

@ArcaneSlime (You seem to be mixing me up with someone else.) In any case, it’s normal to doubt a premise if it doesn’t match your personal experience, but denying data because it doesn’t match your anecdotes isn’t reasonable, even less so is denying inconvenient studies under the assumption that all inconvenient studies are fraudulent. Unless you can point out what’s specifically wrong with the study I cited, I’m going to believe its results over your anecdotes.

@ArcaneSlime I’d be happy to send you the paper (or there are other ways you can get it if you check into a “hub” of "sci"ence.)
The point of acknowledging conflicts in previous work is to explain the need for the current work. That doesn’t mean the current work doesn’t clarify the issue.
More importantly, the results of the study suggest voter suppression for all groups and only more notably for Latinxs despite previous research showing that minorities do have more difficulty getting IDs.