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Apple Politics

Apple's Tim Cook Says Voting 'Ought To Be Easier Than Ever' (axios.com) 351

Apple CEO Tim Cook, an Alabama native with a lifelong interest in civil rights, joins condemnations of Georgia's new voting law. From a report: "The right to vote is fundamental in a democracy. American history is the story of expanding the right to vote to all citizens, and Black people, in particular, have had to march, struggle and even give their lives for more than a century to defend that right."

"Apple believes that, thanks in part to the power of technology, it ought to be easier than ever for every eligible citizen to exercise their right to vote," Cook continues. "We support efforts to ensure that our democracy's future is more hopeful and inclusive than its past." The floodgates are open, as Axios' Courtenay Brown wrote on Wednesday. Almost a week after a bill that curbs voting access in Georgia became law -- and nearly one month after it passed the state's House -- a slew of corporations have come out against voter suppression.

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Apple's Tim Cook Says Voting 'Ought To Be Easier Than Ever'

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  • He's assuming they want the government to represent the whole population.

    • by gaxiyi7905 ( 7177731 ) on Thursday April 01, 2021 @04:38PM (#61225954)

      The voters should represent the legal citizens of the country who are eligible to vote, not everyone. That is the difference.

      • Umm NO! The government should represent everyone within the country. In turn, the citizens should care for everyone in the country.

        This is the US and that has been a very long tradition since its founding. You don't like it, you are in the wrong country.

        Just because they are illegal, fugitive, convict, ex-con, or pedo doesn't mean they are below human. They still retain their rights enshrined in the Bill and Constitution.

        It wasn't that long ago that people said blacks, women, Chinese, Japanese, Irish, etc

        • Just because they are illegal, fugitive, convict, ex-con, or pedo doesn't mean they are below human. They still retain their rights enshrined in the Bill and Constitution.

          False. When imprisoned (and for some of these rights, even after they are released) they lose the right to vote, the right to keep and bear arms, the right to freedom of association, and also the only people it's still legal to enslave in this country (as in, explicitly legal) are prisoners. So in fact we do treat them as below human, by denying them rights "enshrined in the Bill and Constitution".

          • Preventing ex-cons from having guns can be justified under public safety and reducing crime. I see no national benefit in taking away their right to vote.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by slothman32 ( 629113 ) *

        I came up with an interesting idea.
        Instead of Congressional representation being based on all people, it also counts illegals, it should only use people who voted in the last presidential election.
        That way states will want to make registration and even voting more accessible.
        If representation counted legal people, citizens or not, then many states, TX and CA included, would have less people in the House.

      • by v1 ( 525388 )

        "The person that controls how the votes are counted controls the outcome of the election"

        see also: gerrymandering

        We seriously need some FEDERAL voting laws. Leaving it up to the legislature of individual states clearly isn't working out.

        • if everything is controlled by the Federal government, then you only have to compromise (either via people or technology) one organization to control the election outcome. Remember, this is the same Federal government that has been attempting (and failing) to upgrade the IRS computer system for decades. Federalism (lots of different systems in the states) is a feature, not a bug
    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Good point. Follow the money.

      I'll spare y'all the solution approaches. But much as I admire the American Constitution, I'm willing to consider the idea of a page-one rewrite...

  • by lessSockMorePuppet ( 6778792 ) on Thursday April 01, 2021 @04:31PM (#61225920) Homepage

    Apple should absolutely have the right to vote. We're the story of expanding civil rights for all citizens. Corporations have long been oppressed and denied their right to the franchise.

  • by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Thursday April 01, 2021 @04:42PM (#61225976)

    Would be more than happy to have iPhones be that voting tech with an app. Or develop balloting. I can tell you the last thing we need is one of the tech companies to be involved in voting in any way.

  • Do notice that despite a large amount of time to comment on this beforehand that all these CEOs have only chosen to speak out after when it became apparent that opposing this law was popular. They released mealy-mouthed statements beforehand but now that people are upset about it, they suddenly view themselves as righteous representatives of the people's will.

    As far as I'm concerned, these fair-weather warriors can all go to hell.

    • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Thursday April 01, 2021 @05:35PM (#61226198)

      The law was rushed through. There was little time to actually see the provisions in the law before hand. And what was announced in the media beforehand was a greatly abbreviated version of what's in there. I suspect many who approve of and defend the law don't even know everything that is in there. For instance, that the secretary of state (who disagreed with Trump) had much of his power removed while the legislators (who kissed Trump's ass) gave themselves new election powers. If you think this is just about voter IDs, then you're not paying much attention.

  • As my high school history teacher liked to say, during the American civil war, troops in Virginia *walked* back to Ohio to vote, then walked back to Virginia to continue fighting.

    I would say, nowadays, voting is relatively easy, even if you have to do it in person.

    • Re:Easiness (Score:5, Informative)

      by rfunches ( 800928 ) on Thursday April 01, 2021 @10:39PM (#61226984) Homepage

      If one of the voters targeted by this bill left her housekeeping job to stand in line for five hours to vote, when she got back she'd be told to not come back. And if she's lucky she *might* get her last paycheck, because she doesn't have the means to fight the employer at the local or state level to get her back pay.

      Of course, that assumes that she has a state ID. The state office issuing state IDs (separate from a drivers license) is open six days a week between 9 and 5. She works seven days a week, about ten hours a day including travel (public transportation), split between three different employers. And no, none of her employers give paid leave because she doesn't work enough hours with that employer. Taking a half-day off isn't an option; it's the difference being being able to pay the bills for the month and not.

      Even if she could get paid leave to get the ID, she doesn't have the documents she needs. She was never given an original birth certificate from her parents. Or it was lost in a move years ago. Damaged when a water pipe burst in the apartment and it was in a box on the floor. Regardless, getting a new certificate costs money she doesn't have. And she has to visit a different office which costs time plus transportation expenses, neither of which she can afford.

      Even if she could get a birth certificate, she still doesn't have the documents she needs. Her landlord pays the utility bills so she can't show an electric or water bill in her name. Her cell phone is prepaid, so no mailed bill. She doesn't have a bank account -- not that it would have much money in it anyway -- so no bank statements in the mail. And her landlord is illegally renting the place, so there's no rental agreement or rent receipts for her to establish residency with.

      Voting is relatively easy today if you're privileged. For the disenfranchised, it can easily be a choice between voting or having a job; voting or putting food on the table; voting or having a roof over your head. For them, voting is not easy.

  • Racist laws!! (Score:4, Informative)

    by mpercy ( 1085347 ) on Thursday April 01, 2021 @04:48PM (#61226006)

    Damn racist state Georgia, what with them passing these new racist election laws. Have you seen this law yet? You can't even hand out a bottle of water! Read the law and then I'll look at what this means further below.

    Section 17-140 Furnishing money or entertainment to induce attendance at polls
    Furnishing money or entertainment to induce attendance at polls. Any person who directly or indirectly by himself or through any other person in connection with or in respect of any election during the hours of voting on a day of a general, special or primary election gives or provides, or causes to be given or provided, or shall pay, wholly or in part, for any meat, drink, tobacco, refreshment or provision to or for any person, other than persons who are official representatives of the board of elections or political parties and committees and persons who are engaged as watchers, party representatives or workers assisting the candidate, except any such meat, drink, tobacco, refreshment or provision having a retail value of less than one dollar, which is given or provided to any person in a polling place without any identification of the person or entity supplying such provisions, is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.

    Oh wait, silly me. That's the New York state election law that DOES THE SAME THING!

    I've read the new law, and unless you're a racist who thinks black people are somehow incapable of having an approved ID or unable register to vote 78 days before an election, there's nothing it does that is anything close to "Jim Eagle" (WTH does that even mean?).

    Some of the things it is getting called out on are just wrong.

    It EXTENDS early voting, rather than cuts it, providing 3 weeks of early-in-person voting and requiring 2 (vs previous 1) Saturday of early in-person voting. It EXTENDS permissible voting hours.

    It PROVIDES ballot drop boxes. Georgia did not permit drop boxes at all, except that they were permitted under the COVID emergency. Now they're legal, provided they meet certain requirements, mostly being safely ensconced in a government building and observable. Generally, there will be one ballot drop box at each early-voting site. Drop boxes must be processed by two people.

    It does away with signature matching for disallowing absentee votes (it replaces with matching the ID provided). THis should be a help for people who's signatures suffer due to medical issues (parkinsons, arthritis...).

    It requires local election officials to monitor line lengths and duration of standing in line and requires changes to reduce both. Precincts with more than 2000 voters must hire additional staff or be split up. Also, at least one voting machine per 250 voters is required in each precinct. Metrics are going to be used used and the SecOfState is required to act (vs at discretion in old law).

    It requires elections officials to send a registration card to anyone who requested an absentee ballot when not already registered. It requires provisional ballots in a number of circumstances when there were previously votes simply disallowed.

    It sets up a hotline for people to report voter intimidation and other illegal election activities (like electioneering).

    It allows elections officials to begin vetting ballots when they are received) but not counting them.

    It requires precincts to post the number of ballots cast in person early and on election day) and absentee by 10PM on election day, providing the upper limit before counting votes begins. It also requires precincts to count non-stop and observable to monitors, with results required by 5PM the day after election day.

    It DOES cut the absentee request from 180 days (6 months!) to 11 weeks (78 days). It DOES require an approved ID to request an absentee ballot. It DOES prohibit 3rd parties from printing and distributing absentee ballots and/or requests. It DOES require that absentee ballots be printed on security paper. It DOES prohibit local election boards from receiving "grants" from 3rd parties (except that such donations can now be made to the state and disbursed). It DOES shorten the runoff campaign period (when one is needed) from 9 weeks to 4 weeks.

    Even the Washington Post gave Biden 4 pinnochios for his references to this law.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by rfunches ( 800928 )

      Oh wait, silly me. That's the New York state election law that DOES THE SAME THING!

      This needs to be downvoted. It's not the same thing. The NY law has a clear cutout for anything with a retail value of less than one dollar as long as the supplier isn't openly identified. A group of neighbors handing out paper cups of water from tap-filled water pitchers in NY to voters in line would appear to be legal. In GA that same act would land them in jail.

  • just get together with your rich buddies and pull all financial support until the GOP (and it's always the GOP doing the voter suppression) stops blocking Americans from Voting.

    McConnell will be happy to get on the VRA train when his party is facing zero cash.

    Wake me when Tim Cook says he's pulling back on donations. Until then this is just posturing.
  • It's a serious question. They appear to oppose any voter integrity restrictions. Even minor ones. Like, Mexico requires photo ID. I think we deserve an answer on what precisely they do and do not support, and why.

  • Despite the new voting restrictions in Georgia, hey didn't get rid of the no excuse mail voting, which probably was the main factor in achieving unprecedented voter turnout in 2020.

  • We currently require photo ID to buy cigs, etoh, pot, buy firearms, drive a car, fly commercially, get loans, open a bank account, cash a check, notarize something, etc.

    So, I see no reason to NOT require a photoID to vote. BUT, it needs to be easy to obtain a photo ID (such as requiring USPS to offer up state IDs at state expense), as well as being easy to submit the ballot.
  • How about the US join every other 1st world country and require ID to vote? And while we're at it, mandate that election day is a national holiday. If you want people to vote make it easy for them - but they have to prove that they are US citizens over the age of 18. You need ID to drive a car, buy beer, buy cigarettes, fly on a airplane, borrow a book from a library...you should need ID to vote. Otherwise, as the other 1st world countries have found out, you open up the system to massive fraud and abuse.
  • There is zero reason, other than fraud and abuse, that anyone has a problem with requiring voter identification. Without it any human on earth can vote in place of any other human on earth. I live in Georgia, where my wife, and daughter who were not registered were registered by someone and all three of us received ballots in the mail that we did not request this year. With the previous law, anyone could have mailed those ballots back.
  • Helped the Communist party of mainland China suppress [qz.com] the political actions of pro-democracy activists [vox.com] in Hong Kong? The same Tim Cook who helped the mainland Chinese government "silence pro-democracy news sources [cnbc.com]?

    Is this the same Apple that told US Senators it slavishly obeys the Chinese Communist party and refuses to be critical of it because "we follow the law where ever we do business" [senate.gov]? Apparently they only oppose the laws where they do business in the United States of America

    If you are for freedom and

"The great question... which I have not been able to answer... is, `What does woman want?'" -- Sigmund Freud

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