Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Can GOP find votes in wreckage of Pennsylvania voter ID law? - Christian Science Monitor [dayinformations.blogspot.com]

Can GOP find votes in wreckage of Pennsylvania voter ID law? - Christian Science Monitor [dayinformations.blogspot.com]

2006Scape alpha information!

2006Scape - Alpha Information
Right to Information (RTI) activist Subhash Chandra Agrawal says there is something suspicious about why the Cabinet Secretariat is not divulging the full biodata of former Central Vigilance Commissioner (CVC) Polayil Joseph Thomas, and other details ... Information on former CVC hidden, alleges RTI activist

A Pennsylvania judge on Tuesday reversed his earlier decision to let the state proceed with a tough new voter ID law in time for the 2012 election. The about-face could give the GOP some ammunition to rouse its base.

Can the Republican Party turn a Pennsylvania court's decision to block a landmark voter ID law into a rallying cry to raise funds and rouse the GOP base to get out the vote in November?

Skip to next paragraph

Until Tuesday's decision, Democrats were the ones primarily citing the voter ID law, which they oppose, in a bid to mobilize their forces. Groups such as the League of Women Voters and the NAACP claimed that Republicans had imposed a new voter ID requirement to try to disenfranchise key Democratic constituencies, such as minorities, the elderly, and the young â€" much as earlier generations had used Jim Crow rules to disenfranchise black voters. Had the law been allowed to take effect, some legitimate Pennsylvania voters might be turned away from the polls, they said.

But the question now is whether Republicans will seek to capitalize from the ruling by state Judge Robert Simpson, who on Tuesday reversed his earlier decision to allow the controversial law to take effect. It would be easy, some say, to argue that the reversal subverts the will of the people and the state legislature and increases chances of a Democratic victory in November.

The court decision “might be part of a broader narrative that Republicans are using to get out the vote, pointing out that the playing field is a little tougher now, that [Democrats] will have an advantage from this decision and [Republicans] have to counter it,” says Christopher Borick, director of the Muhlenberg College Institute of Public Opinion in Allentown, Pa.

Polls show that 2 in 3 Americans, and a majority of nearly all demographic subgroups, support voter ID laws. Republicans have already argued in fundraising appeals that Democrats and their proxies going to all lengths to undermine a bedrock American principle â€" that every vote should count equally â€" and now may add that courts appear to be taking their side.

“That’s where you have Republicans seeing this as an issue they can push, that having a photo ID handy is not a big deal for Mr. Middle Class Voter, and, secondly, the powerful appeal [of the idea that] … your vote should not be diluted by the votes of ineligible voters,” says Charles Franklin, a polling expert at the

Related Can GOP find votes in wreckage of Pennsylvania voter ID law? - Christian Science Monitor Issues


Question by Sloopy Diggums: Why does the information "x=4" not specify a unique point in the plane? mathematical reasoning problem: must be answered in full sentences. "Why does the information "x=4" not specify a unique point in the plane? What does this say about the dimension of the plane?" Best answer for Why does the information "x=4" not specify a unique point in the plane?:

Answer by Joe
x=4 is a line. If the line lies on the plane, then it represents a set of points rather than one specific point.

Answer by Jeff Aaron
A "plane" generally has two dimensions, i.e. to specify a point within that plane you need two pieces of information, e.g. horizontal and vertical location. x = 4 only contains one piece of information, so that's not enough.

Answer by dank_distributa
x=4 is a vertical line. there is no y-axis coordinate to create an intersection point. the plane is one-dimensional without a y (or even a z) coordinate as well. x=4, y=2, that would be a point (intersection) on a coordinate plane. does that help?

Answer by Adam
It must be a plane with more than one dimension, so it has an infinite number of values. Ex: in a 2d plane, x=4 is a line, and in a 3d set of axis, x=4 is a plane.

Answer by Geezah
Nice copy and past job from your homework assignment. Because there are lots of points in the Cartesian plane that have an x value of 4. You have the points (4,0), (4,1), (4,2), (4,3), etc. So x=4 describes a vertical line. The dimension of the plane is 2, because you need at least 2 coordinates to describe a location.

Answer by votes
if the plane is in 3 dimensions (aka 2 space) then for each x value, there are an infinite number of y values that can accompany it. For a point to be found on a plane, you need the x and y coordinate so that the z (what you are trying to find) can be found. look it up on http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Plane.html and basically all you need to know is that for each x and y, a z is produced. hope that helps.

Answer by Albundy
It is un absolute value or distance from 0,0. and can be either a line in x from 0,0 =+4 or -4.

[information]

PLEASE COMMENT/RATE/SUBSCRIBE! Hey! If you have a second, click the link below to Tweet this video out for me! It really helps me! :) bit.ly Follow me on Twitter ASAP! twitter.com Like my Fan Page real quick! www.facebook.com Send me something to show in a video or for me to sign and return to you! Pete Albano PO BOX 494 Montrose, NY 10548 Link to the song I was talking about at the end: www.youtube.com Beyonce Feat ft J.Cole Party Remix andre 3000 full cdq beyonce j cole party remix j cole party remix beyonce party remix party remix j cole lyrics cover parody spoof keeptheheat forskitsandgiggles barelypolitical Beyonce J Cole Beyonce ft J Cole Beyonce feat J Cole Beyonce Ft J.Cole - Party J.Cole - Party

APPLE PICKING ADVENTURE!!! & Beyonce Feat ft J.Cole Party Remix INFORMATION

0 comments:

Post a Comment