So SHOW ME WHERE THE LAW ALLOWS BALLOT HARVESTING TO ANYONE IN CT AS YOU CONTINUE TO CLAIM!:maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 10:40 am » wrote: ↑ that section applies to people returning a ballot to the municipal clerk only. not for people who mail their ballots or those who drop their ballots off in drop boxes
Yeah, that's the ticket!maineman » 27 Feb 2024, 3:42 pm » wrote: ↑ nothing legally prevents a black woman from carrying the ballots of all of the elderly women in her bible study group to the drop box for them.
Zeets2 » 28 Feb 2024, 11:01 am » wrote: ↑ Yeah, that's the ticket!
Make it sound like anyone who doesn't accept your completely flawed understanding of the law MUST be racist because an old black woman would be doing something criminal!
You morons think you can simply pull out the race card every time you lie and that will be sufficient to shut us up, huh?
NOT TODAY, BUCKO! I don't give two **** if you think I'm a racist, and your attempt to make it sound that way is the last-gasp effort you liberal scumbags use when you've thoroughly lost the argument!
Zeets2 » 28 Feb 2024, 10:52 am » wrote: ↑ So SHOW ME WHERE THE LAW ALLOWS BALLOT HARVESTING TO ANYONE IN CT AS YOU CONTINUE TO CLAIM!:
Connecticut
In Connecticut, a designee may return the ballot of a voter who obtained an absentee ballot due to illness or disability, and an immediate family member may return a ballot for a student. The law defines designee and immediate family member.“An absentee ballot shall be cast at a primary, election or referendum only if: (1) It is mailed by (A) the ballot applicant, (B) a designee of a person who applies for an absentee ballot because of illness or physical disability, or (C) a member of the immediate family of an applicant who is a student, so that it is received by the clerk of the municipality in which the applicant is qualified to vote not later than the close of the polls; ... (3) it is returned by a designee of an ill or physically disabled ballot applicant, in person, to said clerk not later than the close of the polls on the day of the election, primary or referendum; (4) it is returned by a member of the immediate family of the absentee voter, in person, to said clerk not later than the close of the polls on the day of the election, primary or referendum; ... A person returning an absentee ballot to the municipal clerk pursuant to subdivision (3) or (4) of this subsection shall present identification and, on the outer envelope of the absentee ballot, sign his name in the presence of the municipal clerk, and indicate his address, his relationship to the voter or his position, and the date and time of such return. As used in this section, “immediate family” means a dependent relative who resides in the individual's household or any spouse, child or parent of the individual.(b) As used in this section and section 9-150c, “designee” means (1) a person who is caring for the applicant because of the applicant's illness or physical disability, including but not limited to, a licensed physician or a registered or practical nurse, (2) a member of the applicant's family, who is designated by an absentee ballot applicant and who consents to such designation, or (3) if no such person consents or is available, then a police officer, registrar of voters, deputy registrar of voters or assistant registrar of voters in the municipality in which the applicant resides.[3]
Here's the statute you simply refuse to believe:
[url]http://Sec. 9-140b. (Formerly Sec. 9-146). Return of absentee ballots; use of secure drop box. Possession of ballots and envelopes restricted.[/url]Sec. 9-140b. (Formerly Sec. 9-146). Return of absentee ballots; use of secure drop box. Possession of ballots and envelopes restricted.
Look intellectual segregation of behavior of lifetimes socially orchestrating outcomes tomorrow only working what is left evolving forward now.maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 10:40 am » wrote: ↑ that section applies to people returning a ballot to the municipal clerk only. not for people who mail their ballots or those who drop their ballots off in drop boxes
So did you not READ the law or did you simply not understand it?maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 11:21 am » wrote: ↑ How do you know the black woman in your video was not the designee for the people whose ballots she placed in the drop box?
All Illegal Alien Loving Traitors should be rounded up and beaten to death.maineman » 23 Feb 2024, 2:20 pm » wrote: ↑ A great article and a relatively short read for you MAGAts and ESLers:
https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/39 ... st-decade/
Dobbs, Georgia, The ineptitude of the House majority, and Trump continuing to rail about racial purity and immigrants ruining America are all counter-productive to the GOP finding their mojo again anytime soon.
Add to that, the Democrat's superior GOTV ground game and 2024 is looking bleak for the Grand Old Party, even before any felony convictions drive nails into its coffin.


the state provides drop boxes. the law says that the ballots may be in the possession of any other person authorized by any provision of the general statutes to possess a ballot or ballot envelope. Like a designee. the law says you can even use regular old mail boxes. There is nothing that states that a ballot may NOT be dropped off at a drop box except by the actual voter themselves.Zeets2 » 28 Feb 2024, 11:55 am » wrote: ↑ So did you not READ the law or did you simply not understand it?
IF that black woman was the designee for those people THEN SHE'D HAVE TO BRING THOSE PILES OF BALLOTS TO THE MUNICIPAL CLERK AND ABIDE BY THEIR RESTRICTIONS! And IF she's not bringing those ballots to the clerk, THE POSSESION AND HANDLING OF THOSE BALLOTS IS RESTRICTED!
Read it again, asshole!:
(3) it is returned by a designee of an ill or physically disabled ballot applicant, in person, to said clerk not later than the close of the polls on the day of the election, primary or referendum; (4) it is returned by a member of the immediate family of the absentee voter, in person, to said clerk.
(d) No person shall have in his possession any official absentee ballot or ballot envelope for use at any primary, election or referendum except the applicant to whom it was issued, the Secretary of the State or his or her authorized agents, any official printer of absentee ballot forms and his designated carriers, the United States Postal Service, any other carrier, courier or messenger service recognized and approved by the Secretary of the State, any person authorized by a municipal clerk to receive and process official absentee ballot forms on behalf of the municipal clerk, any authorized primary, election or referendum official or any other person authorized by any provision of the general statutes to possess a ballot or ballot envelope.
Now show me where is the provision that says that a designee may submit those ballots by putting them in a drop box!
Time to give it up and acknowledge your ignorance of the law, dickhead!
When was the law applied and was the law legislated within the regulations of the United States and the state's constitutions? or was it bypassed by a specific person working for a specific group to shift the balance away from equal application to favor one party above all others combined.maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 12:24 pm » wrote: ↑ the state provides drop boxes. the law says that the ballots may be in the possession of any other person authorized by any provision of the general statutes to possess a ballot or ballot envelope. Like a designee. the law says you can even use regular old mail boxes. There is nothing that states that a ballot may NOT be dropped off at a drop box except by the actual voter themselves.
Not your idiotic beliefs, fool!maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 12:24 pm » wrote: ↑ the state provides drop boxes. the law says that the ballots may be in the possession of any other person authorized by any provision of the general statutes to possess a ballot or ballot envelope. Like a designee. the law says you can even use regular old mail boxes. There is nothing that states that a ballot may NOT be dropped off at a drop box except by the actual voter themselves.
Zeets2 » 28 Feb 2024, 1:09 pm » wrote: ↑ Not your idiotic beliefs, fool!
SHOW US THE LAW JUST AS I DID WHEN YOU DIDN'T BELIEVE IT EXISTED!
Those ballots CAN ONLY BE IN THE POSSESSION OF A DESIGNEE IF THEY ARE DELIVERED TO THE CLERK, and NOT by just dropping dozens of them in a drop box. THAT'S ILLEGAL! If you're so sure it's legal, SHOW US THE LAW!
And where (for the 3rd time) does it state that your black friend can be the designated person AND be authorized to drop dozens of ballots in a drop box WITHOUT delivering them to the clerk?maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 1:15 pm » wrote: ↑ that is not what the law says. It says that if they are delivered to the clerk, the voter or their designee must deliver them. It doesn't say who can or cannot drop them in the US Mail Box and it does not say who can or cannot drop them in a drop box.
I doubt he did that. Got a quote?
You won't look to find anything that nullifies your beliefs and you won't accept anyone else's information not in the form of context over content facts.maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 4:33 pm » wrote: ↑ I don't give a **** what you doubt. You doubted he appointed hundreds of judges. Go google Trump's comments about immigrants "poisoning the blood" of Americans. I am not your **** research assistant.
Words above in green tell the story.Zeets2 » 28 Feb 2024, 2:01 pm » wrote: ↑ And where (for the 3rd time) does it state that your black friend can be the designated person AND be authorized to drop dozens of ballots in a drop box WITHOUT delivering them to the clerk?
An absentee ballot shall be cast at a primary, election or referendum only if: (1) It is mailed by (A) the ballot applicant, (B) a designee of a person who applies for an absentee ballot because of illness or physical disability, or (C) a member of the immediate family of an applicant who is a student, so that it is received by the clerk of the municipality in which the applicant is qualified to vote not later than the close of the polls; ... (3) it is returned by a designee of an ill or physically disabled ballot applicant, in person, to said clerk not later than the close of the polls on the day of the election, primary or referendum; (4) it is returned by a member of the immediate family of the absentee voter, in person, to said clerk
Do you even understand what the word "ONLY" means?
You ignorant Democrats just can't help making up or adjusting the conditions of any laws you don't like!
Bet you think you are real slick. requested by. but are the drop box ballots verified that the people actually requested them or jut people going around finding persons that have no intention on voting and take their name to b o the ballot. Those never intending on voting never check to see if their name was used to vote. why would they unless someone told them to check.maineman » 28 Feb 2024, 4:50 pm » wrote: ↑ Words above in green tell the story.
from the same statute that says that ballots can be "mailed" by a designee of the person who applies for an absentee ballot:
"(c) (1) For purposes of this section, “mailed” means (A) sent by the United States Postal Service or any commercial carrier, courier or messenger service recognized and approved by the Secretary of the State, or (B) deposited in a secure drop box designated by the municipal clerk for such purpose."
Ergo: as per the law....there is no requirement to deliver it to the clerk. Just drop it in the mailbox or drop it in the drop box... or have your designee do it for you.
So again... do you have any evidence that the black woman on your video clip dropping ballots into the drop box was NOT the designee of the people who cast those ballots? YES OR NO
laws that order ancestries to adopt a social narrative do not protect genetic results from deniers but does defend deniers from honest reproductions standing their time equally occupying space here.maineman » 29 Feb 2024, 8:46 am » wrote: ↑ what about the hundreds of judges appointed by your clown?