Minn. teen charged with offering his vote on eBay - Yahoo! News:
But as for selling his vote, eh, standard procedure.
As I've learned recently while reading American Revolutionaries in the Making, many of our Founding Fathers made it a routine practice to buy and sell votes. Sometimes with currency, sometimes with alcohol, sometimes with influence and promises. But the system of voting in this country was corrupted from its very foundation. Don't believe it? Read the book.
crossposted
University of Minnesota student Max P. Sanders, 19, was charged with a felony Thursday in Hennepin County District Court after allegedly asking for a minimum of $10 in exchange for voting for the bidder's preferred candidate.Yes, our founding fathers would be shocked, a mere 19-year-old who didn't own any land, voting! Horrendous and unimaginable!
"Good luck!" Sanders wrote under the eBay handle zepdrummer612. "You're (sic) country depends on You!"
Sanders was charged with one count of bribery, treating and soliciting under an 1893 state law that makes it a crime to offer to buy or sell a vote.
According to a criminal complaint, the Minnesota secretary of state's office learned about the offering on the Web site and told prosecutors. Investigators sent a subpoena to eBay and got information that led to Sanders.
The student told investigators he made the eBay posting, adding, "That was a joke. It's no longer listed," according to the complaint.
"We take it very seriously. Fundamentally, we believe it is wrong to sell your vote," said John Aiken, a spokesman for the office. "There are people that have died for this country for our right to vote, and to take something that lightly, to say, 'I can be bought.'
"It's a real shame," he said. "I can imagine the conversations being held in American Legion Clubs and VFWs about whether this is a joke or not."
The scarcely used law had its heyday in the 1920s, when many people sold their votes in exchange for liquor, Assistant County Attorney Pat Diamond said.
"There are two things going on here in terms of why it's a crime," he said. "One is the notion that elections should be a contest of ideas and not of pocketbooks — at least not in the sense of straight-out 'I can buy your vote.' The second notion is that everybody gets one vote, and you don't get to buy another one."
But as for selling his vote, eh, standard procedure.
As I've learned recently while reading American Revolutionaries in the Making, many of our Founding Fathers made it a routine practice to buy and sell votes. Sometimes with currency, sometimes with alcohol, sometimes with influence and promises. But the system of voting in this country was corrupted from its very foundation. Don't believe it? Read the book.
crossposted
On candidates who will offer liquor for a vote and voters who will accept it: at least they will have one provable material benefit from the candidate. Can't say as I can point to any from any President I've lived under so far.
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