The CERN Hadron Collider will be fired up on April 8th in an effort to create dark matter and discover the history of the universe… NASA is sending up three rocket ships during the solar eclipse named with a mission named after the Egyptian serpent deity, APEP (the god of chaos), who is the nemesis of the solar god Ra. Ironically and incredibly, NASA and CERN both chose to represent their missions with the god of chaos! From schools being closed to state officials recommending people stock up on essentials and a repeat of virtually the EXACT conditions that set off the largest earthquake in the history of the continental United States back in 1811, you do NOT want to miss this broadcast! Is prophecy coming true right before our eyes? Is the second seal of Revelation about to be released? We will discuss all of that and more in this broadcast! #cernhadroncollider #solareclipse2024 #april8 #redheifer #prophecy2024
Every photo displays satanic hand gestures, including the Playboy bunny with the 666 inner graphic. These are the folks teaching the kids.
JUST IN ALERT TOP STORY Jan 9, 2024 2022 ELECTION Judge: Racine's use of mobile voting truck in 2022 was illegal
The city of Racine's use of a mobile voting truck to serve as a movable early voting site in 2022 was illegal, a Racine County Circuit Court judge ruled Monday.
The vehicle was first used in 2022 as a remote polling place and voter registration station. The truck, and questions about its use, soon became the target of GOP scrutiny — with some Republicans claiming it was being used to boost Democratic votes — during the Aug. 9 primary that year, when there were several hotly contested races on the ballot, including GOP primaries for governor, attorney general and secretary of state.
Shortly after that contest, Racine County Republican Party chair Ken Brown and the conservative law firm Wisconsin Institute of Law and Liberty filed a complaint with the Wisconsin Elections Commission challenging the city's Mobile Election Unit.
The commission dismissed the complaint in November, prompting the lawsuit.
https://bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com/journaltimes.com/content/tncms/assets/v3/editorial/1/a7/1a7755e7-a62d-5faf-bef6-ceddb6715509/659d8c19a6091.pdf.pdf On Monday, Racine County Circuit Judge Eugene Gasiorkiewicz ruled Wisconsin's election statutes refer to physical structures for absentee voting and none "allow for the use of a mobile alternative absentee voting vehicles."
"Nowhere can this Court find or has been provided any authority allowing the use of a van or vehicle as an alternate absentee voting vehicle," Gasiorkiewicz wrote, adding that interpreting statutes to allow such vehicles is "a bridge too far."
The Racine Common Council approved funding for one truck to serve as a mobile early voting site in June 2020. The city used it for the first time in the state's spring primary in February 2022.
The vehicle was purchased using grants from the Center for Tech and Civic Life, a nonprofit that provided funding to communities across the country to help election officials update technology and increase voter participation during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. The center received a $350 million donation in 2020 from Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, which prompted some Republicans to complain the money unfairly helped increase turnout in the Democratic strongholds of Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Kenosha and Racine.
While the grants were provided to any community that requested them, including many in areas that solidly voted for then-President Donald Trump, Wisconsin's five largest cities received two to four times more money, per capita. Court rulings have found nothing illegal about the more than $10 million in grants CTCL distributed to about 214 municipalities in 39 of Wisconsin's 72 counties.
Racine has a new voting van. Republicans plan to challenge it. Again.
“Wisconsin voters should know that their elections are secure, and that election administration does not favor one political party over another," Wisconsin Institute of Law and Liberty deputy counsel Lucas Vebber said in a statement Tuesday. "This decision does just that."
While the city, Democratic National Committee and the Milwaukee-based voting advocacy group Black Leaders Organizing for Communities had argued that no statute expressly bars the use of mobile voting sites, Gasiorkiewicz said the "absence of an express prohibition, however, does not mean mobile absentee ballot sites comport to procedures specified in the election laws."
"Nothing in the statutory language detailing the procedures by which absentee ballots may be cast mentions mobile van absentee ballot sites or anything like them," he added. " Such an interpretation was and is contrary to the law."
Gasiorkiewicz noted in his ruling that he "is not expressing an opinion regarding the efficacy of the use of mobile vans to further the popular use of in-person absentee voting."
"This ruling stands for the proposition that such determinations are for the legislature to direct and cannot be a novel creation of executive branch officials."
It's unclear if Gasiorkiewicz's ruling will be appealed. The state Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday.
Racine City Clerk Tara McMenamin said in an email the city's legal team is reviewing the ruling.
OP's Note: This is the same vehicle with handwritten signage 'MobileVoting.com' that was later converted and used to drive into certain neighborhoods with updated signage ' Covid Testing' 'Covid Vaccine Van', which was then used as they walked door to door, while stating they were there to give the residents their Covid Vaccine and/or Covid testing. The Mayor's own brother ran a Covid testing lab.
WhiteCoatSummit.com
More than two years after a complaint was brought against the 10 Republicans who attempted to hand Wisconsin’s Electoral College votes to President Donald Trump, a Dane County judge said Monday he plans to send the case back to the state elections commission for a second consideration.
Dane County Circuit Judge Frank Remington, who plans to issue a written ruling in the next week or so, said when he sends the matter back to the Wisconsin Elections Commission he’ll stipulate that GOP commissioner Robert Spindell Jr. — who was also one of the 10 fake electors to sign the documents — must recuse himself this time around.
In March 2022, Spindell and the rest of the bipartisan commission unanimously dismissed the complaint after determining the 10 Republicans had not violated state elections laws.
Attorneys for Spindell, the elections commission and liberal group Law Forward, which filed the initial complaint in February 2021, all largely agreed with Remington’s impending decision. Spindell’s attorney Mark Maciolek said his client has agreed to not participate in the complaint’s second consideration before the commission.
“I’ll tip my hand,” Remington said in oral arguments Monday. “I’m going to issue a written decision. But — surprise, surprise — I’m going to come to the conclusion, as all parties have, that the appropriate remedy is to vacate the decision of the (elections commission) and remand it back for further proceedings, which don’t include commissioner Spindell.”
The case stems from a Dec. 14, 2020, meeting at the Capitol where, following pressure from people in Trump’s inner circle, the 10 Republicans signed official-looking documents purporting that Trump had won Wisconsin, despite recounts and court decisions affirming that President Joe Biden won the battleground state by almost 21,000 votes.
Wisconsin Law Forward filed a complaint in early 2021 with the elections commission on behalf of the Service Employees International Union alleging the Republican slate of electors violated Wisconsin law when they convened and then sent documents to federal and state officials falsely claiming to be the state’s rightful electors.
Wisconsin Republicans seek to have fraudulent electors case split, heard in their home counties
After the elections commission dismissed the complaint, Law Forward since filed a separate lawsuit on behalf of a handful of Democrats, including two official presidential electors, against the 10 Republicans, as well as Boston-area lawyer Kenneth Chesebro and Jim Troupis, a former Republican-appointed Dane County judge who has represented Trump in Wisconsin.
That lawsuit, which is also before Remington, alleges the Republicans and their attorneys broke multiple laws, including counterfeiting public records, illegally interfering with official procedures, defrauding the public and engaging in conspiracy. Plaintiffs seek more than $2.4 million in damages, including $2,000 fines for the Republicans and their attorneys, and up to $200,000 in punitive damages for each plaintiff.
Nine of the 10 Republicans have sought to have the lawsuit broken up and brought before individual courts in their counties of residence.