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Mail-in-voting and citizenship enforcement
 
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CODE_TRIAGE
Regular
Sneaky Flag
Stealer

P: 06/10/2022 20:36 EST
E: 06/11/2022 12:47 EST
    https://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/voter-registration/vote-mail/ #vote-by-mail

Quoting the website:

"When your vote-by-mail ballot is received by your county elections official, your signature on the return envelope will be compared to the signature(s) in your voter registration record. To preserve the secrecy of your ballot, the ballot will then be separated from the return envelope, and then it will be tallied."

Somebody point out if I'm misunderstanding the state's enforcement. Because otherwise it sounds as if they are enforcing a signature strictly without verifying registration papers. Registration cards may have been verified beforehand in order to get a voter registration, but if mail-in-voting requires a signature only when the mail is received, the conclusions are essentially the same.

Let's say a person throws it all away all (and I mean 'all') while still in state database, then the police can get your signature strictly and compare it with state records, and this is all they'd need to take one to jail. I'm not asserting this as fact, but merely being hypothetical. This question may as well apply to the federal government also, because they enforce the Presidency on the basis of State voting standards/ideology.

The reason I address this issue is because voting is constitutionally a citizenship enforcement.

..but somebody tell me if I'm misunderstanding something.. because I might be..
  
Backalleybuttlove
Super Regular
Crack-Powered Capper

P: 06/11/2022 13:32 EST
    I think some jurisdictions are letting illegal aliens vote in local elections. Many let illegal aliens get driver's licenses which essentially function as IDs.

  
CODE_TRIAGE
Regular
Sneaky Flag
Stealer

P: 06/13/2022 15:09 EST
E: 06/13/2022 17:24 EST
    Similarities and differences exist between 'illegal' and 'undocumented.' In either circumstance, a person is not enforced as a citizen of the US. Only one, on the other hand, is legally permitted to be here. People without documents are, in fact, - documented! But they are not documented with citizenship enforcement. A green card does not enforce US citizenship. Instead, our presupposition may be that 'permanent residency' enforces the reality of citizenship outside the US - in another country! Why might this possibly be the best assessment?.. - because it involves the US government recognizing the existence of such countries...and not only this, but also 'country of birth' in ones not the United States.  
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