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Fraud commission will protect rule of law

In response to the Daily Herald editorial "Resisting a brutish assault on voter privacy":

The most valuable asset on the planet Earth is the right to vote in this great country. Per our marvelous Constitution, that right belongs only to legal American citizens. Sadly today, we have many states that are openly breaking the rule of law when it comes to protecting the sovereignty of this nation.

Today we have over 12 million illegal immigrants receiving taxpayer money as our nation suffers under $20 trillion in debt, and many states are refusing to enforce federal laws regarding them. Not only are these states not enforcing federal law, they are complicit in aiding these immigrants and in some cases even giving them driver's licenses.

While everybody must have a state ID to fly on a plane, buy certain over-the-counter cold medicines, and to enter a federal building, many states don't require a state ID to exercise the most valuable right on Earth - the right to vote in America. Since many states do not enforce this simple and logical protection of our elections, it is the duty of our federal government to protect the outcome of our national elections.

We know that millions of illegal aliens have fraudulent Social Security numbers. Why would we be surprised if millions are voting illegally?

There is no doubt that there is voter fraud (think of the dead people that vote in Chicago), but the resistance of some states to enforce the use of state IDs makes evaluating this issue critical.

The difference between civilization and anarchy is the rule of law. President Trump and the Election Integrity Commission are dutifully protecting the rule of law and the integrity of our votes.

Randy Rossi

Grayslake

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