- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
North Carolina just found 34,000 dead people on their voter rolls
Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:21 pm
Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:21 pm
It's a known fact that dead people do love to vote
Loading Twitter/X Embed...
If tweet fails to load, click here.Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:30 pm to OysterPoBoy
The video just says the names were found in a comparison of state voter rolls. 34,000 in one state is alarming
Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:33 pm to OysterPoBoy
quote:
Did they vote?
I'm confident that a lot of them voted by mail in/absentee ballot... And all of them Democrat votes, too.
Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:34 pm to L.A.
I can only imagine the amount on CAs rolls

Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:42 pm to L.A.
Yep, and it seems the voter %s as registered. So many Republicans wont vote because the fake %s, make it feel helpless
Posted on 4/28/26 at 10:59 pm to OysterPoBoy
Helps hide true voter turnout percentages in certain precincts thus making easier to fudge the numbers is one of the biggest concerns.
Posted on 4/28/26 at 11:10 pm to L.A.
I imagine 3 million people die every year of voting age. Guessing at least 2/3rds are registered voters. So 2 million dead people on polls each year. Surprised NC doesn’t have more
Posted on 4/28/26 at 11:12 pm to OysterPoBoy
quote:
Did they vote?
Dead people overwhelming vote for demoRats. I wonder why?
Posted on 4/28/26 at 11:12 pm to L.A.
I'm not making excuses for this but I have always wondered, okay, someone from NC (or any state) dies. How does NC or LA or TX or any state - or at least the "voter roll" department find out about it? Unless someone calls up and says "you cancel John Smith from your list, he died last week" he or she will stay on the rolls until it's time to re-register in a few years. Doesn't this just mean that 34,000 people in NC who were registered died and no one reported it (who would think of doing that?) they will stay on the rolls for a few years until their voters registration naturally expires. I bet this is true in almost all states but of course I am no expert.
Posted on 4/28/26 at 11:17 pm to C
quote:
I imagine 3 million people die every year of voting age. Guessing at least 2/3rds are registered voters. So 2 million dead people on polls each year. Surprised NC doesn’t have more
North Carolina has only 10 million people so it's not going to be that many. Plus some are just living there and not registered, or retired in NC but stayed on the rolls somewhere else, or are (were) little kids or whatever.
What percentage of the population is registered to vote in any state?
Posted on 4/28/26 at 11:25 pm to Eurocat
But the numbers add up right. I just looked it up and the USA has about 3 million deaths a year and a population of 330 million, so just under 1 percent. Since we can assume NC trends with the country overall that would be 10,000 deaths a year, and some will not be voters, too young, not registerd. The 34,000 figure comes out to about 4-5 years of people passing away and nobody alerting the voting data base, and just "aging out" in a few years when they don't re register.
Posted on 4/29/26 at 3:51 am to Eurocat
They way it should work is the hospital/funeral home/coroner should be required to inform the federal govt of a death. That agency should be REQUIRED to inform all other agencies of said death. But unfortunately they are not allowed to shared this information and it is by design.
Posted on 4/29/26 at 4:34 am to BHS78
quote:
not allowed to shared this information and it is by design.
They have systems to automatically get them on the rolls but not off.
By design.
Posted on 4/29/26 at 5:22 am to auggie
When a death certificate is issued the hospital, nursing home etc is supposed to notify the county, state, and federal govt. enabling their removal from voter rolls, govt benefit programs etc.
When 16 states refuse to share their federal voter rolls with the federal govt, and one is even suing the federal govt for asking, that tells you there is a big problem and they know it.
3 million people dont just die and accidentally remain on voter rolls, thats absurd.
Here is a Harvard study from 2010, kinda of scary........
Of the 185,445,103 listed registration records in the United States, 16,130,325 are estimated to be invalid.
Aside from invalid records, in the typical state 1 in 65 records is duplicative, meaning that the same registrant is listed multiple times.
1 in 25 records contains a mailing address that is likely to be undeliverable because of a typo, a street that no longer exists, or poor penmanship on registration applications. In the typical state,
1 in 40 counted votes in the 2008 general election cannot be matched to a registrant listed as having voted.
1 in 100 listed registrants is likely to be deceased.
1 in 7 records does not have a listed birthdate, and for many voters who do have a listed birthdate, the date entered is inaccurate.
1 in 25 registration records is estimated to be deadwood, because of registrants who have not voted in a very long time, have moved elsewhere and re-registered, or are thought to be deceased.
1 in 60 registrants do not have a date of registration associated with their record, and and implausibly large number of registrants who do have a registration date (1 in 50) are listed as registering on January 1st.
When 16 states refuse to share their federal voter rolls with the federal govt, and one is even suing the federal govt for asking, that tells you there is a big problem and they know it.
3 million people dont just die and accidentally remain on voter rolls, thats absurd.
Here is a Harvard study from 2010, kinda of scary........
Of the 185,445,103 listed registration records in the United States, 16,130,325 are estimated to be invalid.
Aside from invalid records, in the typical state 1 in 65 records is duplicative, meaning that the same registrant is listed multiple times.
1 in 25 records contains a mailing address that is likely to be undeliverable because of a typo, a street that no longer exists, or poor penmanship on registration applications. In the typical state,
1 in 40 counted votes in the 2008 general election cannot be matched to a registrant listed as having voted.
1 in 100 listed registrants is likely to be deceased.
1 in 7 records does not have a listed birthdate, and for many voters who do have a listed birthdate, the date entered is inaccurate.
1 in 25 registration records is estimated to be deadwood, because of registrants who have not voted in a very long time, have moved elsewhere and re-registered, or are thought to be deceased.
1 in 60 registrants do not have a date of registration associated with their record, and and implausibly large number of registrants who do have a registration date (1 in 50) are listed as registering on January 1st.
Posted on 4/29/26 at 5:27 am to OysterPoBoy
There are dead people on every state's voter roll. Nobody is going to remove a dead person's name from the voter roll who lives alone, with no family.
The sky sreaming on this is hilarious.
The sky sreaming on this is hilarious.
Popular
Back to top


14







