The big lie is denying that elections have been rigged. A Limerick.

The rigging elections denying

like all other cases of lying

demands audit the code

in an open source mode.

Don’t trust secret code, I’m just saying.

Every corporation or person is subject to audits in one form or another. Public corporations are required to have at least annual audits for tax purposes, and they are sometimes subjected to surprise audits to make sure the books are not cooked. The most important thing is that the auditors are certified independent of any of the interested parties. One of the tools the auditors have is to see if any data has been manipulated is to use Benford’s law when analyzing data, see here. It is the best tool to discover if the boos are cooked one way or another

When it comes to elections that is not so. The election software, like Dominion voting systems, a Chinese company with headquarters in Canada using software developed in Venezuela and other places is certified in 26 states, but as far as I know, nobody has independently verified the actual code, since it is “Proprietary”. However, Antrim county, Michigan was allowed to examine the security aspect of the software and the results were. to say the least, horrifying, see here.

Another case occurred in DeKalb County Georgia and Dominion voting machines proves voting fraud with no limits, see here. This case is particularly interesting, since it was discovered by accident. The person coming in third discovered that there was no votes for her in her own precinct, she complained, and, wouldn’t you know, when they rechecked the result she came in first.

Right now the Federal government is playing hardball. Catherine Englebrecht of True the Vote and Gregg Phillips were Put in Jail without parole for six days for Refusing to rat out Sources Who Revealed Konnech U.S. Election Data Transfer to China.

I could go on, but my point is: Eliminate all voting machines and handcount all the votes that has the legal chain of custody preserved in all states. Then we can say that all legal votes are counted once.

DeKalb County Georgia and Dominion voting machines proves voting fraud with no limits.

population 764,000

June 3, ATLANTA — The nation’s leading cybersecurity agency released a final version Friday of an advisory it previously sent state officials on voting machine vulnerabilities in Georgia and other states that voting integrity activists say weakens a security recommendation on using barcodes to tally votes.

The advisory put out by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, or CISA, has to do with vulnerabilities identified in Dominion Voting Systems’ ImageCast X touchscreen voting machines, which produce a paper ballot or record votes electronically. The agency said that although the vulnerabilities should be quickly mitigated, the agency “has no evidence that these vulnerabilities have been exploited in any elections.”

Well, on May 24. DeKalb County held a County commissioner election and the results were as following:

Marshall Orson came in first, Lauren Alexander came in second and Michelle Long Spears came in third. Since no candidate had a majority of the votes, there would be a runoff between the first and second. Michelle Long Spears thought she was more popular than that, so she decided to look how many votes she received in her own precinct. The result were startling. Zero votes. Not only had her husband not voted for her, she hat not even voted for herself! So she demanded and was granted a manual recount. The result of the recount was even more startling.

This time the order was reversed, Michelle Long Spears came in first, Lauren Alexander came in second, and Marshall Owens, the original winner was eliminated from the runoff. And the hand vote count showed 2,810 more votes!

In Dominion speak this is called a minor computer glitch. See the results from Antrim County, Michigan, here.

This calls for a manual recount wherever voting machines were used in the 2020 election, and all primary elections!

The CISA Halderman report is due next week. Stay tuned.