We live behind the enemy lines of New England and are one of the states that came up as red for Trump in the supposed actual 2020 results leaked by team Trump. The state capitol is deep "blue no matter who" and they pull lots of dirty tricks (gerrymandering district lines to push their competition to deeper blue regions) to maintain a choke hold on the communities.
My son said it looks like a normal ballot, was double sided, but was NOT extra thick and NOT larger than a regular 8.5" x 11" paper. What strikes me as extra strange is, they provided the entire ballot all the way down to school board, Town Council and Bond approvals. Maybe they wanted them to get familiar with the whole process, or maybe not.
I'm hoping this was just a fun lesson in politics, but knowing how desperate these rats are, it wouldn't surprise me if the dems scan these in as real ballot images to support the steal on the Dominion and EE&S tabulators.
For those of you with kids, it might be a good idea to ask them if they are holding "mock" elections at their school.
betcha not many people know what a mimeograph is, or what the fluid smells like...i rather enjoyed it, lol...as a clerk-typist in the early '70's, the worst part about mimeograph was that you could only get a certain number of copies, as i recall, then had to re-type the document to run on the mimeograph again...and no way to correct a typing error, either!
I'm just old enough to have used all the old AV technologies all through school, introduced to Apple Mac computers and TRS-80s in high school, and through all the technology we have today. My 83 yo father can use Photoshop even. But, it's nice to remember pre-Internet and cell phones.
We called them "Trash-Eighties", but we all secretly wished we had the money to afford one. I had a Commodore 64, and a cassette tape drive, so I could store programs on the cassette, and not take up any of the valuable onboard memory. Because 64K "ought to be enough for anybody" - LOL!
I had the same VIC-20 setup.
Learned to program on my dad's C-64. Spent soooo many hours entering cool programs from "Computes Gazette" and hoping the checksum on each line was correct. I also had the tape drive but felt like a rock star when we upgraded to the floppy drive.
The tricycle meme makes me sniffle.
I was in charge of making mimeographed tests in 9th grade for class. That was 1979 lol
respect! I once was allowed to take the foot-long chalk erasers down to the 'janitor's room' for a "de-dusting", those guys in the janitor's room were cool as hell...