Purple Knight wrote: ↑Sat Nov 12, 2022 2:49 pm
I hate to take the side of Trump supporters, but in the case of a process like an election, the fairness of which ought to be sacred, the burden of proof should be on the side claiming the process is fair.
This is exactly wrong, jus as is
Daedalus X's similar claim.
In law, the burden is on the party that makes the allegation. If either of you were correct, every election would be in dispute every time and we would be in court continually with the State having to prove a negative, that they did not commit fraud.
I see your point, that it is important for elections to be fair and to appear fair. This
is very important. That is why State legislatures (most are controlled by Republicans, just as Georgia's was) make rules and guard the system. Both parties have "poll watchers" overseeing as well. If a rule is violated, the person making that claim must prove it. And this should be easy since the process is open and has observers from both sides monitoring.
With a little reflection that the burden of proof should be on the one who alleges fraud should be obvious. D-X's and your proposal would be like claiming everyone should be considered a thief, liar, murderer, or sexual pervert
unless they prove their innocence.
In any event, whether you or
D-X agree, the person alleging fraud must prove the claim, not the other way 'round.
The irony is that as usual, Trump and his supporters are practicing projection,
projecting their own attempts to cheat onto those who did not. This will likely be litigated since we hear Trump's own voice urging the Georgia Secretary of State to "just find" him 11,780 votes. THAT was a clear solicitation of fraud.