Bernie Supporters: You Will Decide This Election — Don't Blow It!

I couldn’t help but notice a series of posts on Facebook in the last day or two by unrelenting Bernie supporters declaring that they will not vote for Hillary Clinton because she’s “just as bad” as Donald Trump and because it’s O.K. if Trump wins because the system is so corrupt and broken that it’s time to bring it to its knees. A Trump victory, they proclaim, will lead to the complete collapse of the established order and finally open the door to genuine reform.

What they seem to want, in short, is a revolution — not a violent revolution, but a political revolution, a revolution that will toss out everything that is wrong with our current system and that will enable the American people to start over again from scratch.

Whether or not their understanding of the overall state of our society is correct, the central question is whether either staying home or voting for a third-party candidate — and thus electing Donald Trump — will have the positive effect they desire.

It won’t.

Even if their aspirations for our society are good ones (as I generally think they are), this strategy is naïve, dangerous, and self-destructive. With the election of Donald Trump, everything they say they care about will only get worse. The odds of their romantically dystopian scenario occurring are extremely remote, while the disastrous effects of a Trump presidency are very real indeed.

Their strategy for this election calls to mind the approach of the unrelenting Robert Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy supporters in 1968 and of the Ralph Nader supporters in 2000. The decision of those citizens not to vote for Hubert Humphrey in 1968 and Al Gore in 2000 brought us the glories of Richard Nixon and George W. Bush. Any progressive who celebrates those outcomes will LOVE the 2016 sequel!

Is our society in need of repair? Of course it is. There are innumerable ways in which our nation and our political system could be much, much better. But if one steps back and takes a historical perspective, it should be clear that in important respects the United States today is in better shape than ever before in history.

Through hard-bought political and legal reform we have ended state-imposed racial segregation; forbidden private discrimination on the basis of race, religion, gender, national origin, and disability; expanded and protected the right to vote; guaranteed reproductive freedom for women; witnessed a glorious revolution in the rights of gays and lesbians; and guaranteed health care for millions of Americans.

I do not mean to sound Pollyannaish. But it would be a mistake to deny certain fundamental truths. Indeed, one measure of our nation’s success over time is that virtually no Americans seek to leave the country to live elsewhere — except for the very wealthy, who sometimes move to nations with lower tax rates. At the same time, people seeking a better life – now as in the past — clamor to live in the United States.

This is not to say that there are not major problems in our society today. We are afflicted with persistent racial injustice and serious income, educational, and political inequality. These are critical challenges that must be addressed if we are to achieve our nation’s highest aspirations. These aspirations are shared by Bernie Sanders, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, and the Democratic Party. The goal should not be to destroy what we have accomplished, but to continue to make progress in a determined, persistent, and realistic manner.

An interesting and important question is why it has been so hard for us to move more quickly towards our vision of the just society. Several answers come to mind. First, and perhaps most fundamentally, many of our fellow citizens do not share our vision of the ideal American society. That might seem weird to the stubbornly unrelenting Bernie supporters who are confident that the truths they espouse are self-evident, but the fact is that many Americans have values different from theirs.

Many Americans, for example, care more about having what they regard as a “moral” society — a society in which there is no murder of unborn fetuses; in which homosexuality is suppressed and excoriated, as in the good old days; in which women remain where they belong — in the home raising children; in which African-Americans know their place; in which the government does not meddle with the economic liberties of business; in which crime is suppressed even more aggressively than it is today; in which immigrants are excluded and removed; in which local government, rather than the national government, makes the rules; in which there is no rumor of climate change and no hint of Ronald Reagan’s supposed “welfare queens.”

Here’s the rub. In a democracy, the unrelenting Bernie supporters don’t get to have their way just because they think that they have all the answers and because they think that they have the blueprint for the ideal society. Other Americans have different visions of that society, and the unrelenting Bernie supporters don’t get to win just because they’re certain they are right.

Rather, in a democracy they have to persuade the majority of their fellow citizens to embrace their values and to surrender their own values and preferences. That is at the core of a democratic society. You don’t get to win just because you’re sure you’re right.

The unrelenting Bernie supporters are frustrated because many of their fellow citizens reject their vision. The challenge is not to tear down the system and wreak havoc with millions of lives. It is to continue to strive to persuade others to embrace their views — while at the same time not making things worse.

But, they say, it’s not possible to persuade the majority to embrace their views because the system is rigged. Moreover, they say, even if they could persuade the majority to agree with them about the ideal society, the system is so corrupt that the majority would not be able to change it. There is real truth in both of these points.

Perhaps the most serious problem our nation faces today is the distorting role of money in the political process. There is plenty of evidence that on many key issues elected officials take positions that are consistent with the interests of the one percent at the expense of the interests of the vast majority of their constituents. This is a corrupt and broken democracy.

This state of affairs is due partly to the extraordinary imbalance in wealth in the United States; partly to the often unhealthy and polarizing influence of the media; and partly to a legal system that cannot regulate the impact of money in politics. The latter, which is the most important cause of our political dysfunction, is due largely to a single vote in a Supreme Court decision — Citizens United, in which the Court, in a five-to-four decision, held unconstitutional all sorts of laws designed to address this problem.

It is absolutely critical that Citizens United be overruled, or at least sharply restricted. With a Clinton presidency, that will happen. Indeed, if Merrick Garland is confirmed, there will for the first time since Citizens United be a majority on the Supreme Court prepared to limit or overturn that decision. And with more appointments possible in the next few years, the effect would be even more dramatic.

But with a Trump presidency, the Court will continue to affirm Citizens United, making it impossible to limit the role of money in politics. Anyone who wants to change the political system in the United States – and to bring about meaningful reform on all sorts of issues ranging from guns to racial justice to economic equality — first has to elect Hillary Clinton so we can get rid of Citizens United.

That won’t solve everything, of course, but it will open the door to dramatic change in the electoral process, and then the governing process, and it will make it easier for people who share Bernie’s vision of America to persuade other Americans that their vision of the future is the right one.

Because of the makeup of the Supreme Court, President Obama never had that opportunity. But President Hillary Clinton, with the opportunity finally to replace Justice Scalia, can effect that change, and with that change we can begin to repair the dysfunction and corruption that has distorted American democracy. This is a moment when we can do this within the system. This is a moment when it is absolutely critical to win.

Don’t blow it.

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Watch a Katana Bend When It Hits Liquid

Watch a Katana Bend When It Hits Liquid

In order to harden the edge of steel, swords are often heated until they’re impossibly hot and then quenched in liquid to rapidly cool down. This creates a much stronger grain structure in the steel which obviously leads to a much stronger sword. An interesting thing that happens during this quenching process is how the sword dramatically bends before it snaps back into shape (with a slight upward tilt).

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Is The Republican Party A Legitimate Political Party?

The Republican Party, as many observers have noted, is facing the prospect of a long-term decline as a national political party. Since 1992, they have lost four out of the last six presidential elections. And of the other two, in 2000 they lost the popular vote (and quite possibly the electoral vote too if Florida had been accurately tallied); in 2004 they won with just 50.7 percent of the vote.

My own view is that Trump will very likely continue this losing streak. But leaving that aside for now, there is no doubt that the Republicans face serious structural problems at the national level. These include changing demographics (their base is overwhelmingly white); the increasing unpopularity of their core ideas; the long-term failure of their economic policies (including some that continued to be advanced and implemented during the Bill Clinton era); the extremism of their electoral base, which makes it more difficult for the party to choose a presidential candidate that can possibly win the general election; and increasing divisions, including along class lines, within the party (which we can see in the Trump insurgency).

What, then, appears to be the strategy for a declining political party in the Republicans’ situation? It is clear that there are two major elements that have come to the fore in recent years. One is voter suppression, i.e., to reduce the number of voters with a bias toward keeping likely Democratic voters away from the polls. The array of “voter identification” laws passed in recent years is an attempt to reduce turnout: for example, the 2011 law in Wisconsin that requires voters to present government-issued identification in order to vote. It is pretty well established that these laws have nothing to do with preventing fraud. Indeed, the Wisconsin law was originally thrown out by the courts for this reason, only to be reinstated on appeal. (Friday’s decision by the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, invalidating a voter identification requirement in North Carolina, could be a significant blow to the national voter suppression effort.)

The second element is gerrymandering of districts for the House of Representatives. The Republicans have been able to do this by winning control of many state legislatures, which redraw the congressional district boundaries every 10 years, in accordance with the census (most recently in 2010). Since Obama took office in 2009, Republicans won 30 state legislative chambers (913 legislators), 11 governors, and 69 members of the House of Representatives. Although the party opposing the president typically makes some gains in these arenas, these are very large by historical comparisons.

The Republicans have had some advantages at the state and local level: local media tends to be more conservative than the national media, and some big Republican donors (e.g., the billionaire Koch brothers) have funded this strategy, since Obama became president, of using state governments to hang onto power by shifting the rules for national elections in their favor.

The two strategies are related, since they are both implemented at the state and local level. But I would like to focus on voter suppression, because it raises serious questions about the legitimacy of the Republican Party. If a political party can only be competitive under a system in which a large majority of the adult population (e.g., in US congressional elections) does not vote, how legitimate is that party? Prior to the Voting Rights Act and the Civil Rights struggle of the 1960s, millions of African-Americans in the South were excluded from voting. It was this system of disenfranchisement that allowed racist, segregationist politicians to be elected and re-elected, to have powerful positions as committee chairs in Congress, and to block voting and civil rights reforms for many years.

We do not have the same impediments to voting today that Black people faced in the South in the pre-Civil Rights era. Nonetheless, they are sufficient to make the United States an exceptional country in terms of low voter turnout. Most democracies hold their elections on a non-workday, e.g., a Sunday. They also do not have so many laws and restrictions that keep people from voting, such as requirements for advance registration, and for reregistration after moving. As a result of this “American exceptionalism,” the US recently ranked 31 out of 34 countries in the OECD (a group of mostly high-income countries). And that was based on the 2012 presidential elections in the US, with a 58.3 percent turnout. Non-presidential election years are vastly worse; in 2014 only 35.9 percent of eligible voters participated.

That leads to the question of how different our government would be if we had normal levels of voter participation. It seems very likely that it would be quite different, and that Republican chances of winning a majority in Congress would fall drastically, and their already low chances of winning the presidency would also plummet.

A study by the Pew Research Center in November 2012 found that nonvoters favored Barack Obama over Mitt Romney by a margin of 59 to 24 percent, while likely voters were evenly divided. Only 27 percent of nonvoters identified as “Republican or lean Republican,” as compared to 52 percent “Democrat or lean Democrat,” whereas likely voters were again evenly split.

These differences between nonvoters and votes are enormous, and they help explain why voter suppression has become so important to Republicans in recent years. More survey data is needed, especially for non-presidential election years, where the Republican strategy has given them a grip on the House that is tough to break. But it is pretty clear that voter disenfranchisement is the bedrock of Republican power. As such, the legitimacy of the Republican Party is questionable.

More broadly, this country needs voting reform that can put an end to this form of “American exceptionalism,” just as the civil rights legislation of the 1960s put an end to the disgraceful era of African-American disenfranchisement.

Mark Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C., and the president of Just Foreign Policy. He is also the author of the new book “Failed: What the ‘Experts’ Got Wrong About the Global Economy” (2015, Oxford University Press). You can subscribe to his columns here.

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You Won’t Waste Any More Food or Money with These Discounted Produce Containers

We’re all probably a bit ashamed of the amount of produce we allow to spoil in the fridge, but these Rubbermaid FreshWorks containers use a few neat tricks to extend your food’s lifespan, and avoid unnecessary waste.

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Everything We Can Piece Together About Apple's Mysterious Car Project

Everything We Can Piece Together About Apple's Mysterious Car Project

It’s 2016, and Apple’s mysterious, oft-buzzed about car project is still tucked away under the “ideas that may or may not happen in this lifetime” section of the company’s filing cabinet. Despite a powerful rumor mill—former Apple board member Mickey Drexler once claimed it was Steve Jobs’ “dream” to make an iCar, and reports have repeatedly materialized
over the years that Apple was in various stages of building its own vehicle—we’re still waiting, and the will-they-or-won’t-they nature of the project has us asking
if we’ll ever see the vehicular version of Sasquatch.

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Fourth Circuit Strikes Down Discriminatory Provisions of Gov. Pat McCrory's North Carolina "Omnibus" Election Law

2016-07-29-1469829898-5690616-McCroryMooreBerger.jpg

The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals has struck down provisions of Gov. Pat McCrory’s “omnibus” election law requiring photo identification in form blacks are less likely to have and requiring changes to early voting, same-day registration, out-of-precinct voting, and preregistration all in ways carefully calculated to adversely affect black voters. The full text of the opinion merits careful reading and can be found here.

The bill’s “almost surgical precision” (the Court’s words) in disenfranchising black voters should shock everyone’s conscience regardless of party affiliation. There is also more here that should shock the conscience. Eerily like McCrory’s HB2, the legislation was rushed through the legislature and the stricken provisions involve much more than the touted purpose of the law (voter i.d. here and transgender bathroom use in HB2). Also eerily like HB2, the problem purporting to be solved isn’t really solved at all. As the Court discusses, the voter i.d. provisions leave holes in absentee voting (which is used more by whites) and also accept yet reject the very same forms of identification.

Though highlights of the opinion are no substitute for reading the entire opinion, I realize not everyone will have time to read the entire opinion. I also realize that politicians like Pat McCrory are again betting everything that voters won’t take the time to read what has really happened here. I therefore have excerpted below some of important language from the opinion and have done so in the order the language appears in the opinion. I have omitted or shortened internal citations and have bolded certain provisions that seemed particularly important to me. Although this is no substitute for reading the opinion in full, here goes:

In holding that the legislature did not enact the challenged provisions with discriminatory intent, the [district court below] seems to have missed the forest in carefully surveying the many trees. This failure of perspective led the court to ignore critical facts bearing on legislative intent, including the inextricable link between race and politics in North Carolina.

After years of preclearance and expansion of voting access, by 2013 African American registration and turnout rates had finally reached near-parity with white registration and turnout rates. African Americans were poised to act as a major electoral force. But, on the day after the Supreme Court issued Shelby County v. Holder, 133 S. Ct. 2612 (2013), eliminating preclearance obligations, a leader of the party that newly dominated the legislature (and the party that rarely enjoyed African American support) announced an intention to enact what he characterized as an “omnibus” election law. Before enacting that law, the legislature requested data on the use, by race, of a number of voting practices. Upon receipt of the race data, the General Assembly enacted legislation that restricted voting and registration in five different ways, all of which disproportionately affected African Americans.

Although the new provisions target African Americans with almost surgical precision, they constitute inapt remedies for the problems assertedly justifying them and, in fact, impose cures for problems that did not exist. Thus the asserted justifications cannot and do not conceal the State’s true motivation.

Faced with this record, we can only conclude that the North Carolina General Assembly enacted the challenged provisions of the law with discriminatory intent. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the district court to the contrary and remand with instructions to enjoin the challenged provisions of the law.

In particular, between 2000 and 2012, when the law provided for the voting mechanisms at issue here and did not require photo ID, African American voter registration swelled by 51.1%. (compared to an increase of 15.8% for white voters). African American turnout similarly surged, from 41.9% in 2000 to 71.5% in 2008 and 68.5% in 2012. Not coincidentally, during this period North Carolina emerged as a swing state in national elections.

In this one statute, the North Carolina legislature imposed a number of voting restrictions. The law required in-person voters to show certain photo IDs, beginning in 2016, which African Americans disproportionately lacked, and eliminated or reduced registration and voting access tools that African Americans disproportionately used. Moreover, as the district court found, prior to enactment of SL 2013-381, the legislature requested and received racial data as to usage of the practices changed by the proposed law.

This data showed that African Americans disproportionately lacked the most common kind of photo ID, those issued by the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV). The pre-Shelby County version of SL 2013-381 provided that all government-issued IDs, even many that had been expired, would satisfy the requirement as an alternative to DMV-issued photo IDs. After Shelby County, with race data in hand, the legislature amended the bill to exclude many of the alternative photo IDs used by African Americans. As amended, the bill retained only the kinds of IDs that white North Carolinians were more likely to possess.

The racial data provided to the legislators revealed that African Americans disproportionately used early voting in both 2008 and 2012. (trial evidence showing that 60.36% and 64.01% of African Americans voted early in 2008 and 2012, respectively, compared to 44.47% and 49.39% of whites). In particular, African Americans disproportionately used the first seven days of early voting. After receipt of this racial data, the General Assembly amended the bill to eliminate the first week of early voting, shortening the total early voting period from seventeen to ten days. As a result, SL 2013-381 also eliminated one of two “souls-to-the-polls” Sundays in which African American churches provided transportation to voters.

The legislature’s racial data demonstrated that, as the district court found, “it is indisputable that African American voters disproportionately used [same-day registration] when it was available.” The district court further found that African American registration applications constituted a disproportionate percentage of the incomplete registration queue. And the court found that African Americans “are more likely to move between counties,” and thus “are more likely to need to re-register.” As evidenced by the types of errors that placed many African American applications in the incomplete queue, in-person assistance likely would disproportionately benefit African Americans. SL 2013-381 eliminated same-day registration.

The district court found that the racial data revealed that African Americans disproportionately voted provisionally. In fact, the General Assembly that had originally enacted the out-of-precinct voting legislation had specifically found that “of those registered voters who happened to vote provisional ballots outside their resident precincts” in 2004, “a disproportionately high percentage were African American.” With SL 2013-381, the General Assembly altogether eliminated out-of-precinct voting.

African Americans also disproportionately used preregistration. Preregistration permitted 16- and 17-year-olds, when obtaining driver’s licenses or attending mandatory high school registration drives, to identify themselves and indicate their intent to vote. This allowed County Boards of Elections to verify eligibility and automatically register eligible citizens once they reached eighteen. Although preregistration increased turnout among young adult voters, SL 2013-381 eliminated it.

We hold that the challenged provisions of SL 2013-381 were enacted with racially discriminatory intent in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and § 2 of the Voting Rights Act.

Using race as a proxy for party may be an effective way to win an election. But intentionally targeting a particular race’s access to the franchise because its members vote for a particular party, in a predictable manner, constitutes discriminatory purpose. This is so even absent any evidence of race-based hatred and despite the obvious political dynamics. A state legislature acting on such a motivation engages in intentional racial discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and the Voting Rights Act.

The record is replete with evidence of instances since the 1980s in which the North Carolina legislature has attempted to suppress and dilute the voting rights of African Americans.

And only a few months ago (just weeks before the district court issued its opinion in the case at hand), a three-judge court addressed a redistricting plan adopted by the same General Assembly that enacted SL 2013-381. Harris v. McCrory (M.D.N.C. Feb. 5, 2016). The court held that race was the predominant motive in drawing two congressional districts, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause.

As one of the State’s experts conceded, “in North Carolina, African-American race is a better predictor for voting Democratic than party registration.”

As “evidence of justifications” for the changes to early voting, the State offered purported inconsistencies in voting hours across counties, including the fact that only some counties had decided to offer Sunday voting. The State then elaborated on its justification, explaining that “[c]ounties with Sunday voting in 2014 were disproportionately black” and “disproportionately Democratic.” In response, SL 2013-381 did away with one of the two days of Sunday voting. Thus, in what comes as close to a smoking gun as we are likely to see in modern times, the State’s very justification for a challenged statute hinges explicitly on race — specifically its concern that African Americans, who had overwhelmingly voted for Democrats, had too much access to the franchise.

The record shows that, immediately after Shelby County, the General Assembly vastly expanded an earlier photo ID bill and rushed through the legislative process the most restrictive voting legislation seen in North Carolina since enactment of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The district court erred in refusing to draw the obvious inference that this sequence of events signals discriminatory intent.

This hurried pace, of course, strongly suggests an attempt to avoid in-depth scrutiny. Indeed, neither this legislature — nor, as far as we can tell, any other legislature in the Country — has ever done so much, so fast, to restrict access to the franchise.

Instead, this sequence of events — the General Assembly’s eagerness to, at the historic moment of Shelby County’s issuance, rush through the legislative process the most restrictive voting law North Carolina has seen since the era of Jim Crow — bespeaks a certain purpose. Although this factor, as with the other Arlington Heights factors, is not dispositive on its own, it provides another compelling piece of the puzzle of the General Assembly’s motivation.

In sum, relying on this racial data, the General Assembly enacted legislation restricting all — and only — practices disproportionately used by African Americans.

Moreover, although aggregate African American turnout increased by 1.8% in 2014, many African American votes went uncounted. As the district court found, African Americans disproportionately cast provisional out-of-precinct ballots, which would have been counted absent SL 2013-381. And thousands of African Americans were disenfranchised because they registered during what would have been the same-day registration period but because of SL 2013-381 could not then vote. Furthermore, the district court failed to acknowledge that a 1.8% increase in voting actually represents a significant decrease in the rate of change. For example, in the prior four-year period, African American midterm voting had increased by 12.2%.

Registration and voting tools may be a simple “preference” for many white North Carolinians, but for many African Americans, they are a necessity.

Any individual piece of evidence can seem innocuous when viewed alone, but gains an entirely different meaning when considered in context.

Our conclusion does not mean, and we do not suggest, that any member of the General Assembly harbored racial hatred or animosity toward any minority group. But the totality of the circumstances — North Carolina’s history of voting discrimination; the surge in African American voting; the legislature’s knowledge that African Americans voting translated into support for one party; and the swift elimination of the tools African Americans had used to vote and imposition of a new barrier at the first opportunity to do so — cumulatively and unmistakably reveal that the General Assembly used SL 2013-381 to entrench itself. It did so by targeting voters who, based on race, were unlikely to vote for the majority party. Even if done for partisan ends, that constituted racial discrimination.

The photo ID requirement here is both too restrictive and not restrictive enough to effectively prevent voter fraud. First, the photo ID requirement, which applies only to in-person voting and not to absentee voting, is too narrow to combat fraud. On the one hand, the State has failed to identify even a single individual who has ever been charged with committing in-person voter fraud in North Carolina. On the other, the General Assembly did have evidence of alleged cases of mail-in absentee voter fraud. Notably, the legislature also had evidence that absentee voting was not disproportionately used by African Americans; indeed, whites disproportionately used absentee voting. The General Assembly then exempted absentee voting from the photo ID requirement. This was so even though members of the General Assembly had proposed amendments to require photo ID for absentee voting, and the bipartisan State Board of Elections specifically requested that the General Assembly remedy the potential for mail-in absentee voter fraud and expressed no concern about in-person voter fraud.

The photo ID requirement is also too broad, enacting seemingly irrational restrictions unrelated to the goal of combating fraud. This overbreadth is most stark in the General Assembly’s decision to exclude as acceptable identification all forms of state-issued ID disproportionately held by African Americans. The State has offered little evidence justifying these exclusions. Review of the record further undermines the contention that the exclusions are tied to concerns of voter fraud. This is so because voters who lack qualifying ID under SL 2013-381 may apply for a free voter card using two of the very same forms of ID excluded by the law. Thus, forms of state-issued IDs the General Assembly deemed insufficient to prove a voter’s identity on Election Day are sufficient if shown during a separate process to a separate state official. In this way, SL 2013-381 elevates form over function, creating hoops through which certain citizens must jump with little discernable gain in deterrence of voter fraud.

But, in the broader context of SL 2013-381’s multiple restrictions on voting mechanisms disproportionately used by African Americans, we conclude that the General Assembly would not have eliminated same-day registration entirely but-for its disproportionate impact on African Americans.

In sum, the array of electoral “reforms” the General Assembly pursued in SL 2013-381 were not tailored to achieve its purported justifications, a number of which were in all events insubstantial. In many ways, the challenged provisions in SL 2013-381 constitute solutions in search of a problem. The only clear factor linking these various “reforms” is their impact on African American voters. The record thus makes obvious that the “problem” the majority in the General Assembly sought to remedy was emerging support for the minority party. Identifying and restricting the ways African Americans vote was an easy and effective way to do so. We therefore must conclude that race constituted a but-for cause of SL 2013-381, in violation of the Constitutional and statutory prohibitions on intentional discrimination.

We therefore reverse the judgment of the district court. We remand the case for entry of an order implementation of SL 2013-381’s photo ID requirement and changes to early voting, same-day registration, out-of-precinct voting, and preregistration.

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Genovation’s GXE breaks the land speed record for a street-legal all-electric car

maxresdefault-2 You probably aren’t trying to set a land speed record for an all-electric, street legal car, but if you are, I have bad news: The goalposts just got moved further out. Genovation‘s Extreme Electric (GXE) car, which uses a Corvette Z06 chassis with a custom electric drive under the hood, broke its previous record of 186.8 mph by a margin of nearly 20 mph. The new record now stands… Read More

Wisconsin Voter ID, Early Voting Law Partially Struck Down By Judge

A federal judge on Friday struck down parts of a Wisconsin law requiring voters to show a photo identification at the polls, as well as other election rules passed by the state’s Republican-led legislature, the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel newspaper reported.

U.S. District Judge James Peterson, ruling in a lawsuit challenging the 2011 law by two liberal groups, found sections of the law unconstitutional, the paper reported.

Peterson left the voting rules intact for an Aug 9. primary election but the decision was expected to impact the November presidential election.

Wisconsin is one of several Republican-led states that have passed such laws in recent years amid fear of fraudulent voting by illegal immigrants and others. The nine states with the strictest laws, insisting on state-issued photo identification for voters, include Georgia, Indiana, Texas and Virginia.

Republicans say voter ID laws are needed to prevent voter fraud. But Democrats say the laws are really intended to make it harder for poor African-Americans and Latinos, who tend to vote Democrat, to vote.

 

(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by G Crosse and James Dalgleish)

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Lava Spilling Over a Cliff Looks Like Hot Candy

Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano has been slowly leaking lava onto the surface around it for over three decades now, but only rarely does that lava reach the island’s cliffs. This week, it finally did—and a photographer caught the whole thing from a boat.

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Bluetooth Has Finally Outsold Wired Headphones

When Bluetooth headphones first hit the market in the mid-2000s, it was a good idea to steer clear. The sound was discernibly worse. Connection problems were abundant, and they were expensive. But a decade later, consumer research firm NPD Group says that Bluetooth headphones have finally outsold their wired competition.

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