funny, though. I see only paper ballots. No machines. We could learn something from that.
Lots of decentralised operations, to mitigate large groups of people in one place which could be seen as a target. Those groups are one person checking IDs and writing down names (to check against central registers; one person to hand out ballots, and one person carrying the ballot box. So there is separation between the person carrying a stack of blank ballots and the person carrying the box. The ballot boxes are transparent, so that everyone can see what's inside. A stuffing operation would be glaringly obvious. Note to USA: they check everyone's ID (how racisss).
The most irregular thing I saw was one voting group, who did not provide a 'privacy shelter' for the voters - They put an opened folder on the desk, in a way so others could not see: no-one cared, because they all feel the same way.
Also, the Western MSM keeps hammering the 'occupied' status of these regions, setting the narrative that this is a 'sham' election. These people look relieved and happy, while risking their lives to vote. And I have yet to see a single gun pointing at anyone's head while voting. NVM.
funny, though. I see only paper ballots. No machines. We could learn something from that.
Lots of decentralised operations, to mitigate large groups of people in one place which could be seen as a target. The ballot boxes are transparent, so that everyone can see what's inside. A stuffing operation would be glaringly obvious.
The most irregular thing was one voting group, who did not provide a privacy shelter for the voters: no-one cared, because they all feel the same way.