Who is censoring y'all?flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 12:06 pmNot sure you read everything, but I think you might be in the same category as the judges asked to look at these issues. It is too overwhelming to digest, so you believe it's easier to sweep it under the rug as 'legitimate errors'. Even if it can be explained away as that ( I don't happen to think so. This is just one group's compilation of what they found), is this volume of 'legitimate errors' acceptable to you? To the point where no one can whittle it down to one official number that everyone can accept? And is the answer for you just to ignore all these 'legitimate errors' and censor anyone questioning them, as we are currently doing?earendel wrote: ↑Sun Aug 06, 2023 2:41 pmok, flock, I've read through what you've posted, and here's the problem I see. You may have encountered errors, but that's a far cry from proving that there was fraud. For that you would have to do research by finding the voter, questioning them as to why they erroneously registered or voted, and if they were put up to it by someone else. Then you would need to show that those registrations were the result of a conspiracy to defraud. Next you would have to find out for whom those registrants voted (they may have voted for Trump). And finally you'd have to connect the dots from DeKalb County to all counties in Georgia (at the least) to show that the election was stolen. That's a fairly massive undertaking.
I suggest you read it more thoroughly, especially the links.
I most definitely agree that it is a massive undertaking to 'prove' election results are inaccurate. It is far easier to swear by your mother's life that they are 'the most secure and accurate in history' and to censor and blacklist anyone who disagrees.
My question to you: Why should it be that way, and who is fighting tooth and nail to keep it the way it is and block and harass any attempt to improve and simplify the verification of results?
I have gone back through what you posted and I still maintain that what is being found are legitimate errors, not evidence of fraud. I don't think anyone would argue that voter rolls are 100% correct. The issue is whether anything is being done to address this issue. The EPIC system is one way, but some states, run by Republicans, have opted out of that system (if I understand correctly, Georgia is not one of those). I'm pretty sure that every state has a process for reviewing the rolls and purging them.
I don't know why you're going into all of this in a thread where the subject matter is Trump's most recent indictment, but I personally am all for any efforts to uncover instances of voter fraud, and hope that, with all of the eyeballs that are apparently on the case, as many as possible of the people involved in those instances will be prosecuted and suffer a significant consequence. I'm a big believer in enforcing the law with the goal of deterring similar criminal behavior in the future.
Same goes for Hunter Biden and anyone else who might be shown to have broken the law, including any other member of the "Biden crime family." And, yeah, that includes Joe.
And, if the evidence demonstrates that Trump conspired with others to undermine the results of the election on many fronts, as is alleged, in violation of the laws cited, then I hope that they all end up suffering consequences that might deter others from trying to do the same.