Not quite two months after the Manhattan Declaration was unveiled they have less than half the 1 million signatures they intended to have by Dec. 1. Thus having failed, they emailed all of the signers this week, pitching efforts to date as a success and calling for a push on to the million.
Depressingly manipulative, the pitch dwells on rumors of success and outlines a special effort by four Catholic archbishops:
Just ten days ago, Cardinal Rigali of Philadelphia, Archbishop Wuerl of Washington, DC, Archbishop Dolan of New York and Archbishop Kurtz of Louisville reached out to all of their brother Catholic bishops asking them to spread this document throughout their dioceses and encourage their clergy and faithful to study it and join as signatories.
That signature shortfall they've achieved but failed to confess is unexpected. After all, the signatures are unverified.
If the petition gatherer does not somehow verify that there is one, unique, living human being who has associated himself or herself with each signature (and not the same human being behind more than one signature), such petitions are open to padding.
The Manhattan Declaration's signature-collection process does filter for robots. But apparently does no other identity verification. Not even a verification email to the address signers give them.
Our testing suggests that it just bumps the counter.
Which means people can sign several times under bogus names, and that a suitably unethical person can sign for you.
Yes. That million-signature petition, assuming they eventually get their million signatures -- it's_a_joke.
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