Election Fraud Evidence Piles Up

There will probably soon be web sites devoted to showing election fraud perpetrated by Democrats. It’s going to be complicated to follow in real time as new information arrives. To contend with, there will also be the censorship of major media attempting to eliminate the evidence from sight of most Americans.

This blog consists of only a few links that cropped up today that contain significant information that looks reliable.

Link1
Link2
Link3
Link4
Link5
link6
link7
link8
link9
link10
link11
link12
link13

One prominent event that raises many questions is the arrival of ballots in Detroit at 4 am on November 4. This preceded the switch in prediction market forecasts by 30 minutes.

Who were the people in control of these ballots? What is their paper trail? Where did they come from? Who signed for them and took control of them? What Trump/Biden split did they convey? Was it statistically probable or improbable? Had they already been counted? Has their legitimacy been established? Did observers have access to them before delivery and after delivery? Why were they delivered at that time? Did this delivery coincide with deliveries elsewhere in other states?

And link14 has been recommended to me. It’s a video on bitchute. This informs us of the many companies that sell voting services to governments, and it points out their vulnerabilities to having votes flipped. Thanks to Robert Laverty for this link.

There’s a small debate going on about the term “glitch”, and that matter is beyond my scope here. I’d add this article about no glitches in software as link15. That is, if it runs, it does what it’s instructed to do.

There can, however, be programs whose bugs haven’t been removed; but this can hardly be acceptable for governments to use, and people should surely know this if it’s happening, because it renders voting as problematic from the get-go.

There can also be human errors and lapses in updating software, or updates that create issues.

There are also various legal issues that are forming debates all of their own.

I have no intent of keeping up with all of this. I merely wanted to record a few links before I lost the links altogether, i.e., before my internet searches failed to turn them up and/or before they got lost in my search history and became way too tedious to recover.

And another vote flip in Pennsylvania, link16.

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6:03 pm on November 8, 2020