drowned by rising oceans, and how a giant glacier would cover Europe and North America. The scientists described conditions by which the earth would dramatically warm and then cool, sending us into another ice age.

      These scientists were more cautious in their predictions than others, but this didn’t stop Friedan from speculating that, based on their calculations about the rate of warming, a layman could conclude that “the Arctic Ocean will be open and the Ice Age [will] begin in another twenty years.”   [read more]

      Monday, April 08, 2019

      New Bill to Tax Stock Market Could Devastate Ordinary Savings and Retirement

      From The Daily Signal.com (Mar. 6):

      A new tax proposal in Congress aims to stick it to the rich. But if passed, it could devastate the U.S. financial system and ruin the value of ordinary Americans’ retirement accounts.

      The proposal, introduced by a team of Democrats* in the House and Senate, would assess a penalty each time someone sells a stock, bond, or other financial instrument. It would tax each of the roughly 10 billion U.S. equity market trades each year, among other transactions.

      The goal, presumably, is to hit the rich. But the stock market is not just a tool for the wealthy.

      Some of the largest shareholders and beneficiaries of our modern financial system are pension funds for public-sector employees and private retirement account holders. Firefighters, teachers, university endowments, and private retirement savings all benefit from sophisticated equity markets. Many employers issue short-term debt to cover payroll and young start-ups sell securities to fund their growth.

      This proposal would handicap markets for U.S. saving and investment. It would levy a tax of 0.1 percent on the value of every stock, bond, and derivative transaction in the U.S. or made by a U.S. resident.

      …………………..

      The tax would also increase costs for small businesses and start-ups trying to raise funds. A start-up that sells $50 million in securities would now owe a $50,000 tax—not a trivial sum.

      But most of all, the tax would hurt ordinary American savers.  [read more]

      *Of, course it is from the Dems. They never met a tax they disliked.

      Wednesday, April 03, 2019

      Why We Should Teach Girls to Be Individualists Instead of Feminists

      From FEE.org:

      The first problem with feminism, regardless of what meaning you put into it, is that even the term itself singles out a particular group of people—women—by appealing to the "feminine." It is often argued that the term is used to outline the target group of the movement. However, when one group marks itself out, it contributes to the segmentation of society. Nothing is wrong with this until the group starts calling for privileges and unnecessary concessions. This special treatment is justified by claiming a certain sect of society is responsible for their woes.

      Opportunity versus Outcome

      The feminist movement has been especially effective at promoting all sorts of measures aimed at ensuring women are as free to pursue their goals as are men, such as gender quotas. It is key to distinguish between equality of opportunity—which is one of the pillars of individualism—and equality of outcome, which undermines individualism.

      …………………

      Why Compete with Men When You Can Be an Individual?

      Using your competitor’s tactics can help you maintain your place, but it won’t help you win the race. For this very reason, feminism hasn’t won yet and never will if it carries on in its current form. The victory of feminism is only possible if it dissolves into individualism.

      ……………….

      Individualism is a philosophy that treats all individuals equally, regardless of their gender, race, upbringing etc. It is a merit-based system of beliefs and, therefore, is mainly concerned with the value every individual can bring to the world. Individualism encourages us to leverage what we have and to harness our new sides.

      Teaching girls to compete like men is a flawed and poisonous strategy. It’s time we started teaching girls to compete like individuals and to use feminine to their advantage in fair and value creation-oriented competition based on equality of opportunity.  [read more]

      Everyone regardless of their gender should be individualists.

      Tuesday, April 02, 2019

      Don’t look now: why you should be worried about machines reading your emotions

      From The Guardian.com (Mar. 6):

      In recent years, technology companies have started using Ekman’s method to train algorithms to detect emotion from facial expressions. Some developers claim that automatic emotion detection systems will not only be better than humans at discovering true emotions by analyzing the face, but that these algorithms will become attuned to our innermost feelings, vastly improving interaction with our devices.

      But many experts studying the science of emotion are concerned that these algorithms will fail once again, making high-stakes decisions about our lives based on faulty science.

      Emotion detection technology requires two techniques: computer vision, to precisely identify facial expressions, and machine learning algorithms to analyze and interpret the emotional content of those facial features.

      Typically, the second step employs a technique called supervised learning, a process by which an algorithm is trained to recognize things it has seen before. The basic idea is that if you show the algorithm thousands and thousands of images of happy faces with the label “happy” when it sees a new picture of a happy face, it will, again, identify it as “happy”.

      …………….

      Amazon, Microsoft and IBM now advertise “emotion analysis” as one of their facial recognition products, and a number of smaller firms, such as Kairos and Eyeris, have cropped up, offering similar services to Affectiva.

      Beyond market research, emotion detection technology is now being used to monitor and detect driver impairment, test user experience for video games and to help medical professionals assess the wellbeing of patients.  [read more]

      Yea, the AI Overlords will use this algorithm to determine who is a threat to them or not.

      Monday, April 01, 2019

      15 Things Conservatives Say Democrats’ Election Bill Would Do

      From The Daily Signal.com (Mar. 4):

      House Democrats tentatively have set a vote this week on election legislation that conservatives say would inhibit states’ powers to set qualifications for voters, remove safeguards on voter registration rolls, and undermine the integrity of elections.

      ………………..

      Here are 15 things conservative opponents say you should know about the proposed legislation, highlighted from a fact sheet created by The Heritage Foundation. Analysts with Heritage say the bill would:

      1. Seize the authority of states to regulate voter registration and the voting process by forcing states to implement early voting, automatic voter registration, same-day registration, online voter registration, and no-fault absentee balloting.

      2. Make it easier to commit voter fraud and promote chaos at the polls through same-day registration, as election officials have no time to verify the accuracy of voter registration information and cannot anticipate the number of voters, ballots, and precinct workers that will be needed.

      3. Hurt voter turnout through early voting by diffusing the intensity of get-out-the-vote efforts while raising the cost of campaigns. Voters who vote early don’t have the same information as those who vote on Election Day, missing late-breaking developments that could affect their choices.

      4. Degrade the accuracy of registration lists by automatically registering individuals from state databases, such as DMV and welfare offices, by registering large numbers of ineligible voters, including aliens as well as multiple or duplicate registrations of the same individuals.

      5. Constitute a recipe for massive voter registration fraud by hackers and cybercriminals through online voter registration not tied to an existing state record such as a driver’s license.

      6. Require states to count ballots cast by voters outside of their assigned precinct, overriding the precinct system used by almost all states that allows election officials to monitor votes, staff polling places, provide enough ballots, and prevent election fraud. Mandates no-fault absentee ballots, which are the tool of choice for vote thieves.  [read more]

      Yea, the bill sounds crappy. A complete federal gov’t takeover of the election system. Below is the rest of the bill:

      1. Prevent election officials from checking the eligibility and qualifications of voters and removing ineligible voters.
      2. Cripple the effectiveness of state voter ID laws by allowing individuals to vote without photo identification and merely sign a statement in which they claim they are who they say they are.
      3. Violate the First Amendment and perhaps cover a vast range of legal activity.
      4. Expand government regulation and censorship of election campaigns and political activity and speech, including online and policy-related speech.
      5. Reduce the number of Federal Election Commission members from six to five, allowing the political party with three commission seats to control the commission and engage in partisan enforcement activities.
      6. Prohibit state election officials from participating in federal elections and impose numerous other “ethics” rules that are unconstitutional or unfairly restrict political activity.
      7. Require states to restore the ability of felons to vote the moment they are out of prison.
      8. Transfer the power to draw congressional districts from state legislatures to “independent” commissions whose members are unaccountable to voters.
      9. Violate separation of powers and directly interfere with the president’s constitutional duties.