sturg33
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so cerno or technofrog?
i just want to get to the bottom of things
I can say with certainty that these sources weren't reporting GA voting law as Jim Crow.
The lecturers preferred sources were.
They were lying. He was wrong.
Again
so cerno or technofrog?
i just want to get to the bottom of things
with all due respect the GDT ain't a source...for a minute i thought you had something
Links to news reports and local officials statement were posted in the thread. It got immediate attention due to the time discrepancy that sturg referred to. Some of were watching at 9:00 when the "water main break" was initially reported.
I'm still all ears for a plausible explanation for how this could have compromised the integrity or accuracy of the vote count.
You don't seem to be, otherwise the problems with continuing to count after sending observers home wouldn't need to be explained.
I am. But having done a little digging, I haven't come up with anything plausible. I'm leaning toward nothing burger. But if you have something I'll read it.
Thanks. Based on what you have provided, I would say it was wrong to send the observers home at 10:30 pm if more vote counting was to occur. At the same time you have the state's independent monitor present to observe the counting by the five vote counters who continued counting by 10:30 pm. Plus of course, it is all there on video.
So....is there any plausible reason to think the count is not accurate?
I think we all know what went down. Something very bad and ugly happened in the country between election day and January 6. And the people who pushed the story of a stolen election and an illegitimate president continue to push it. That includes the people (like Giuliani) who apparently worked their will on the state legislature. I don't think they had to work very hard. Anyhow, I see a lot of dirty pool. But more on the GOP side. They took a little something (let's call it a slider rather than a nothing burger) and blew it up cuz they didn't like the outcome and their hero has an ego too delicate and fragile to be subjected to the rough and tumble of a democracy.
Do we need plausible reasons, or do we want to encourage people to vote? Obvious shenanigans in a Dem stronghold that always has election shenanigans made people doubt the integrity of the Georgia election prior to Trump filing any lawsuits. By itself, without him saying a word, that occurring right before a massive influx of Dem votes made people believe the election was being stolen.
As for the independent monitor, you can thank the supposedly unbiased media, judges, teachers, etc for people not buying that. And if both parties trusted that person, they wouldn't post their own observers.
This was the tweet at 8:41pm on election night.
Now all the stories say it was at 6 am.
It seems to me they just lied to not make it look so bad
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There's a major difference between the states, though: Colorado votes by mail. Every registered voter receives a ballot about 15 to 20 days before the election. And instead of waiting in line at a polling station, the vast majority simply drop the ballot in a mailbox or a secure dropbox.
According to information from the secretary of state, 99.3% of Colorado primary voters used one of those methods last year.
So, while it's true that Colorado has fewer days for in-person voting, it also has far less demand for in-person voting. Voters rarely encounter lines here. And the ultimate result of Colorado's system is relatively high turnout.
The Georgia law also bans mobile voting centers, and it strictly limits the use of dropboxes. This is another area where Colorado is moving in the opposite direction. Colorado had one dropbox per 9,400 active registered voters for the last election, with the secretary of state boasting about adding scores of new locations in the past few years.
Georgia has now set a cap of one box per 100,000 active registered voters. The metropolitan Atlanta area could see its number of dropboxes drop from 94 to 23, The New York Times reported. And, instead of being outdoors with 24-hour access, as many in Colorado are, the Georgia boxes must be inside government buildings and voting sites.