Archive for October 18th, 2008
Harvey Wasserman, Who Investigates Election Irregularities, On News Talk Online On Paltalk
Ohio is a key state in this year’s presidential election. And this year, as in the 2004 election, there are concerns about possible election fraud in the Buckeye state. So Ohio is our next stop on the campaign trail as I interview Harvey Wasserman, co-author of four books on election protection including As Goes Ohio: Election Theft Since 2004, on News Talk Online on Paltalk.com Monday October 20.
Wasserman, senior editor at freepress.org, is also plaintiff in a federal lawsuit alleging election irregularities in Columbus, Ohio in 2004.
Among other things, the suit alleges that Michael Connell, who managed the Bush-Cheney 2000 web site, was paid with state funds in 2004 by then-Ohio Secretary of State J. Kenneth Blackwell, took votes to be tabulated out-of-state, in Chattanooga, Tennessee in the same building that hoisted the Republican National Committee’s servers. Ohio, the deciding state in that election, ultimately went for President Bush. Wasserman has subpoenaed Connell, an IT specialist, to testify in the federal case.
To talk to Wasserman live from Columbus at 5 PM Monday October 20 CLICK HERE. There is no charge.
Paltalk is the largest multimedia interactive program on the Internet with more than 4 million unique users.
News Talk Online is also syndicated by CRN Digital Talk Radio to an additional 12 million households.
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Photo credit: Peg McPhearson
Pennsylvania Voters Proudly Hold To Bibles And Guns
BERWICK, PA – Barack Obama disparagingly made the comment about people in Pennsylvania clinging to their Bibles and guns when economic times turn sour.
Well, he may have not been so far from the truth. Except, people here are proud of that.
That was one of many points made by Dan Warner as he explained why he has both a gun and a Bible in his nightstand.
Warner, who graciously invited us into his home to discuss the presidential campaign on News Talk Online, lives in Pennsylvania, a key state in this campaign.
A conservative Republican, Warner is voting for neither Obama nor John McCain. His vote, a write in, will be, he says, for Ron Paul.
Paul, who many in the media were dismissive of when he was running for the Republican nomination for president, is now a sought after interview; now that his predictions about the economy have turned true.
Someone in the virtual auditorium on Paltalk suggested that a vote for Paul would be a wasted vote. Not in Warner’s mind.
“My vote for Paul will be a vote for conscious, a vote for real change and a message to the two parties that they offer no real choice,” Warner says.
“When you get right down to it, there’s little significant difference between Obama and McCain.”
Next stop: Columbus, Ohio.






