5
ElemenohpeaQ 5 points ago +5 / -0

I have a better theory:

She saw someone call it on 4chan and ran to Twitter to FIRST.

12
ElemenohpeaQ 12 points ago +12 / -0

How many is a few? ... because it has been a few hours since that was posted.

1
ElemenohpeaQ 1 point ago +2 / -1

lol - Remind me, big dog... What claim am I not defending? You’re the one that tried to shift from the claim I made to the DHS being in an article that I never said was. It was about the states.

It’s precious how you’re making things up as you go though. “DHS distributes”. lol - Reading is hard huh? We’re talking about printing, champ.

1
ElemenohpeaQ 1 point ago +5 / -4

Hey good for you. You’re not supposed to. It’s not what the article is about.

The article was shitting all over your comment I originally responded to.

Slide, slide, slippity slide tho. lol

2
ElemenohpeaQ 2 points ago +4 / -2

They issue them but don’t do the physical printing:

https://www.npr.org/2020/05/03/848347895/ballot-printers-increase-capacity-to-prepare-for-mail-voting-surge

“So I'm on the production floor looking at one of our HP printing presses and it takes a roll of paper that starts out at a thousand pounds, and then it goes through the machine, gets printed, and then gets trimmed to size," Ellington said, adding that the machine can print about 20,000 ballots an hour.

Standing near the printer are stacks of massive rolls of white paper that will eventually become ballots for millions of American voters. On this day, the company is producing mailings for Iowa, Nevada, Arizona and Georgia. The latter's ballots need to be delivered quickly for Georgia's June 9 primary, which was delayed from March due to the pandemic.