One main issue in voting is the amount of trust, not only with the system but those who handle your ballot and operate the entire machine.
But the Dominion voting system has long been problematic, not only for the Democrats but mostly for conservatives who had been the frequent victims of election rigging and security flaws by these flawed machines.
Since implementing the automated election system, Georgia has been in hot water as cybersecurity experts and political groups questioned its vulnerabilities., which prompted both political parties to unite and demand the state election board to once and for all ditch the Dominion voting machines.
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These machines have been in place since 2020, but even then, various groups – political parties and cybersecurity experts, have been calling for the state to go back to manual voting and dump these vote-counting machines.
The chairman of the Morgan County Democratic party, Jeanne Dufort, said on Monday, “It’s madness, actually, to go into a system and have all of our ballots relying on that.”
Dufort calls for the board to let go of the automated voting and switch to hand-marked paper ballots in November.
Meanwhile, Debbie Dooley, a Republican and supporter of Donald Trump since 2015, also asked the board to replace the computerized voting system with hand-marked paper ballots in the coming fall.
Both political parties argue that computer hackers can access and steal elections without a trace.
Dr. Rich DeMillo, founder of Georgia Tech’s School of Cybersecurity, emphasized that the security breach on these Dominion machines must not be ignored.
“If you look at the series of breaches, global breaches of cybersecurity systems over the last two years, it’s story after story like this where some vulnerability in a system was ignored,” said DeMillo.
“We believe the experts who tell us that bad guys, foreign and domestic, are interested in overturning election results or interfering with them. And we believe they now have really good tools to do that,” Dufort added.
Georgia has been under public scrutiny since last year after experts and activists proved that these voting systems can be easily manipulated and rigged. Moreover, they have testified during investigations about the computers’ lack of integrity and vulnerabilities of these automated election systems.
In 2019, the state acquired Dominion Voting Machines, which cost a massive $107 million contract. Among the inclusions were ballot-marking devices allowing voters to mark their choices on electronic voting machines. The EVMs then print receipts, where the summary of your votes will be listed.



Paper ballots you vote election day two forms of identification and you know election night who won it’s called election day not election week month I am all for paper ballots two forms of identification One of them being a picture ID you must be a legal registered voter in the United States of America 18 years of age and a legal citizen of this country in order to vote.
I agree with the paper and only one day!
Yes. It shouldn’t be any other way