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To: jwalsh07
Thanks for the info. I notice it didn't explicitly say not to vote in both their college town AND their home town. Expect to hear that raised as a defense. I also love the part about the legal ramifications of declaring NH as their domicile. NH still lacks an income tax doesn't it? Things like registration fees, license fees, and court fines for things like failing to obtain a NH driver's license within 60 days will make a nice little 1/2/2005 surprise for some. Well, they were warned.

There is enough friction already between the college kids and the townies. I wonder if these 10,000 changed any town governments from red to blue. That will go over well ... not!

11 posted on 11/08/2004 3:36:53 PM PST by NonValueAdded (Now that you are engaged in the political process, stay engaged!)
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To: NonValueAdded

W lost by 10,000 but the Republican Governor lost by 13,000. I think you'll find that this story is gonna have some legs in the months to come.


12 posted on 11/08/2004 3:42:16 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: NonValueAdded

>>I notice it didn't explicitly say not to vote in both their college town AND their home town.


Even if it's not double voting, there must be lots of mass-a-chew-sits natives with property in NH, or cross-border college students, or vice versa that could vote in EITHER location.

Why would they vote in MASS when they know their vote makes no difference there? Thousands of them could choose to vote instead on NH, and thats just not right to pick and choose like that.


17 posted on 11/08/2004 5:06:47 PM PST by Future Useless Eater (FreedomLoving_Engineer)
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