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The 59 Republicans Who Joined Electoral Voter Fraud Scheme For Trump Could Face Prison
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Jan 28, 2022 18:41:45   #
RascalRiley Loc: Somewhere south of Detroit
 
Bojangle wrote:
It's all about impeaching Trump and keeping him from ever running for office again. Even if you did win in 2020 Trump lives in your heads and you just can't let it go. I personally think it is due to fear. If Trump gets re-elected he is going to send the left back to the dark ages. Drain The Swamp.


Well you are right about the dark age that will result from another Trump presidency.

As for the draining the swamp I do know if you noticed or not but Trump had a very swampy administration.

"Recent administrations with the MOST criminal indictments:

Trump (Republican) — 215

Nixon (Republican) — 76

Reagan (Republican) — 26

"Recent administrations with the LEAST criminal indictments:

Obama (Democrat) — 0

Carter (Democrat) — 1

Clinton (Democrat) — 2

Now not all of these indictments were a result of crimes committed while Trump was was President. But he did tend to hire people who have the the same distain for ethics as he has.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 19:41:52   #
Justice101
 
RascalRiley wrote:
Why would democrats go to so much expense organizing a riot to overturn a presidential election that they had already won?


To create chaos so that the Republican congressmen's objections to the states' slates of electors would be withdrawn out of fear of reprisal by the members of the Democrat Party. That they (the Republicans) would be blamed for the riot.

Originally, about 14 Senate Republicans and roughly 140 House Republicans had planned to vote in favor of the objections, meaning some lawmakers did change their votes after the attack on the Capitol on Wednesday.

In a vote Wednesday evening, six Republicans in the Senate and 121 in the House backed objections to certifying Arizona’s electoral outcome, while seven Senate Republicans and 138 House Republicans supported an objection to certifying Pennsylvania’s electoral outcome.

Heading into Wednesday's joint session of Congress to tally the Electoral College vote results, lawmakers anticipated a long day peppered with objections. More than a dozen Republican senators had said they would object to at least one state's election results.

They began with a debate over a challenge to Arizona's results. But after pro-Trump extremists brought violence and chaos to the Capitol, both chambers were forced into an emergency recess while the building was locked down.

When lawmakers reconvened hours later, a number of Senate Republicans abandoned their plan to cast objections.

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Jan 28, 2022 19:48:36   #
American Vet
 
RascalRiley wrote:
Well you are right about the dark age that will result from another Trump presidency.

As for the draining the swamp I do know if you noticed or not but Trump had a very swampy administration.

"Recent administrations with the MOST criminal indictments:

Trump (Republican) — 215

Nixon (Republican) — 76

Reagan (Republican) — 26

"Recent administrations with the LEAST criminal indictments:

Obama (Democrat) — 0

Carter (Democrat) — 1

Clinton (Democrat) — 2

Now not all of these indictments were a result of crimes committed while Trump was was President. But he did tend to hire people who have the the same distain for ethics as he has.
Well you are right about the dark age that will re... (show quote)


And a cheeseburger can be 'indicted'.

Reply
 
 
Jan 28, 2022 19:54:18   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
Old Thinker wrote:
You can em' and tell em' but they don't want to hear it...


They are zombies!

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:02:24   #
RascalRiley Loc: Somewhere south of Detroit
 
Justice101 wrote:
To create chaos so that the Republican congressmen's objections to the states' slates of electors would be withdrawn out of fear of reprisal by the members of the Democrat Party. That they (the Republicans) would be blamed for the riot.

Originally, about 14 Senate Republicans and roughly 140 House Republicans had planned to vote in favor of the objections, meaning some lawmakers did change their votes after the attack on the Capitol on Wednesday.

In a vote Wednesday evening, six Republicans in the Senate and 121 in the House backed objections to certifying Arizona’s electoral outcome, while seven Senate Republicans and 138 House Republicans supported an objection to certifying Pennsylvania’s electoral outcome.

Heading into Wednesday's joint session of Congress to tally the Electoral College vote results, lawmakers anticipated a long day peppered with objections. More than a dozen Republican senators had said they would object to at least one state's election results.

They began with a debate over a challenge to Arizona's results. But after pro-Trump extremists brought violence and chaos to the Capitol, both chambers were forced into an emergency recess while the building was locked down.

When lawmakers reconvened hours later, a number of Senate Republicans abandoned their plan to cast objections.
To create chaos so that the Republican congressmen... (show quote)


Mission accomplished then. And look at all the help they got from Trump and his cult. He is such a nice guy. 😂

Republican spin never fails to amaze me.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:07:49   #
federally indicted mattoid
 
lindajoy wrote:
No I don’t and I don’t think, just by what I read “ they were setting up false electors either..

Given what was going on and all the allegations within the different swing states along with bidens admission that they had the election rigged or whatever his actual words were in that “ slip up” I think they were looking at and preparing for whatever legal challenge they could raise…


Lol, legal challenges failed.

They created slates of false electors. Stephen Miller telegraphed it right after chump lost.

Names have been taken.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:08:49   #
federally indicted mattoid
 
Cuda2020 wrote:
True enough and why it's a useless conversation that will go nowhere.


Yes, conceded.

They true chumpies will never believe the liar lied to them.

Reply
 
 
Jan 28, 2022 20:11:45   #
federally indicted mattoid
 
the waker wrote:
Did they finally come up with the "Chain of Custody" in the 5 States in question, that set this whole mess off to begin with?
No?
Then good luck with that.
Can't prove someone wrong, if you can't even prove your right to begin with.


Sici, are you back?

We missed you. Thought you were probably among the pack of nitwits in jail for 1/6.

WWGOWGA, ammiright!

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:13:43   #
federally indicted mattoid
 
Justice101 wrote:
There are common international standards about what makes an election “free and fair.” These criteria, summarized by the Inter-Parliamentary Union, include: the “absolute” right to a secret ballot; the right to “express political opinions without interference; [t]o seek, receive and impart information and to make an informed choice”; the right of candidates to “equal opportunity of access to the media”; the “right of candidates to security”; freedom of association, and others.

Many of these were violated in 2020.

“Fraud” was not as important as what Democrats were able to accomplish legally, for example, by pushing the country to adopt vote-by-mail on a massive scale.

The scientific basis for doing so was always dubious. South Korea and Israel both had national elections at the height of the pandemic in March and April, and both used in-person voting, almost exclusively. Neither could be accused of a lax approach to COVID-19.

Never before had the country adopted an entirely new system of voting in the middle of an election, at the urging of one party, and over the objections of the other.

Democrats also sued to lower the safeguards against fraud in absentee ballots. The attorney leading many of those lawsuits, Marc Elias of Perkins Coie, was also the key figure in hiring Fusion GPS to produce the fraudulent “Russia dossier” in an attempt to smear Donald Trump in the 2016 election.

Democrats preferred vote-by-mail because it allowed them to turn out low-propensity voters. Republicans preferred voting in person — the standard practice worldwide — partly because of an attachment to tradition, but also because many Republican voters did not trust that mail-in ballots would remain secret or would be delivered at all by postal workers whose union had backed Democrat Joe Biden.

Republicans turned out voters; Democrats turned out envelopes.

Beyond that unfair advantage to Democrats, there were flagrant abuses of the principles that make an election free and fair.

Political violence was widespread, carried out almost entirely by left-wing groups alongside Black Lives Matter protests. Though most protests were peaceful, hundreds were not.

Forty-eight of the 50 largest U.S. cities experienced riots, as did many smaller towns. Democrats minimized the violence and blamed police, or the president, for the unrest.

With the riots came a national panic that came to be known as “cancel culture.” Conservatives feared speaking out lest they lose their jobs, their social media accounts, or their lives. A poll in July revealed that 77% of Republicans were afraid to share their political views.

The extreme bias of the mainstream media also suppressed conservative and pro-Trump views. Media fact-checkers cast Trump as a liar while ignoring Biden’s lies about Charlottesville and much else.

The 2020 election also featured unprecedented censorship. Google manipulated its search algorithm to bury conservative news. Facebook and Twitter suppressed debate about the coronavirus.

In October, when the New York Post published credible allegations about Hunter Biden’s laptop and emails, which exposed Joe Biden’s past dissembling, Twitter and Facebook both censored the story. Mainstream media applauded the censorship, and demanded more.

Other factors also made the 2020 election unfree and unfair. The Commission on Presidential Debates was stacked against Trump, with one moderator caught conspiring with a prominent Trump critic. An election-year impeachment, based on claims by a “whistleblower” whose very name was censored voluntarily by the press, cast the president as illegitimate. Former military leaders, like Admiral William McRaven (Ret.), called for his removal, “the sooner, the better.”

Most of these abuses were legal. That is why the results of the election cannot simply be set aside. When laws were broken — as in the nationwide riots — voters arguably delivered their own verdict, punishing Democratic candidates for the violence and for the party’s waffling on “defund the police.”

But we cannot pretend that what happened in 2020 was acceptable. It leaves many Republicans convinced that the system is “rigged” — even against a “red wave.”

We need to make urgent changes.

If vote-by-mail cannot be reversed, it must be made more secure, or replaced with a secure, 100% American, and politically independent remote voting system.

Political parties must condemn violence unequivocally. Big Tech must lose its immunity under Section 230, which it has abused. The Commission on Presidential Debates should be replaced.

Above all, “free and fair” must be the standard to which American elections are held.

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2020/12/08/why_the_2020_election_was_neither_free_nor_fair_144798.html#!
There are common international standards about wha... (show quote)


Get your law degree son.

Take it to court.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:17:06   #
the waker Loc: 11th freest nation
 
Not the "thang".
I do remeber him though.
Been around long before him, just respond to the idiocracy i find on here from time to time.
Perhaps he is locked up for tresspassing.
He always was a fiery individual.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:18:27   #
federally indicted mattoid
 
the waker wrote:
Not the "thang".
I do remeber him though.
Been around long before him, just respond to the idiocracy i find on here from time to time.
Perhaps he is locked up for tresspassing.
He always was a fiery individual.


Ok, my bad.

You do have some passing similarities however.

Reply
 
 
Jan 28, 2022 20:18:31   #
microphor Loc: Home is TN
 
RascalRiley wrote:
Mission accomplished then. And look at all the help they got from Trump and his cult. He is such a nice guy. 😂

Republican spin never fails to amaze me.


Talk about a nice guy: https://www.onepoliticalplaza.com/t-234698-1.html

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:28:30   #
RascalRiley Loc: Somewhere south of Detroit
 
soontobeindicted mattoid wrote:
Lol, legal challenges failed.

They created slates of false electors. Stephen Miller telegraphed it right after chump lost.

Names have been taken.


The Arizona AG is said to have been dragging his heels. It might have been against the law to use a State Seal on the bogus slates but is it against Republican principles or lack there of.

Is this an indication that rule of law is no longer the norm.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:30:43   #
Justice101
 
RascalRiley wrote:
Mission accomplished then. And look at all the help they got from Trump and his cult. He is such a nice guy. 😂

Republican spin never fails to amaze me.


Sure, the dem's mission is an accompli fatale. They are achieving their goal of destroying the USA for the good of China. No spin here, you're just too blind and ignorant to see the facts.

Reply
Jan 28, 2022 20:32:42   #
Justice101
 
soontobeindicted mattoid wrote:
Get your law degree son.

Take it to court.


ttps://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/pennsylvania-mail-voting-law-found-unconstitutional


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