🚨FULTON COUNTY PANIC MODE: DOJ Demands EVERY Name, Address & Phone from 2020 Election Workers – The Full Reckoning Is Here—Gabriel Sterling, Brian Kemp, and Brad Raffensperger, Prepare for Impact! 💥
Democracies do not die in darkness—they are reborn in the disinfectant glare of scrutiny.
As Justice Louis Brandeis taught a century ago, sunlight is the best disinfectant. Today, the Department of Justice has wielded precisely that weapon: a grand jury subpoena demanding the names, home addresses, emails, and personal phone numbers of every single individual who staffed, volunteered, counted, reviewed, transported, or otherwise touched the 2020 presidential election in Fulton County, Georgia—the Democratic stronghold at the epicenter of America's most fiercely contested vote.
Poll workers. County employees. Mobile voting bus drivers. Ballot reviewers. The full dramatis personae. Thousands strong. No exceptions. No shadows left.
Fulton officials are in full court panic, filing motions to quash and crying 'harassment' and 'expired statutes.' They warn of safety fears for workers—yet one must ask the scholar's question: if the process was as flawless and secure as they repeatedly proclaimed, why does naming those who ran it constitute terror instead of transparent exoneration?
Even our http://VoiceAgainstCorruption.com has been receiving whistleblower tips from poll workers concerned they might be caught up in the dragnet, and they want to come clean on what they may have witnessed.
The consent of the governed is not a slogan; it is the bedrock of the republic. When the very stewards of the franchise resist the most basic ledger of accountability, they do not protect democracy—they erode it.
This is not retribution. This is republican virtue in action: the rigorous verification that legitimacy demands.
History records not just who cast the ballots, but who counted them. The grand jury is watching. The American people are watching.
🚨FULTON COUNTY PANIC MODE: DOJ Demands EVERY Name, Address & Phone from 2020 Election Workers – The Full Reckoning Is Here—Gabriel Sterling, Brian Kemp, and Brad Raffensperger, Prepare for Impact! 💥
Democracies do not die in darkness—they are reborn in the disinfectant glare of scrutiny.
As Justice Louis Brandeis taught a century ago, sunlight is the best disinfectant. Today, the Department of Justice has wielded precisely that weapon: a grand jury subpoena demanding the names, home addresses, emails, and personal phone numbers of every single individual who staffed, volunteered, counted, reviewed, transported, or otherwise touched the 2020 presidential election in Fulton County, Georgia—the Democratic stronghold at the epicenter of America's most fiercely contested vote.
Poll workers. County employees. Mobile voting bus drivers. Ballot reviewers. The full dramatis personae. Thousands strong. No exceptions. No shadows left.
Fulton officials are in full court panic, filing motions to quash and crying 'harassment' and 'expired statutes.' They warn of safety fears for workers—yet one must ask the scholar's question: if the process was as flawless and secure as they repeatedly proclaimed, why does naming those who ran it constitute terror instead of transparent exoneration?
Even our http://VoiceAgainstCorruption.com has been receiving whistleblower tips from poll workers concerned they might be caught up in the dragnet, and they want to come clean on what they may have witnessed.
The consent of the governed is not a slogan; it is the bedrock of the republic. When the very stewards of the franchise resist the most basic ledger of accountability, they do not protect democracy—they erode it.
This is not retribution. This is republican virtue in action: the rigorous verification that legitimacy demands.
History records not just who cast the ballots, but who counted them. The grand jury is watching. The American people are watching.
Sunlight, at long last, has arrived.