Prominent defense attorney Sidney Powell sued Georgia's top officials late Wednesday, alleging in federal court that the GOP-run state government permitted a massive voter fraud scheme that rigged the Nov. 3 election in favor of Democrat Joe Biden.
Powell's suit made a variety of allegations, including that:
- At least 96,600 absentee ballots were requested and counted but were never recorded as being returned to county election boards by the voter. "Thus, at a minimum, 96,600 votes must be disregarded," the suit said.
- Kemp and Raffensperger "rushed through the purchase of Dominion voting machines and software in 2019 for the 2020 Presidential Election" without due diligence and disregarded safety concerns.
- "There is incontrovertible physical evidence that the standards of physical security of the voting machines and the software were breached, and machines were connected to the internet in violation of professional standards and state and federal laws."
- Fulton County election workers used a claim of a water leak to evacuate poll watchers and workers for several hours on Election night, even as "several election workers remained unsupervised and unchallenged working at the computers for the voting tabulation machines until after 1:00 AM.
- State officials in a settlement with Democratic parties made changes to election procedures that violated both state law and the U.S. Constitution.
The suit asked for more than a dozen remedies including an injunction blocking the state's certified results showing Biden as winning by 12,000 votes from being sent to the Electoral College, an audit where signatures are matched, the impounding of election machines, and the securing of video surveillance tapes from vote-counting settings.
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Toronto Canada:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zE7jorXjKYw
How many patrol cars are in front of the BBQ joint?
Staff Major Gen. Trevor Cadieu on the Canadian military’s role in vaccine distribution
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ksfL-_qyDhE
I suppose the Canadian armed forces are up to the job of providing a package delivery service, but what's wrong with FedEx or UPS?
DeleteStill, since we're not fighting any wars right now, I suppose providing a vaccine courier service will provide our military something to do.
Trouble is, we ain't got no vaccine to distribute, nohow. There are no vaccine manufacturing facilities in Canada and Canada will not be the first country in line to receive vaccines if and when any of the vaccines under development are approved for use. So for now, the the men in uniform can stand down.
One, at least, of the RNA vaccines developed for protection against Covid19 is expected to prevent illness caused by the virus without necessarily preventing infection, or therefore, community transmission.
DeleteIf so, Covid vaccines may not generate herd immunity to infection or check the spread of the virus. In that case, allowing the virus to spread while so far as possible protecting from infection those belonging to categories most susceptible to severe illness or death (i.e., the Great Barrington proposal) may be the only way forward.
But the view of the actual epidemiologists will be ignored until the most expensive and destructive alternatives proposed by politicians and vaccine vendors have been tried and proved futile.