We don’t know what the mil operation has for a plan, but until they walk away it’s not over.
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Florida would've been a phenomenal state to steal. Not only that -- Florida turning blue would've been believable at the mainstream level as it'd been projected as a toss-up. Clearly, the post-2000 ballot counting reforms + state government had a positive effect on the Florida outcome.
Texas has rejected Dominion voting machines since 2013 over security concerns. We can thank their state governments for that.
Sure, the federal election was stolen, but there's plenty of evidence, as noted above, of individual state governments protecting their states from becoming accomplices.
If I had to argue against what I've just said, however, I'd point out that it's a lot easier to protect a state government from corruption than to eradicate the corruption once it's taken hold. Also, it only takes a single term resulting from a single election to make corrupting changes. If Biden does give amnesty to 11 million illegal immigrants, a large chunk of that would precisely impact Texas and Florida. So, if I was playing for the other team, I'd provide the amnesty so as to win Texas and Florida local elections by the book, then aggressively implement the changes required to enable fraud in those local elections within the first term, guaranteeing all subsequent elections.
That's my two cents: There's legitimate hope, as of now, in state government, but a major, immediate threat to that hope looms.
I know people in Florida that say certain counties were fishy!! Every state is a problem if you have a computer involved.
I just looked the Florida electoral college map. Now that you mention it, I'd say that the results from South Florida counties (Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach) are fishy; the rest of the blue areas were expected and reasonable in my opinion.
Why do I think there were fishy happenings in South Florida? Let's look at Miami-Dade county: It has a population of 2.7 million, of which roughly 1.2 million are of Cuban heritage and roughly 200k are of Venezuelan heritage. Both of those groups, which comprise over half of their population, vote overwhelmingly Republican as they've directly experienced the effects of Marxism first-hand. I'm a Venezuela-born naturalized U.S. citizen, and out of the dozens of family members I know living in the Miami area, even the more socially left-leaning ones support Trump -- Bernie's popularity and influence within the Democrat party scared the living hell out of them. The same applies to the Cubans I know. Besides anecdotal evidence, this phenomenon amongst Venezuelans & Cubans has had plenty of MSM coverage in at least the past two election cycles.
This kind of reasoning similarly extends to Broward and Palm Beach, although Venezuelans and Cubans aren't the majority there. There's no way in hell I can be convinced that Broward, being 62% White and 17% Hispanic (majority Venezuelan & Cuban), only yielded Trump 35%.
I'd expect that kind of thing from Hispanics in, say, Texas or California, being overwhelmingly Mexican or Central American (i.e. overwhelmingly benefiting from illegal immigration amnesty), but not in Florida.
The rest of the blue counties were in metropolitan areas nearby large public universities, so no red flag there.
Anyways -- Now my faith in Florida's election integrity has been slightly undermined, lmao.
Do you have a source for the not being able to vote in 8 years? I was wondering if any kind of amnesty legislation would follow the typical permanent residency to citizenship timeline, or if there'd be some kind of provision that would commute the waiting period according to time already spent here. After a quick Google search, I couldn't find specifics on the timeline from any news articles; I also couldn't find any specifics on the WH website, but I might've missed it.
As far as Texas going blue: I don't disagree with you. As far as I know, it can be entirely accounted for by demographic changes -- Hispanics currently make up roughly 40% of the population there, and the Hispanic population there has seen a roughly 20% increase in the past decade alone. Hispanics there are overwhelmingly Mexican and Central American, which tend to vote Democrat unlike their Venezuelan & Cuban counterparts in Florida.
Interesting fact: Hispanics of Venezuelan and Cuban descent in the U.S. have significantly higher educational attainment and incomes than Hispanics in the U.S. in general. It's almost as if education + first-hand experience of living in a leftist hell hole immunizes against adopting leftist beliefs.
As a whole, compared to the general U.S. population, Hispanics of Mexican & Central American origin might have experience with the latter, while lacking the former. Inversely, native-born U.S. liberals, also as compared to the general U.S. population, overwhelmingly have the former, while lacking experience with the latter.
In case you're wondering: I was born in Venezuela and became a naturalized U.S. citizen.
Thanks for providing a source for that.
Yeah, so, aside from labeling Q as anti-semitic, it seems like we both agree on everything surrounding the second point. At least, I agree with what you said and don't see it as conflicting with anything I said.
I don't doubt that you're a person of good will, so I'd really like to implore you to examine this message board with the aim of reconsidering the anti-semitic charge. Of course, you may have found anti-semitism on 4chan, 8chan, or Voat (sometimes even at TDW), but I'm hoping that you can draw a distinction between the vastly diverse communities that all simultaneously operated on those platforms.
Just to be clear, I brought up educational attainment and income as it pertains to political views specifically because the overall trend within the U.S. (education positively correlated with liberal views) often gets brought up to lend credibility to the liberal world view. But it's interesting to see the trend kind of reversed when examining only first and second generation Hispanics grouped by country of origin or heritage.
I think it highlights something that's missed entirely by looking purely at the overall trend -- namely, that we may get a different picture when also controlling for lived experience alongside education.
I haven't looked into it, but I'd also be interested in examining the trend restricted to other ethnic or country-of-heritage groups e.g. Eastern Europeans.
Bullshit and ur a insult to Texans spouting that "texas will be blue" crap. Texans always watch dallas and always watch the foriegners. There's a reason people vanish here.
Houston is a powder keg and have been since they lost that oil money. They don't need much to start killing each other honestly lol.