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The 2020 election fraud in a nutshell => 68.05% of the election was adjudicated up until 81 million crimes were reached...

F_zE3ldWkAAl_nc
 
I keep asking the same thing.
When you get your mind to a place where you accept that there are not really 2 parties because most Republicans are just Democrats or to be more correct most Democrats and Republicans are the same except a few outliers in both parties....

Once you get there it is obvious why nobody says anything
 
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There is a bunch of talk about the FBI involvement in the GA election nonsense.

Let’s be clear, I personally handed our geospatial data to two FBI agents on a hard drive at a BBQ restaurant in San Antonio.

We were later told the FBI in Atlanta was unable to “use” the data because there was “no financial nexus above $50,000” which was their threshold for investigation.

There are other text messages that seemed to imply they didn’t like the quality of the data or analysis. Funny thing is we didn’t give them our analysis because that’s not how it works.

Truth is they never opened the disk.

Ever.

Sometime after this conversation, we were asked to provide another copy as they lost the original. It turned out they needed the second copy because the head of the GBI wanted to review it.

Stupid thing here is no one on the bureau staff in Atlanta was competent to review or analyze the geospatial data provided. And of course, the head of the GBI has zero capability to draw any conclusions.
 
prove it...



A federal judge in Georgia has ordered a trial for the case against Dominion voting machines.

U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg has ruled that a lawsuit against Georgia’s use of electronic voting machines must go to a non-jury trial in January.

According to 11 Alive News, the federal judge’s ruling will require Georgia’s secretary of state to defend the state’s utilization of electronic voting prior to the upcoming presidential primary election in the state.

The lawsuit questions whether Georgia’s current system of computerized voting is safe or whether it is vulnerable to potential hacking incidents.
 
and this will prove Trump won Georgia...

and ALL the lawsuits against Trump and Rudy will end...


A federal judge in Georgia has ordered a trial for the case against Dominion voting machines.

U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg has ruled that a lawsuit against Georgia’s use of electronic voting machines must go to a non-jury trial in January.

According to 11 Alive News, the federal judge’s ruling will require Georgia’s secretary of state to defend the state’s utilization of electronic voting prior to the upcoming presidential primary election in the state.


The lawsuit questions whether Georgia’s current system of computerized voting is safe or whether it is vulnerable to potential hacking incidents.
 
ok... idiot...

when Judge Totenburg's trial starts on January 9th...

just wish it away....



AJC.com
https://www.ajc.com › politics › georgia-election-secur...

Nov 13, 2023 — An election security case over Georgia's Dominion voting system is heading to trial in January. A judge suggested a compromise.


A federal judge suggested a compromise in an election security lawsuit over Georgia’s voting equipment, but without an agreement, she ordered a trial scheduled to begin in January.

U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg wrote in an order Friday that the public might be better served outside of the court battle between Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and plaintiffs opposed to the state’s touchscreen voting system.

“Reasonable, timely discussion and compromise in this case, coupled with prompt, informed legislative action, might certainly make a difference that benefits the parties and the public,” Totenberg wrote in the 135-page ruling.

Totenberg said she won’t order Georgia to use hand-marked paper ballots, even if the plaintiffs prevail during the trial set to begin Jan. 9. She said it’s not within her power to mandate a new statewide voting system that would replace equipment manufactured by Dominion Voting Systems.

Georgia uses a voting system where voters fill out their ballots on touchscreens, which are attached to printers that create a paper ballot. The ballot displays voters’ choices in human-readable text alongside a QR code that is read and counted by scanning machines.

Critics of the technology say voters can’t be sure that the code accurately reflects their selections. Recounts and audits in Georgia have routinely confirmed the accuracy of vote counts.
 
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