The surveillance video and cellphone ping data represent the most comprehensive and indisputable evidence of election fraud yet and True the Vote alleges that as much as 7% of mail-in ballots were illegally trafficked in this manner in swing states during the 2020 election.
We may never get another chance like this to expose the fraudulent U.S. election system because ballot traffickers will avoid surveillance cameras and not carry their cellphones in future elections.
It will be our duty to win in the court of public opinion with the documented evidence that True the Vote and 2000 Mules provide then we must compel state legislatures and county election officials to act on that evidence.
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Clean up the voter rolls
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Stop mass mail-in voting
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Abolish the drop boxes
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Indict ballot traffickers
The FBI, DOJ, and SC might ignore the evidence, but we can demand change on a local level that will have a national impact.
https://kanekoa.substack.com/p/exposing-americas-ballot-trafficking?s=w
@KanekoaTheGreat
Does surveillance footage and cell phone ping data show who that person voted for?
No, but stuffing more than one ballot in a ballot drop box is a felony. And surveillance footage shows multiple people stuffing multiple ballots in drop boxes and then the cell phone ping data shows those same individuals going to DemoncRATic offices afterward. Ostensibly to get paid.
Some states, such as Alabama, state that only the voter must return the ballot. Others, such as Rhode Island and Wyoming, do not explicitly specify who may or may not return a ballot on behalf of a voter. In 31 states, however, someone other than the voter is explicitly allowed to return a voted ballot on behalf of another voter. Many of these states limit this provision to a family member, household member or caregiver. Sixteen states allow a voter to designate someone—not necessarily a family member, household member or caregiver—to return their ballot for them.
Among the 31 states where a voter can authorize someone to return a ballot on their behalf, nine limit how many ballots an authorized person can return and four limit how long those ballots can remain in the authorized person’s possession before being returned. These limits are based on the concern that saving people the task of returning their ballot can bleed into encouraging them to vote a certain way.
Am I missing something here? Does this say in some states people can turn in more than one ballot?
Who gives a shit! Stuffing ballot boxes is illegal in some states! And the SCOTUS has already ruled: “fraud vitiates everything!” Not “a little fraud is ok” or “fraud has to reach a certain level before it’s really considered fraud”! I don’t want to hear some lame ass excuses that “in some states someone can turn in ballots for relatives” etc. Fraud is fraud no matter how small or how big it is. Couple that with the fact that in some cases (Pennsylvania) where voting laws were changed by the Secretary of State or the courts and not by the State legislatures as required by the Constitution; that also invalidates the election!
In some states yes! What states were stuffing ballots?