Re: 2000 Mules
Posted: Wed May 25, 2022 4:33 pm
Dinesh takes on several straw horses such as Biden's comments about voter fraud which have nothing to do with what he alleges in his story. Then he comments about where ballot harvesting is illegal. For the record, ballot harvesting is legal in 24 states plus DC. 13 other states (including Wisconsin) which he discusses in his clip do not have any law on the subject. It's a precept of criminal law that unless an act is specifically prohibited, it is allowed by law. Only 13 states limit who can return ballots on behalf of the voter (including Georgia and Arizona). https://ballotpedia.org/Ballot_harvesting_laws_by_stateflockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Wed May 25, 2022 4:33 pmDinesh takes on the stalker.
https://rumble.com/v162n85-taking-down- ... mules.html
Since I didn't see the movie, I don't know how much of this material D'Souza discussed in the film. But all of this material was referenced in the complaint True the Vote filed with the State Election Board, and if this evidence exists in substantially the form that True the Vote claims, it would go a long way to verifying DiSouza's claims, at least insofar as Georgia is concerned.
1. The "detailed account of coordinated efforts to collect and deposit ballots in drop boxes across metro Atlanta" that you reference in your November 30, 2021 complaint (Complaint"), including any recordings, transcripts, summaries, testimony, statements, witness interviews, notes, or other documents describing such account, including the identities and contact information for the people who gave you such detailed account
2. The identity and contact information of the "several individuals regarding personal knowledge, methods, and organizations involved in ballot trafficking in Georgia referenced in your Complaint and any recordings, transcripts, summaries, testimony, statements, witness interviews, notes or other documents describing what those individuals said.
3. The identity and contact information of the "contracted team of researchers and investigators" referenced in your Complaint and any recordings, transcripts, testimonies, statements, summaries, witness interviews, notes, or other documents evidencing what the "several individuals regarding personal knowledge, methods, and organizations involved in ballot trafficking in Georgia" told them.
4. The identity and contact information for John Doe referenced in your Complaint and any recordings, transcripts, testimonies, statements, summaries, witness interviews, notes, or other documents evidencing all statements John Doe told you.
5. The identity and contact information for John Doe's mother and any recordings, transcripts, testimonies, statements, summaries, witness interviews, notes or other documents evidencing what she told you or your contracted team of researchers and
investigators.
6. Any recordings, transcripts, voicemails, summaries, notes, or other documents from your Georgia Election Integrity Hotline, tip line, or other hotline regarding allegations of ballot harvesting in Georgia
7. Any receipts, invoices, bills, or other documents evidencing any medical payments you or your contracted team of vendors made for any person you suspect participated in ballot harvesting in Georgia
8. The identities of the network of non-governmental organizations that worked together to facilitate a ballot trafficking scheme in Georgia" that John Doe described to you and any recordings, transcripts, testimonies, statements, summaries, witness interviews, notes, or other documents evidencing those statements.
9. The identities of the "ten hubs" in Atlanta that you allege participated in a ballot harvesting scheme in Georgia
10. The identity and contact information for the "bartender who came in from South Carolina" to help with the alleged ballot harvesting scheme in Georgia and any recordings, transcripts, testimonies, statements, summaries, witness interviews, notes or other documents supporting this allegation
11. Any Non-disclosure agreements or confidentiality agreements you are relying on to withhold the disclosure of any documents or information being requested by this subpoena.
True the Vote has resisted a State Election Board subpoena for the evidence the Texas-based group says it has to prove its claims of misconduct in the 2020 election. Secretary of state attorney Ryan Germany said attorneys from both sides are working toward resolution, and a confidentiality agreement to protect a whistleblower to mitigate personal safety concerns raised by the organization.
That reminds me. I missed the last episode of Fantasy Island.flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon May 30, 2022 7:59 pmI have recorded a 3 minute segment of an hour-long webconference with Catherine Engelbrecht in which she discusses TTV's dealings with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI). I do not know how to post videos or images that I have saved on my computer to the bored. Can anyone help me with that?
They were investigating election fraud before 2000 Mules. https://arizonadailyindependent.com/202 ... ing-fraud/flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon May 30, 2022 7:54 pmFlickering Falsehoods: The Yuma sheriff isn’t investigating election fraud because of ‘2000 Mules’
OK. Here's an answer for you.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/0 ... irds-sang/
Keep up the good work, Trump and Flock. Stacey Abrams and Raphael Warnock will thank you in November.It’s starting to feel like Donald Trump doesn’t want any Republicans to win in Georgia if he or his candidates can’t win.
In a near-exact replay of his 2021 message heading into the doomed Senate runoffs, when he convinced his supporters that Georgia elections can’t be trusted, Trump blasted out an email message Tuesday morning with a single, ominous sentence: “Something stinks in Georgia.” The message linked to an essay by far-right writer, Emerald Robinson, who wrote that Gov. Brian Kemp’s winning margin of 74 % to 22% over David Perdue last week was proof of “obvious fraud.” “Nobody in any election in America gets 74% of the votes. Ever,” she wrote. “It doesn’t happen.” In reality, plenty of people in America win with 74% of the vote. On election night in Georgia, several Republicans won by that much or more.
The rest of Robinson’s essay, sent out far and wide by the former president, pointed to the difference between the Real Clear Politics average of public polls taken since December of 2021 and the election results last week as more proof of hanky panky, an assertion as ludicrous as it is uninformed. Trump’s bad-math-and-sour-grapes routine is a familiar one in Georgia by now., but it’s made even less credible by the fact that all four of Trump’s statewide losers — the very ones he seems to be saying were defrauded — quickly conceded their own lopsided races last week with no echo of Trump’s allegations of fraud.
Trump is now under grand jury investigation for possible criminal election interference in 2020. His Stop the Steal message was roundly rejected last week by Republican voters. And even the candidates who echoed him during the campaign aren’t going along with his conspiracies this time around. He and his candidates have racked up statewide losses in the last three elections in a row. If he continues to tell GOP voters their votes don’t count, Republicans know they can expect the same results in November that they got last year. “This is why we have two Democratic senators,” an exasperated senior Republican texted on Tuesday after Trump started up again, referring back to the 2021 runoffs when thousands of Trump voters stayed home instead of going to the polls for Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.
The only thing that stinks in Georgia this year is Trump’s continued meddling in the state’s elections.
I hope this will affect MTG's reelection.silverscreenselect wrote: ↑Wed Jun 01, 2022 3:23 amThe gift that keeps on giving. From the Atlanta Journal (an editorial, but there's some news gems thrown in as well):
Donald Trump pushing Georgia election lies again. But this time is different.
Keep up the good work, Trump and Flock. Stacey Abrams and Raphael Warnock will thank you in November.It's starting to feel like Donald Trump doesn't want any Republicans to win in Georgia if he or his candidates can't win.
In a near-exact replay of his 2021 message heading into the doomed Senate runoffs, when he convinced his supporters that Georgia elections can't be trusted, Trump blasted out an email message Tuesday morning with a single, ominous sentence: "Something stinks in Georgia." The message linked to an essay by far-right writer, Emerald Robinson, who wrote that Gov. Brian Kemp's winning margin of 74 % to 22% over David Perdue last week was proof of "obvious fraud." "Nobody in any election in America gets 74% of the votes. Ever," she wrote. "It doesn't happen." In reality, plenty of people in America win with 74% of the vote. On election night in Georgia, several Republicans won by that much or more.
The rest of Robinson's essay, sent out far and wide by the former president, pointed to the difference between the Real Clear Politics average of public polls taken since December of 2021 and the election results last week as more proof of hanky panky, an assertion as ludicrous as it is uninformed. Trump's bad-math-and-sour-grapes routine is a familiar one in Georgia by now., but it's made even less credible by the fact that all four of Trump's statewide losers — the very ones he seems to be saying were defrauded — quickly conceded their own lopsided races last week with no echo of Trump's allegations of fraud.
Trump is now under grand jury investigation for possible criminal election interference in 2020. His Stop the Steal message was roundly rejected last week by Republican voters. And even the candidates who echoed him during the campaign aren't going along with his conspiracies this time around. He and his candidates have racked up statewide losses in the last three elections in a row. If he continues to tell GOP voters their votes don't count, Republicans know they can expect the same results in November that they got last year. "This is why we have two Democratic senators," an exasperated senior Republican texted on Tuesday after Trump started up again, referring back to the 2021 runoffs when thousands of Trump voters stayed home instead of going to the polls for Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.
The only thing that stinks in Georgia this year is Trump's continued meddling in the state's elections.
My preferred candidate didn't win the primary, but you can be sure I will be voting for the people that did win. GOD HELP US if the President of the Earth becomes our governor. An opinion article in the AJC trying to convince conservatives not to vote is exactly the kind of thing the stalker thinks is proof and gospel.Bob Juch wrote: ↑Wed Jun 01, 2022 7:51 amI hope this will affect MTG's reelection.silverscreenselect wrote: ↑Wed Jun 01, 2022 3:23 amThe gift that keeps on giving. From the Atlanta Journal (an editorial, but there's some news gems thrown in as well):
Donald Trump pushing Georgia election lies again. But this time is different.
Keep up the good work, Trump and Flock. Stacey Abrams and Raphael Warnock will thank you in November.It's starting to feel like Donald Trump doesn't want any Republicans to win in Georgia if he or his candidates can't win.
In a near-exact replay of his 2021 message heading into the doomed Senate runoffs, when he convinced his supporters that Georgia elections can't be trusted, Trump blasted out an email message Tuesday morning with a single, ominous sentence: "Something stinks in Georgia." The message linked to an essay by far-right writer, Emerald Robinson, who wrote that Gov. Brian Kemp's winning margin of 74 % to 22% over David Perdue last week was proof of "obvious fraud." "Nobody in any election in America gets 74% of the votes. Ever," she wrote. "It doesn't happen." In reality, plenty of people in America win with 74% of the vote. On election night in Georgia, several Republicans won by that much or more.
The rest of Robinson's essay, sent out far and wide by the former president, pointed to the difference between the Real Clear Politics average of public polls taken since December of 2021 and the election results last week as more proof of hanky panky, an assertion as ludicrous as it is uninformed. Trump's bad-math-and-sour-grapes routine is a familiar one in Georgia by now., but it's made even less credible by the fact that all four of Trump's statewide losers — the very ones he seems to be saying were defrauded — quickly conceded their own lopsided races last week with no echo of Trump's allegations of fraud.
Trump is now under grand jury investigation for possible criminal election interference in 2020. His Stop the Steal message was roundly rejected last week by Republican voters. And even the candidates who echoed him during the campaign aren't going along with his conspiracies this time around. He and his candidates have racked up statewide losses in the last three elections in a row. If he continues to tell GOP voters their votes don't count, Republicans know they can expect the same results in November that they got last year. "This is why we have two Democratic senators," an exasperated senior Republican texted on Tuesday after Trump started up again, referring back to the 2021 runoffs when thousands of Trump voters stayed home instead of going to the polls for Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.
The only thing that stinks in Georgia this year is Trump's continued meddling in the state's elections.
I love it when Republicans eat their own.
After all, they've only had eight months since they brought this material to the attention of the GBI. I don't think there were any more votes cast in the 2020 election since then.flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 01, 2022 9:32 amBTW, Ripcord is coming. Englebrecht addressed this in her weekly Q&A. They are working on the format they will use to release all the data so it can be presented in a way that can be handled by the general public. And jumping through all the legal hoops, because they want to do it right. They know all the stalkers out there are just waiting for them to make a little mistake that they can jump on.
I am waiting. I hope it's soon.
It's not surprising that most people who watched the movie tended to believe there was election fraud to begin with.flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 6:01 pm68% of Democrats and 77% of unaffiliated voters say [ACTUALLY VIEWING 2000 MULES FOR THEMSELVES] strengthened their conviction that there was systematic and widespread election fraud in the 2020 election [ACCORDING TO RASMUSSEN].
Most of you who have been automatically critical in this thread seem to put a lot of stock into polls.
https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public ... ith_voters
Want to bet?flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 7:40 pmI am a database programmer and so I have more experience and expertise than any of you have, so you cannot question anything I say on the matter...
What they (claim to) want is irrelevant. A subpoena is a legal order compelling compliance on a particular date. They don't get to ignore that part of the subpoena just because there's other stuff they'd like to do for PR purposes. --Bobflockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 7:40 pmAlso, in her weekly Q&A conference, Englebrecht confirmed there will be both a Geek and a Non-Geek version of the ripcord information. The Geek version will hopefully have the cellphone data in a form I can add to a database and examine myself. I am a database programmer and so I have more experience and expertise than any of you have, so you cannot question anything I say on the matter, assuming the data is in a format which I can access. She says the geek version is all ready to go, it's being held up by the formatting issues for the Non-Geek version. They want, of course, to get it as accessible, user-friendly, and intuitive as they can before it goes out. They want to release BOTH versions at the same time.
Again, from the expert point of view (which I am. I have been doing database building and software development for 40 years, and you cannot question or doubt what I say here), most of the time and effort in software programming is spent on the UI (User Interface) which is the window that the end-users have to the data. They are undoubtedly building this UI from scratch because of the unique nature of the data they need to present. And, hopefully, they have better resources to build it for them than were used for healthcare.gov. So I can understand why it's taking them some time.
I have a big problem with this claim. 158 million people voted in the 2020 Presidential election. 15% of that total would be 23.7 million people. 2000 Mules has made about $1.4 million at the box office so far, so at an average ticket price of $10, that would be about 140,000 people who paid to see it. I realize many of the downloads were through Dinesh DiSouza's website, and according to Salem Media Group, the film's distributor, one million people had seen the film by May 12. That wouldn't include the theatrical release, which was on May 20. I'm sure they got more people since then, but 1 million is a far cry from 23 million.So far, only 15% of voters have seen “2000 Mules,” the movie by conservative activist Dinesh D’Souza that premiered last month at former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.
I assume you are talking about the Raffensberger subpoena the stalker was harping about before I re-canceled him. I can find nothing current about what is happening with that doing searches. The only thing I know is Gregg Phillips said the Georgia PTBs can arrest him if they want, but he will not give them any more information. TTV, in their naivety, gave preliminary data to both the FBI and the GBI last year, with the expectation that they would use that data to start their own investigations. However, the FBI did nothing, and the GBI decided to go after and intimidate True The Vote instead. TTV has legitimate concerns because their confidential whistleblower sources came forward only under the understanding they would remain anonymous.Bob78164 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 7:55 pmWhat they (claim to) want is irrelevant. A subpoena is a legal order compelling compliance on a particular date. They don't get to ignore that part of the subpoena just because there's other stuff they'd like to do for PR purposes. --Bobflockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon Jun 06, 2022 7:40 pmAlso, in her weekly Q&A conference, Englebrecht confirmed there will be both a Geek and a Non-Geek version of the ripcord information. The Geek version will hopefully have the cellphone data in a form I can add to a database and examine myself. I am a database programmer and so I have more experience and expertise than any of you have, so you cannot question anything I say on the matter, assuming the data is in a format which I can access. She says the geek version is all ready to go, it's being held up by the formatting issues for the Non-Geek version. They want, of course, to get it as accessible, user-friendly, and intuitive as they can before it goes out. They want to release BOTH versions at the same time.
Again, from the expert point of view (which I am. I have been doing database building and software development for 40 years, and you cannot question or doubt what I say here), most of the time and effort in software programming is spent on the UI (User Interface) which is the window that the end-users have to the data. They are undoubtedly building this UI from scratch because of the unique nature of the data they need to present. And, hopefully, they have better resources to build it for them than were used for healthcare.gov. So I can understand why it's taking them some time.
I have not heard anything about the status of that subpoena, and I have not heard of Phillips being arrested. But it is pretty apparent that the Georgia Powers that Be are more concerned about the political aspect of this than they are about election integrity.Gregg Phillips, who teamed with True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht in the probe, said in an interview with reporter Emerald Robinson that days before the release of “2000 Mules,” Georgia election officials issued subpoenas to get him to turn over his sources and witnesses.
He emphasized that the witnesses came forward because they were promised their identity would be protected.
“This is a very, very dangerous escalation in this. I believe that somebody’s going to get killed if they’re not careful,” Phillips said.
“The (Georgia) investigator himself and the people who fashioned this subpoena are going to get someone killed,” he continued. “They don’t understand what they’re dealing with.
“I’m not going to reveal the source. I don’t care what they do,” Phillips said. “They can cuff me.”