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<A HREF="http://www.conspire.com/votescam.html">60 Greatest Conspiracies |
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60 Greatest Conspiracies: Election Special


Excerpted and adapted from
Conspiracies, Cover-Ups and Crimes
By Jonathan Vankin
©1991 by Jonathan Vankin



------------------------------------------------------------------------

The 1996 presidential election campaign is in full swing, and in this
year when our responsibilities as citizens of this democracy are
foremost in our minds, we here at 60 Greatest Conspiracies want to do
our part to undermine your faith in the electoral process. To that end,
we humbly present this piece, taken from 60GCAT co-author Jonathan
Vankin's 1991 tome, Conspiracies, Cover-Ups and Crimes, which by
remarkable coincidence is being reissued this spring by Illuminet Press
 with a new introduction and special "update" chapter by Vankin, and an
all-new cover design by 60GCAT co-author John Whalen. Wow! Heck, we're
sold! We think everyone should buy a whole lot of copies right away
before they sell out! And don't forget to vote.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

O good voter, unspeakable imbecile, poor dupe . . .
Octave Mirbeau, Voter's Strike!





------------------------------------------------------------------------

On election night, when the three major television networks announce the
next president, the winner they announce is not chosen by the voters of
the United States. He is the selection of the three networks themselves,
through a company they own jointly with Associated Press and United
Press International. That company is called the Voter News Service
(VNS). Its address is 225 W. 34th St, New York City. Its phone number is
(212) 947-7280. Voter News Service provides "unofficial" vote tallies to
its five owners in all presidential, congressional, and gubernatorial
elections. VNS is the only source Americans have to find out how they,
as a people, voted. County and city election super visors don't come out
with the official totals until weeks later. Those results are rarely
reported in the national media. The U.S. government does not tabulate a
single vote. The government has granted VNS a legal monopoly, exempt
from antitrust laws, to count the votes privately. Those are the facts.
Even an average citizen should be a bit unsettled by the prospect of a
single consortium providing all the data used by competing news
organizations to discern winners and losers in national elections. Every
significant election in the country could be fixed by a sophisticated
web of computer experts, media executives, and political operatives.

The unbelievable accuracy of VNS's predictions is perhaps explainable as
a marvel of technology, the genius of statisticians, or at least a
mind-boggling stroke of luck. But their method has been expanded into an
Olympian system that allows the three major television networks to
"monolithically control" any election worth controlling‹that is, most of
them. They announce the winners and what percentage the winners get.
They are virtually never wrong. And once you've been named, you can rest
assured you're the winner, even if vote totals have to be meddled with
later.

The Voter News Service is the only mechanism in existence for counting
national votes on election night, the only one in contact with every
voting jurisdiction in the nation. The company is a conspiracy
theorists' dream‹ or nightmare. As mentioned above, VNS operates exactly
the way the most imaginative conspiracy theorists believe all media
operate. The ABC, NBC, and CBS networks, together with the Associated
Press (a nonprofit co-op of many daily newspapers) and their
"competition", and United Press International own the company jointly.
(Actually, UPI dropped out recently after they were bought by the
Saudis.) Local television and radio stations take most of their election
returns from network tabulations. VNS is a very real "cabal." Every
media outlet in the United States acts in concert, at least on election
nights. VNS has a full-time staff of fourteen. On election nights, that
number swells to approximately ninety thousand employees, most of them
posted at local precincts phoning in vote totals as they're announced.
Others answer the phones and enter these totals into the VNS computer.
The government has no such computer. Only the privately-held VNS
tabulates the votes. When the company's executive director, Robert
Flaherty, was asked whether VNS was run for profit, he wouldn't answer.
His only response was "I don't think that's part of your story."

VNS was conceived as New Election Service in 1964, in part as a
cost-saving measure by the three major television networks (it was
originally called Network Election Service, then the News Election
Service, and only recently the brand new acronym), but largely to
solidify the public's confidence in network vote tallies and projections
by insuring uniformity. In the California Republican primary that year,
television networks projected Barry Goldwater the winner on election
night, while newspapers reported Nelson Rockefeller victorious in their
morning editions. The networks themselves could vary widely in their
return reports. "Many television executives believe the public has been
both confused and skeptical over seeing different sets of running totals
on the networks' screens," the New York Times reported. The networks and
print syndicates wanted the figures transmitted over their airwaves to
be irrefutable. With all the networks‹ and later the print
media‹deriving their information from a central computer bank, with no
alternative source, how could they be anything but? "The master tally
boards . . . would probably come to be accepted as the final authority
on the outcome of races," the Times declared.

The "news media pool" was first tried in the 1964 general election. Most
of the 130,000 vote counters were volunteers from civic groups. Twenty
thousand newspaper reporters acted as coordinators. VNS central (at the
time, still NES) was located at New York's Edson Hotel. When polls
closed, the newly formed system shaved almost ninety minutes off the
time needed to count votes in the 1960 election. News Election Service
had its goal circa 1964 to report final results within a half hour of
final poll closing time. Now, of course, they go much faster than that.
In the 1988 election, CBS was first out of the gate, making its
projection at 9:17 Eastern time, with polls still open in eleven states.
ABC followed just three minutes later. All of these light-speed results
are, naturally, "unofficial." County clerks take a month or more to
verify their counts and issue an official tally. Plenty of time for any
necessary fudging and finagling. And there may be none needed.
Discrepancies are a matter of course throughout the nation's thousands
of voting precincts. The major networks rarely bother to report on such
mundane matters. So who's going to know? The idea is to get the
predetermined winner announced as speedily and authoritatively as
possible. VNS provides the centralized apparatus to do just that. One
rationale behind maintaining a vote-counting monopoly is to insure
"accuracy," but in 1968, when Richard Nixon defeated Hubert Humphrey by
a margin that could be measured in angstroms, the role of VNS became a
good deal more shadowy. At one point in the tally, the VNS computer
began spewing out totals that were at the time described as "erroneous."
They included comedian/candidate Dick Gregory receiving one million
votes when, the New York Times said, "His total was actually 18,000."
The mistakes were described as something that "can happen to anyone."
VNS turned off its "erroneous" computer and switched on a backup system,
which ran much slower. After much waiting, the new machine put Nixon
ahead by roughly forty thousand votes, with just six percent of the
votes left to be counted. Suddenly, independent news reporters found
over fifty-three thousand Humphrey votes cast by a Democratic splinter
party in Alabama. When the votes were added to Humphrey's total, they
put him in the lead. Undaunted, the Associated Press conducted its own
state-by-state survey of "the best available sources of election data"
(presumably, NES also makes use of the "best available sources") and
found Nixon winning again. And that's how it turned out. What exactly
was going on inside the "master computer" at NES? The company's director
blamed software, even though the machine had run a twelve-hour test flaw
lessly just the day before using the same programming. Could the softwa
re have been altered? Substituted? Or was the fiasco caused by a routine
"bug," which just happened to appear at the most inconvenient possible
time? With all the snafus and screwups, the real winner of the 1968
presidential election may never be known.

As of 1992, computers tabulated 54 percent of the votes cast in the
United States. Sure, paper ballot elections were stolen all the time,
and lever voting machines are invitations to chicanery. But there's
something sinister about computers. Though most professionals in the
field, as one would expect, insist that computers are far less
vulnerable to manipulation than old ways of voting, the invisibility of
their functions and the esoteric language they speak makes that
assertion impossible to accept. Even executives of computer-election
companies will admit that their systems are "vulnerable," although
they're reticent to make public statements to that effect. One executive
told me, right after asserting that there's never been a proven case of
computer election fraud, "there's probably been some we don't know
about." Even if "we" do find out, there's still little chance that the
fraud will be prosecuted. A former chief assistant at torney general in
California points out that without a conspirator willing to inform on
his comrades or an upset so stunning as to immediately arouse suspicion,
there's little hope of ferreting out a vote fraud operation. There are
very few elections that qualify as major up sets anymore. Preelection
polling tempers the climate of opinion effectively enough to take care
of that. As for turncoat conspirators, if the conspiracy works there are
no turncoats. A good conspiracy is an unprovable conspiracy. It remains
a conspiracy "theory." To even talk about it is "paranoid." "If you did
it right, no one would ever know," said the same state prosecutor, Steve
White. "You just change a few votes in a few precincts in a few states
and no one would ever know." Maybe it's already happened. George Bush
may have received a Votescam benefit in an election that was rare in
that it was a significant upset. According to some researchers, the
favor came courtesy of New Hampshire Governor John Sununu, who had
staked his political future on Bush before the then-vice president was a
clear people's choice (if he ever was). Bush had lost the Iowa
Republican Caucus, the first round of the 1988 presidential primaries,
to Senate Ma jority Leader Bob Dole. As Bush entered the New Hampshire
primary, pollsters placed him behind Dole in that state, too. These were
"days when things were darker," Bush said in his acceptance of the
Republican presidential nomination six months later. His campaign was
fizzling. Despite his apparent deficit in public opinion, Bush won a
decisive nine-point victory in the New Hampshire primary, reanimated his
campaign, and more or less coasted to the nomination and presidency. The
press at tributed this remarkable turnaround to the contrary nature of
New Hampshire voters and Dole's allegedly "mean" public image. Either
that or... Sununu was later rewarded with an appointment as Bush's chief
of staff, often considered the second most powerful job in the country.
He is trained as a computer engineer who had been a member of the Center
for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank be
lieved to be linked to the CIA. The New Hampshire rigged primary
scenario turned on the "Shouptronic" voting machines used in Manchester,
New Hampshire, from which early returns were taken. The Shouptronic's
most advantageous feature is the speed with which it tabulates votes.
Multiple machines can send results to a central computer instantly over
telephone lines or even by satellite. Shouptronic is essentially an
automatic teller machine for voters. All votes are recorded by button
pressing. The Shouptronic leaves no physical record of votes. Like all
computer vote counters, its programming is top secret. As solid a source
as Robert J. Naegle, author of the federal government's national
standards for computerized vote counting, is alarmed by the secrecy
masking computer election software. "They act like it was something
handed down on stone tablets," he says. "It should be in the public
domain." [As an aside, the Shouptronic is named for its company's owner,
Ransom Shoup II. In 1979, Mr. Shoup was convicted of conspiracy and
obstruction of justice relating to a Philadelphia election urder
investigation by the FBI. That election was tabulated by old-fashioned
lever machines, which also leave no "paper trail" of marked ballots.
Shoup was hit with a ten thousand dollar fine and sentenced to three
years in prison, suspended.

Another computer voting company, Votomatic, maker of Computer Election
Services (now known as Business Records Corporation Election Services),
emerged unscathed from a Justice Department antitrust investigation in
1981. The president of the company quipped, "We had to get Ronald Reagan
elected to get this thing killed." The remark was supposed to be a joke.
Forty percent of Amencan voters vote on CES systems. CES machines have
been described as relying on "a heap of spaghetti code that is so messy
and so complex that it might easily contain hidden mechanisms for being
quietly reprogrammed 'on the fly.' " A computer consultant hired by the
plaintiffs in a suit against CES described the way a CES computer runs
its program as "a shell game." Votomatic has one especially troubling
drawback. The trick with the Votomatic is something called "hanging
chad." The perforated squares on Votomatic computer ballot cards are,
for some reason, called "chad." When a voter fails to punch it out
completely, it hangs on the card. To solve this problem and allow the
computer to read the cards, election workers routinely remove hanging
chad. The registrar of voters in Santa Clara County, Cali fornia, says
that "five percent or less" of all Votomatic cards have hanging chad,
and election workers don't pull it off unless it is hanging by one or
two corners. The vision of local ladies from the League of Women Voters
deciding how voters have voted, putting holes in perforated ballots with
tweezers, is an image both hilarious and sobering.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
•Now that your faith is fully undermined, check out The National Voters
Boycott.
•Or if you need further disillusionment, find out bad things about all
of the presidential candidates by peeking in their Skeleton Closet.
•Then try reading Ken and Jim Collier's book, Votescam, published by
Victoria House Press, 67 Wall Street, NYC 10005.
This greatly abridged and altered version of the CC&C chapter Votescam
 first appeared in Lumpen Times.



------------------------------------------------------------------------





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