- dirigismo : rdrama is just right wing memes now
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https://i.rdrama.net/images/1706199826777646.webpgeneral dtatement from denizens of the donald
VP_Unchained
Remember to pray for our legislators for they're under constant assault from temptations being launched at them by the SWAMP!
For a 50 mile radius around the swamp there exists a sewer of vampiric leeches who exist for nothing more than to suckle at the teat of our nations tax revenue. They're hungry and include just about any business (great and small) in and around the DC beltway.. they'll all stop at nothing to continue the gravy train. You need only do a little research on people's LinkedIn profiles to see the incestuous nature of their job rotations in and out of the government, NGOs & industry.
Facebook censoring posts about it
HahaOhWaitThatsNotFU
ZuckBucks won't be able to hide in his bunker. We're going to deliver justice to that sick freakoid weirdo. Hey ZuckStrag! A lot of people see through the agenda.
1MonkeyJr
In fifteen years, Zuck will be worse than Soros.
HahaOhWaitThatsNotFU
He's already equal to the SoroStrag.
RachetQueen2020
That bunker has got to have ventilation right?
FreedomFromGovt
Does it? Not if we have anything to say about it, it doesn't.👹
Fedposting, Fedposting everywhere
Kari lake is worried about her safety
IPMang
In that 10 minute attempt to bribe her, he openly says he should be worried about his car exploding....
That should be way more than enough to open a massive investigation into Brian Kemp's car explosion, I'd think??
RootLevelPrivilege
Yeah, I mean, they blew up Kemp's daughter's boyfriend's car, the staffer for one of the Senators. Well, not officially. Officially it was a totally random car accidenplosion or something. I don't know, I stopped even trying to understand official stories. But everyone knows what happened.
Mountaineer
Officially it was a totally random car accidenplosion
The Ghost of Michael Hastings has entered the chat
Resist_and_Bite
Kek - more pedes need to research Hastings.
LongDongDonald420x69
We think, but they don't
Oh wait, yes they do
They're all in on it
StairsVsBiden
… and they don't think you know, but i know that you do…
PritzkersFatAss76
Yeah, but WHO would open that investigation? We are at that point in our country's history, who is watching the watchers? Or who is policing the police? Shit sucks man.
Oldman1945
I don't like Kari but don't believe the GOP head that said he was “set up"
KernalMustard
By Kari or the people who sent him. If its people who sent him. Name names buddy
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JUST IN - U.S. Supreme Court on 5-4 vote allows federal agents to cut razor wire Texas installed on US-Mexico border — AP
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) January 22, 2024
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I don’t agree with Nikki Haley on everything, but we agree on this much: She is not Nancy Pelosi. pic.twitter.com/hjNgmcrwAP
— Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) January 21, 2024
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Looking past why voting machines are generally a bad idea anyway
Georgia voting machines have been known to be vulnerable to hacking since 2018
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/10/14/wireless-modems-could-endanger-midterms-00061769
and they still havent fixed them
bc of that prominent people on both sides of the isle are skeptical of the results
https://apnews.com/article/trump-georgia-fraud-defendants-201d73d2a6b165d06230961af9f21b61
https://www.cnn.com/2024/01/08/politics/trump-fulton-county-georgia-immunity/index.html
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/04/28/magazine/stacey-abrams-election-georgia.html
Whats going on there? Are the elections people to busy drinking moonshine and driving fast through the woods to hire decent cybersecurity people? Georgia on it's way to frick up the 2024 election:
P.S. I am not implying that there is anything wrong with Dominion voting machines.
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Election Fraud Is Rare. Except, Maybe, in Bridgeport, Conn.
Voters say that campaigns in Connecticut's largest city routinely rely on absentee ballots — collected illegally — to win elections. Now, the city faces a mayoral primary redo.
Two months ago, Joe Ganim received the most votes in the race for mayor of Bridgeport, Conn. This week, the city will vote again --- to decide if he should even be the Democratic candidate.
The unlikely and confusing situation arose after a judge ruled that there was enough evidence of misconduct in the Democratic primary in September to throw its result --- a victory by Mayor Ganim --- into doubt. The judge pointed to videos showing "partisans" repeatedly stuffing absentee ballots into drop boxes.
The footage provided a particularly lurid illustration of ballot tampering, though experts say election fraud is rare in the United States and often accidental when it occurs.
But in Bridgeport, Connecticut's largest city, ballot manipulation has undermined elections for years.
In interviews and in court testimony, residents of the city's low-income housing complexes described people sweeping through their apartment buildings, often pressuring them to apply for absentee ballots they were not legally entitled to.
Sometimes, residents say, campaigners fill out the applications or return the ballots for them --- all of which is illegal.
"Bridgeport has a very long, tortured history of absentee ballot abuse," said Bill Bloss, a lawyer who persuaded the judge to order the fall primary to be rerun.
"It's not a secret," he added. "It has been going on for years."
Last June, the State Election Enforcement Commission found evidence of criminality in the 2019 Democratic primary for mayor. In 2022, a judge ordered a Democratic primary for state representative to be rerun amid an allegation of ballot fraud.
In 2018, Bridgeport was forced to hold three primaries for City Council. The first was invalidated over a miscounted absentee ballot; the second was voided by the State Supreme Court in part because a police officer had improperly collected absentee ballots.
Similar episodes have been documented back to the 1980s, though political observers say they cannot remember how the tradition of ballot manipulation initially took hold. Such manipulation has led to forgery charges, fines and even bans on participating in campaigns.
"It is just simply part of the electoral strategy political culture in Bridgeport," Mr. Bloss said. "The perception is that you can win elections in Bridgeport by harvesting absentee ballots. And so, they do it."
In both the 2019 and 2023 races for mayor, the beneficiary of questionable acts in the initial Democratic primary vote was Mayor Ganim, the incumbent, who once spent seven years in prison on federal corruption charges, then regained the mayor's post in 2015.
In both of the recent primaries, Mayor Ganim came up short among voters who voted in person but overwhelmed his opponent in the absentee ballot count.
"It is routine here," said State Senator Marilyn Moore, whose district includes parts of Bridgeport and who lost to Mayor Ganim in 2019. She added: "People just accept it. Like, 'It's just Bridgeport.'"
In a radio interview last month, Mayor Ganim took responsibility for his supporters' mishandling of absentee ballots in the fall. He said he had not known about it, and called it a "black eye" for the city. He declined to comment for this article.
The rules for absentee ballots differ from state to state. In recent years, there have been efforts to expand their use as a way to encourage voter participation. There have also been campaigns to restrict absentee ballots as a way to prevent fraud or other misconduct, though some such efforts have been criticized as racially discriminatory.
In Connecticut, only certain voters qualify to vote by absentee ballot, such as people who will be out of town on Election Day. Other legitimate reasons include a physical disability or military service.
Most voters are supposed to fill out their own applications for a ballot, complete it themselves --- without influence or oversight --- and return it to the city. (A few trusted people, like immediate family members, are allowed to return it on their behalf.) But campaigners may not collect ballots and return them for others, a practice referred to as "ballot harvesting."
A far greater percentage of voters in Bridgeport use absentee ballots than in many other Connecticut communities, according to the Connecticut Mirror. In the 2023 primaries, almost 23 percent of Bridgeport's votes were absentee ballots, compared with about 15 percent in Hartford and under 5 percent in New Haven.
In 2019, three voters sued Mayor Ganim, city election officials and others. About a dozen voters testified that someone else had filled out at least part of their absentee ballot application for them, or submitted a fraudulent application. Others testified that absentee ballots never came or had just shown up in the mail, even if they hadn't applied. Others said they did not vote, but the town clerk had a record of their ballots.
One woman testified that she had been paid $15 an hour by Mayor Ganim's campaign to circulate ballot applications. She said she received personal checks from the mayor.
Bridgeport Generation Now Votes, a nonprofit organization dedicated to increasing voter turnout, helped the three voters with the lawsuit. The organization canvassed and found vulnerable residents --- those who were older, disabled or not fluent in English --- who said they had been targeted by campaigners to vote by absentee ballot.
"They stay, they have you vote, they tell you who to vote for and then they take your ballot and leave," Callie Gale Heilmann, the group's co-director, said in an interview.
Some voters refer to the people who come through as "absentee ballot queens."
"They come all the time," Caroline Askew, who lived in public housing, testified in the 2019 case. "They come every election. Before every election. They come after hours, after management is gone or on the weekend."
Kadeem Graham, another voter, testified that a City Council member, Alfredo Castillo, filled out most of an absentee ballot application for him, checked in repeatedly to see if the ballot arrived, then returned and took it.
"I told him that I had not filled out anything on the ballot at all or anything," Mr. Graham testified. "He just asked me to sign my name on one of the papers and told me he got it."
"That was the last I saw of the ballot," he added. "I handed it to him and then that was it. I'm --- I'm not sure what happened."
Mr. Castillo, a Democrat, did not respond to a request for comment. He is one of three people whom the state election board recommended for criminal charges in connection with the 2019 primary.
Vanessa Liles, 51, a community organizer and one of the plaintiffs in the 2019 lawsuit, said in an interview that some voters felt intimidated. Others just don't know their rights.
"It's essentially stealing votes," she said. "Where absentee ballot was looking to make the vote more expansive, the process that's used in Bridgeport was really constricting people's right to vote."
But Tony Barr, the founder and chairman of Bridgeport's New Movement Party, argues that helping voters is just common sense.
On a recent afternoon, he was sitting in a car outside the P.T. Barnum Apartments, a subsidized housing complex, after helping residents apply for absentee ballots.
He said he comes back to see if the ballot has arrived, and typically checks back in to see if the residents have voted. He also brings stamps, just in case. Often, the ballot is still there.
Mr. Barr said that he sometimes takes older people out for a fast food meal after they drop off their ballots. "It's not that they're being voter suppressed --- it's that they're just lazy," he said.
He added, "People don't get up off of their behinds unless they're getting something for free."
Activists and elected officials in Bridgeport say there has been little effort from the governor, legislators or other state leaders to fix the election issues.
"If the leaders of this state can't show they're responsible for making sure that democracy works everywhere in the state, then we're looking at a very serious problem," said Kim McLaughlin, 69, a community organizer.
Some speculate that Democratic leaders have little interest in rocking the boat.
"No one wins an election statewide if they don't win Bridgeport," Mr. Barr said. He added: "Why do you think they haven't come out to speak negatively about Bridgeport? Because they need it."
Gov. Ned Lamont, a second-term Democrat, declined to comment. His office referred questions to the secretary of the state's office, which appointed a single Bridgeport election monitor in the general election --- well after many absentee ballots had been sent out.
For the new primary on Tuesday --- in which Mayor Ganim and his opponent, John Gomes, will face each other again --- the secretary of the state appointed two monitors.
The judge who ordered the primary redo, William Clark, did not have the authority to postpone the general election in November, which Mayor Ganim won.
If Mayor Ganim wins the second primary, it's not entirely clear what will happen; he has not been sworn into office for a new term. Mr. Gomes, who successfully challenged the first primary outcome, said he would not force a new contest.
Stephanie Thomas, the secretary of the state, attributed the lack of state intervention in Bridgeport to the "clunkiness" of government and the limited powers of the executive branch. She said legislators should pass laws providing more oversight, and voters need to know their rights and speak up if they see malfeasance.
Tawanda White, a P.T. Barnum resident, has voted absentee in the past --- even though, she said, she was perfectly able to vote in person.
People came by her apartment with an application and stamps to help her send it in.
Ms. White, 54, is fed up with the entire process. In a recent election, she sent in a blank ballot, a protest against what she sees as the corrupt process --- and the lack of investment in the community.
"Whether we vote or don't vote, we're still screwed," she said, sitting on her sofa on a recent Saturday afternoon. She added: "They need our vote just to get where they need to be. And then when they get it, what do they do? Nothing."
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Gracchi Brothers, Marius, Sulla, Pompey, Crassus, Caesar. Are we watching the beginning of the end in our lifetime, or is the system robust enough to let complete r-slurs keep "saving" America from the last guy in charge.
Or better yet, is anyone even really making a difference at all while in the presidency, and we keep getting worked up and dooooming over nothing?
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- Stoicpeace : Can someone buy me an unban award?
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https://news.yahoo.com/breaking-100-years-tradition-biden-211252713.html
STRONGLY WORDED LETTER. SLIM LOCAL MAJORITY IS HAPPENING
https://news.yahoo.com/hampshire-official-threatens-democratic-party-205833399.html
Only if the Demonrat nomination miraculously ends up close. Otherwise, the Satanists will divide the vote in half as a coverup