• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1003 months ago

    Even as a joke, I hate it when people write in candidates like this. It reminds me of people writing “Harambe” when that was recent.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      913 months ago

      You can print off sample ballots and make memes all day.

      A little levity during this crisis is understandable. As long as the context is clear that wasting votes isn’t cool.

      • The Picard ManeuverOP
        link
        363 months ago

        Yeah, I think sometimes dumb memes are good to break the tension. A lot of people are on edge today.

        • LeadersAtWork
          link
          103 months ago

          I know I am, and I usually deal with stress rather well. There’s a different weight to it this time.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          33 months ago

          I can’t vote, not American, and honestly that doesn’t make it easier. I don’t want to have to go back to falling asleep wondering what bullshit I’ll wake up to every. Fucking. Night. I’ll take what laughs I can, but day drinking might be an option tomorrow.

    • snooggums
      link
      English
      183 months ago

      I have several local races with only a single Republican candidate.

      It doesn’t matter if I write John Smith or Harambe, it isn’t like the one on the ticket is going to lose and at least I got to vent a little. Best case the news does a little story on funny write in candidates.

      • @InverseParallax
        link
        English
        28
        edit-2
        3 months ago

        Funny thing:

        You can’t vote in Florida as a felon.

        But: You can vote in Florida if you’re a felon in another state, and that crime is not a felony in Florida.

        Basically Florida has no laws against… well, just don’t ask too many questions…

        Donald Trump retained his voting rights in Florida after his felony conviction due to the interplay between Florida and New York laws regarding felon disenfranchisement. Florida law stipulates that a felony conviction in another state renders a person ineligible to vote in Florida only if the conviction would make them ineligible to vote in the state where the conviction occurred. PolitiFact

        In New York, individuals convicted of felonies lose their voting rights only while incarcerated; once released, their rights are restored. Since Trump was not incarcerated following his New York conviction, he remained eligible to vote under New York law. Consequently, Florida recognized his eligibility, allowing him to retain his voting rights.

        Basically once he’s sentenced he loses his voting rights.

        • @Bassman1805
          link
          143 months ago

          It’s not that “the crime isn’t a felony in Florida”, it’s that Florida defaults to the felony-voter rules of the state where the crime was committed.

          New York lets felons vote as long as they’re not currently incarcerated, so Florida lets him vote.

        • Nougat
          link
          fedilink
          53 months ago

          But: You can vote in Florida if you’re a felon in another state, and that crime is not a felony in Florida.

          Not quite.

          You can’t vote in Florida as a Florida felon. If you are convicted of a felony in another state, your eligibility to vote in Florida depends on the eligibility of felons to vote in the state in which you were convicted.

          Trump was convicted of felonies in New York State. New York State allows convicted felons to vote. Therefore, Trump is eligible to vote in Florida.

          • @InverseParallax
            link
            English
            53 months ago

            New York State allows convicted felons to vote

            They allow convicted felons to vote after they served their sentence, or, through this colorful technicality, before they’ve been sentenced.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        113 months ago

        I believe so. He resides in Florida, and was convicted in New York. For out of state crimes Florida follows the rules of the convicted state. New York let’s felons vote as long as they aren’t in jail.

      • @Psythik
        link
        33 months ago

        He can’t, but he already did.

    • @finitebanjo
      link
      93 months ago

      For some reason sometimes phone pictures are way oversized so the only way to properly send or upload them is to reduce the resolution drastically.

      Also we allowed the same guys who made YouTube compression design the image format that Lemmy instances use.

      • snooggums
        link
        English
        73 months ago

        Properly resized images should not have noticeable artifacts, and by properly I mean resized to the target size.

        This one looks like it was downscaled too far and then upscaled again. The write in text is so clear I’m sure it is photoshopped.

        • @finitebanjo
          link
          23 months ago

          Nice catch, they probably found a random image online and blew it up for the edit.

    • @egrets
      link
      43 months ago

      The print is smudgy and the oval graphic on the print is a raster that’s already been stretched, I think. Add the image focus being a little off and the compression by the file host, and it’s a conjunction of mess.

  • @Snapz
    link
    113 months ago

    Unimaginably stupid.