May 28, 2022

Georgia election "irregularities" should have rejected 300,000 votes; biden allegedly won by just 11,779

According to a January 2020 report from the Texas Secretary of State, Texas three times rejected using ballot- counting machines and software from Dominion Voting Systems over concerns that the machines and software were vulnerable to manipulation (thus to election fraud).

Georgia apparently didn't bother having any experts examine Dominion machines, because in July of 2019 Georgia's RINO secretary of state Brad Raffensperger announced that Georgia had awarded a $107 million contract to Dominion to replace every voting machine in the state with the company's machines and vote-tabulating software.
  It's simply coincidence that Jared Thomas--a former Kemp staffer when Kemp was Georgia’s Secretary of State--was a paid lobbyist for Dominion when the contract was awarded.

Later an election worker in a rural Georgia county demonstrated how Dominion software allowed officials with the right authorization to change batches of votes from one candidate to another.  (The demo was recorded on video.)

The *stated* reason for this feature was that if a ballot was marked in a way the scanning machine couldn't interpret, officials could try to interpret the voter's intent.  That sounds at least reasonable.

Any decision by those officials as to which candidate would be awarded that questionable vote was supposedly logged to a supervisory action file.  But in Georgia and other states,some of these files (usually in high-population counties) were often missing.  

The stated reason was "The file doesn't exist because there were no ambiguous or unreadable ballots, so we didn't award any votes."  But obviously if the file was missing there would be no way to verify that claim.  

Now: Forty-four of the 50 states are so clearly D or R that the winner of the presidential election in those states is known before the election.  Only six states are considered toss-ups--the so-called battleground states.
  In five of these six battleground states, vote counting was mysteriously stopped after midnight of election day.  As far as I know, in prior elections officials have never stopped counting before all votes had been counted, yet on the night the polls closed in 2020 it happened in five states.

For something that never happened in one state before, this seems to be improbable.

Fulton County is Georgia’s most populous county.  Vote counting for Fulton was done at the State Farm Arena.  At about 6 a.m. on the morning of election day, arena maintenance staff reported a toilet fill line was leaking.
   Local stations reported this as a "water-main break."  The line was repaired in two hours and had no effect on vote counting.  But 14 hours later it was reportedly used as an excuse by election officials to order vote-counting stopped--and crucially, to order poll-watchers to leave the arena.
   "Poll watchers" and media crews obediently left.  But interestingly, just two people stayed in the counting area and continued to feed stacks of ballots two inches thick into vote-counting scanners.  
    This went on for over two hours *and was recorded on time-stamped surveillance video.*
    That video shows the two employees--who were easily identified--feeding the same stack of ballots into scanning machines multiple times.  No explanation has been offered as to the reason these two workers alone were allowed to keep scanning after everyone else--specifically including poll-watchers--were ordered to leave the arena after counting was supposed to have stopped, nor has anyone explained why the workers clearly fed the same stack of ballots into the scanner multiple times.
   Finally, the two workers have never been required to give depositions.  It's like none of this ever happened.
   biden supposedly won Georgia by 11,779 votes.

On December 7 one Gabriel Sterling--"voting implementation manager for Georgia" and whom Newsweek took care to note was a Republican--addressed the issue of the water-main controversy:
   "There was no water-main break," he said. "There was a urinal that they turn off during the downtime at State Farm [arena].  And it had a little slow leak that came over the side."

Okay, so if the honcho says it was NOT a "water-main break," why did the Democrats running the counting operation stop the count and order everyone to leave, including poll watchers?  Every local TV station claimed they were told it was because of the "water-main break."  So if that WASN'T the reason, what reason did the managers give for (supposedly) stopping the count?

Frances Watson, chief investigator for the Georgia secretary of state, echoed Sterling's statement in an affidavit.
   "The Secretary of State's Office opened an investigation into the incident at State Farm Arena. Our investigation revealed that the incident--initially reported as a water leak late in the evening of November 3rd--was actually a urinal that had overflowed early in the morning of November 3rd, and did not affect the counting of votes by Fulton County later that evening."
   Watson's affidavit also states that "observers and media were NOT asked to leave. They simply left on their own when they saw one group of workers, whose job was only to open envelopes and who had completed that task, also leave," the affidavit said.
   This is horseshit.  Poll watchers are supposed to watch the entire process of scanning the ballots, not just the opening of envelopes.  Many GOP poll-watchers claimed they were ordered to leave by county officials, and that the stated reason was a "water-main break."

So how did the story about a "water-main break caused counting to be halted" arise?  Two weeks later (Nov 17), the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported that "the water leak was originally reported as a burst pipe, but days later officials corrected themselves to say it was a leaky toilet spilling water into a room with ballots early on Election Day."
   Fulton County's Twitter account said
      "Around 6 a.m. on Nov 3 a pipe burst in the room at State Farm Arena where absentee ballots were processed.  Work resumed in approx 2 hours."

State Farm Arena also published a statement saying, "Within 2 hours, repairs were complete. No ballots were damaged, nor was any equipment affected. There was a brief delay in tabulating absentee ballots while the repairs were being conducted...as planned, Fulton County will continue to tabulate the remainder of absentee ballots over the next two days."

According to CNN, Fulton County finished processing ballots two days after election day, on November 5.

So clearly, except for a "brief delay" around 9 a.m, the alleged "broken water-main" didn't cause vote-counting to be halted.  But in that case, why did the Dem officials running the counting operation stop the count around 10 pm?  

And why did so many poll-watchers report that Democrat officials told them the reason was a broken water-main?

Here's how the totally Trump-hating rag "Newsweek" summarized things.  See if you can spot the trick:
    "Officials determined that there was a water leak from a urinal at State Farm Arena on November 3 that took two hours to repair. Approximately two hours after the repair was completed, vote counting resumed.
    "There was a four-hour delay, but members of the media, election officials, observers and poll watchers were not asked to leave *while repairs were being made.*

Did ya spot it?  Newsweek attempts to debunk the story by saying that observers and poll watchers were not asked to leave "while repairs were being made."  But of course that's not the claim.  The red flag--the thing that makes this event suspicious--is that poll watchers claimed that at about 10 pm they were told that counting was being stopped because of a broken water-main, and that they were instructed to leave the arena.  Yet by everyone's account, it was NOT a water-main, and was fixed by 9am.

One more example of Newsweek's bullshit:  Trump supporters claimed Democrat election officials--hired by Fulton County supervisors--ran the vote-tabulating operation at the arena.  Here's how Newsweek *supposedly* disposed of that:
   "Election officials in Georgia report to the secretary of state, Raffensperger, *a Republican, so the election apparatus is not run by Democrats.*

This is laughable.  Notice the cunning use of the phrase "the election apparatus."  Newsweek used that to make readers think Republicans run the vote count, so there couldn't be any anti-Trump fraud, eh?  But of course the people running vote-counting in Fulton County were Democrats.  RINO Raffensperger was not involved in Fulton County in any way.  Newsweek deliberately used Raffensperger's (nominal) "Republican" label to make you think he was running things in Fulton County.


Missing "chain-of-custody" documents

When ballots (including scans of actual hand-marked ballots) are transferred from the voting place to the counting facility, there's supposed to be a written series of signed receipts, called a "chain of custody."  Without that, fraudsters could pick up ballots and destroy them.  

As of this day, the legally required chain-of-custody documentation remains missing for over 18,000 ballots in Fulton County, and 355,000 ballots throughout the state--a state biden supposedly won by 11,779 votes.

If chain-of-custody documentation doesn't exist, votes aren't supposed to be certified--yet somehow they were counted.
 
Superior Court Judge Brian Amero recently ruled that 145,000 Fulton County mail-in ballots must be recounted due to evidence of fraudulent ballots and improper counting.  In response, the Fulton County board of elections immediately hired outside attorneys to block the audit. 

biden supposedly won Georgia by 11,779 votes.

A month after the 2020 election Kemp gave a speech in Athens, Ga. to over 200 members of the state's General Assembly, warning them not to try to convene a special session to deal with what appeared to be massive election fraud a month earlier.

Honest people don't try to shut down investigations.  Dishonest people do.

 

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