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Started By
Message
re: GA!! LOL... Dekalb county audited... And the NUMBERS were completely WRONG!
Posted on 6/23/22 at 5:16 pm to SmackDaniels
Posted on 6/23/22 at 5:16 pm to SmackDaniels
quote:
Anyone reporting this other than GP?
VoterGA themselves.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 6:31 pm to Jjdoc
I don't believe that Kemp, Rafensperger or Mike Collins won. They were awarded by the election mafia using Dominion Vote rigging machines, harvesting and Democrat cross over (which is the only legal part).
Posted on 6/23/22 at 6:32 pm to NineLineBind
quote:
If this is in any way indicative of other elections and other years, we need a complete rebuild of election procedures from the ground up. How can anyone have confidence in the current status?
Imagine the damage done to our nation by these unethical fools being places in offices of authority and ability to spend to oblivion.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 6:34 pm to Jjdoc
FBI going to be dispatched to intimidate and charge whoever found this out.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 6:58 pm to BugAC
It's gateway pundit, I don't care if The Canterbury Tales are there. It's still a tin foil idiot site.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:02 pm to TGFN57
quote:
It's gateway pundit, I don't care if The Canterbury Tales are there. It's still a tin foil idiot site.
Opinion...
NOT a fact.
That completes the lesson.
You’re welcome.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:06 pm to Jjdoc
Kemp, and the ratifensburher are both huge holders of D-voting systems stock?
How is this not a conflict of interest?
How is this not a conflict of interest?
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:07 pm to BugAC
quote:
Here you go, short bus.
quote:from REVOLVER.COM
BugAC
REVOLVER PROOF of FRAUD
We report a simple yet powerful statistical model of county-level voter behavior in the November 2020 presidential election using two main types of data:
County-specific voting data from the five previous presidential elections.
Selected demographic variables (race and education) plotting how different national voter groups voted differently in 2020 overall.
These two types of predictors allow us to explain over 95% of the variation in county-level votes, and therefore allow us identify which counties (and consequently, states) look substantially anomalous in the 2020 election.
The model provides substantial support for the allegation that the outcome of the election was affected by fraud in multiple states. Specifically, the model’s predictions match the reported results in all other states, i.e. states where no fraud has been alleged, but predicts Trump won majorities in five disputed states (AZ, GA, NV, PA and WI) and 49.68% of the vote in the sixth (MI).
In other words, the reported Biden margin of victory in at least five of the six contested states cannot be explained by any patterns in voter preference consistent with national demographic trends.
This post was edited on 6/23/22 at 8:12 pm
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:18 pm to JJJimmyJimJames
Significant historical treands all point to a strong Trump victory in 2020
One of the most reliable predictors of presidential elections is the performance of the S&P 500 in the three months before Election Day. In every election since 1984 (all but three elections since 1928), when the S&P 500 rose from early August through early November, the incumbent party has won the White House.
On August 1, the S&P 500 closed the day at 3,294. On Monday, it closed at 3,492.
Even more encouraging for President Trump is the fact that since presidential primary elections were introduced in 1912, no incumbent has lost a re-election bid when he faced no serious primary opposition.
Only three incumbents in the primary era lost re-election, and all three faced a formidable primary opponent—Gerald Ford, who had to fend off Ronald Reagan before eventually losing to Jimmy Carter in 1976; Carter, who was primaried by Ted Kennedy four years later; and George H.W. Bush, whose primary challenge by Patrick Buchanan set the stage for the third-party candidacy of Ross Perot, which ultimately cost Bush the 1992 race.
Stony Brook University political scientist Helmut Norpoth has quantified this effect in what he has dubbed “The Primary Model.”
“It is a statistical model that relies on presidential primaries and, in addition, on an election cycle as predictors of the vote in the general election,” he explains on his website. “Winning the early primaries is a major key for electoral victory in November.”
The Primary Model has correctly predicted 25 of the 27 presidential elections since 1912 (the only exceptions being the incredibly close 1960 and 2000 races) and gives President Trump a 91 percent chance of winning re-election.
The underlying logic of this model is sound, as a party united around an incumbent president has a tremendous advantage over a challenger who often must struggle to win over his primary opponents’ supporters in the general election.
It also translates into a massive “enthusiasm gap.” The most recent Pew Research poll on voter enthusiasm found that a full 66 percent of Trump’s supporters said they “strongly support” him, while just 46 percent Biden’s supporters said the same. Since strong support is a strong indicator of likelihood to actually vote for a given candidate on Election Day, the candidate who has had the strongest enthusiasm among core supporters has won every presidential election since 1988.
Trump’s support among Republicans seems to be uniquely strong, as he won 94 percent of the primary vote. His 18.1 million total votes nearly doubled the previous record for total primary votes for an incumbent president (Jimmy Carter’s 10.0 million in 1980).
Biden, on the other hand, won just 51.8 percent of the Democratic primary vote even though his party effectively cleared the field for him ahead of Super Tuesday.
If history is a guide, Biden will have more difficulty getting Democrats to actually vote for him on Election Day. In fact, Biden’s own recent polling history suggests that there is at least some percentage of people who say they will vote for him but don’t.
Ahead of the Iowa Caucuses, Biden’s support in the RealClearPolitics average of polls was 19.3 percent. His actual share of the vote was 14.9 percent. In New Hampshire, his pre-primary polling average was 11.0 percent and he ended up with just 8.4 percent.
Only when Democrats became desperate to stop socialist Senator Bernie Sanders from running away with the nomination and started to coalesce around Biden did Biden finally start to over-perform his polling average. In other words, Democratic voters weren’t especially excited to vote for Biden; they simply needed to vote against Sanders.
The same phenomenon exists today. Democrats are voting against Trump; they aren’t necessarily voting for Biden. Trump’s supporters, meanwhile, are voting for him and not necessarily against Biden. There is a big difference.
Democratic presidential voters haven’t been sold on Biden for most of his political career. In 1988, a plagiarism scandal forced him from the primary. In 2008, he had so little support that he dropped out a month before the first votes were cast.
This does not bode well for his chances in 2020, and neither does the 14-Year Rule (or “Quatorze Quotient”), which was popularized by journalist Jonathan Rauch and posits that “no one gets elected president who needs longer than 14 years to get from his or her first gubernatorial or Senate victory to either the presidency or the vice presidency.”
Biden was first elected to the Senate in 1972. He didn’t make it to the vice presidency until 36 years later. Today, 48 years removed from his first Senate victory, a Biden win next month would be an unprecedented break from Rauch’s 14-Year Rule.
A more recent trend also points to a Trump victory: Since its inception, Google Trends has predicted every single presidential election from 2004 on. The candidate with the most Google searches during the election year has won each race. This year, Trump has the largest lead in Google searches on record, roughly tripling Biden’s total.
This suggests that the voting public wants to learn more about the president, while Biden is something of an afterthought, a proposition supported by the significant enthusiasm gap between the two.
Voters also seem to be more enthusiastic about their personal situations than conventional wisdom might suggest. A full 56 percent told Gallup this month that they are better off today than they were four years ago.
Ever since Reagan asked that famous question during a 1980 debate and an overwhelming majority of voters decided that they weren’t and voted for him over the incumbent Carter, pollsters have asked voters if they are indeed better off than they were when the current president was first elected.
In 1984, just 44 percent said they were. Reagan won in a landslide. In 2004, just 47 percent said they were. George W. Bush still won re-election. In 2012, 45 percent believed they were better off than when Obama was first elected. He still won re-election by nearly as large a margin as he did in 2008.
------------------------------------
and to the scoundrel a-hole who stated there was no fraud, you are nothing but a cheat lowlife who supports the theft of the civil rights of 10s of millions of Americans. Joe Biden lost, scumbag.. and you are a piece of shite
One of the most reliable predictors of presidential elections is the performance of the S&P 500 in the three months before Election Day. In every election since 1984 (all but three elections since 1928), when the S&P 500 rose from early August through early November, the incumbent party has won the White House.
On August 1, the S&P 500 closed the day at 3,294. On Monday, it closed at 3,492.
Even more encouraging for President Trump is the fact that since presidential primary elections were introduced in 1912, no incumbent has lost a re-election bid when he faced no serious primary opposition.
Only three incumbents in the primary era lost re-election, and all three faced a formidable primary opponent—Gerald Ford, who had to fend off Ronald Reagan before eventually losing to Jimmy Carter in 1976; Carter, who was primaried by Ted Kennedy four years later; and George H.W. Bush, whose primary challenge by Patrick Buchanan set the stage for the third-party candidacy of Ross Perot, which ultimately cost Bush the 1992 race.
Stony Brook University political scientist Helmut Norpoth has quantified this effect in what he has dubbed “The Primary Model.”
“It is a statistical model that relies on presidential primaries and, in addition, on an election cycle as predictors of the vote in the general election,” he explains on his website. “Winning the early primaries is a major key for electoral victory in November.”
The Primary Model has correctly predicted 25 of the 27 presidential elections since 1912 (the only exceptions being the incredibly close 1960 and 2000 races) and gives President Trump a 91 percent chance of winning re-election.
The underlying logic of this model is sound, as a party united around an incumbent president has a tremendous advantage over a challenger who often must struggle to win over his primary opponents’ supporters in the general election.
It also translates into a massive “enthusiasm gap.” The most recent Pew Research poll on voter enthusiasm found that a full 66 percent of Trump’s supporters said they “strongly support” him, while just 46 percent Biden’s supporters said the same. Since strong support is a strong indicator of likelihood to actually vote for a given candidate on Election Day, the candidate who has had the strongest enthusiasm among core supporters has won every presidential election since 1988.
Trump’s support among Republicans seems to be uniquely strong, as he won 94 percent of the primary vote. His 18.1 million total votes nearly doubled the previous record for total primary votes for an incumbent president (Jimmy Carter’s 10.0 million in 1980).
Biden, on the other hand, won just 51.8 percent of the Democratic primary vote even though his party effectively cleared the field for him ahead of Super Tuesday.
If history is a guide, Biden will have more difficulty getting Democrats to actually vote for him on Election Day. In fact, Biden’s own recent polling history suggests that there is at least some percentage of people who say they will vote for him but don’t.
Ahead of the Iowa Caucuses, Biden’s support in the RealClearPolitics average of polls was 19.3 percent. His actual share of the vote was 14.9 percent. In New Hampshire, his pre-primary polling average was 11.0 percent and he ended up with just 8.4 percent.
Only when Democrats became desperate to stop socialist Senator Bernie Sanders from running away with the nomination and started to coalesce around Biden did Biden finally start to over-perform his polling average. In other words, Democratic voters weren’t especially excited to vote for Biden; they simply needed to vote against Sanders.
The same phenomenon exists today. Democrats are voting against Trump; they aren’t necessarily voting for Biden. Trump’s supporters, meanwhile, are voting for him and not necessarily against Biden. There is a big difference.
Democratic presidential voters haven’t been sold on Biden for most of his political career. In 1988, a plagiarism scandal forced him from the primary. In 2008, he had so little support that he dropped out a month before the first votes were cast.
This does not bode well for his chances in 2020, and neither does the 14-Year Rule (or “Quatorze Quotient”), which was popularized by journalist Jonathan Rauch and posits that “no one gets elected president who needs longer than 14 years to get from his or her first gubernatorial or Senate victory to either the presidency or the vice presidency.”
Biden was first elected to the Senate in 1972. He didn’t make it to the vice presidency until 36 years later. Today, 48 years removed from his first Senate victory, a Biden win next month would be an unprecedented break from Rauch’s 14-Year Rule.
A more recent trend also points to a Trump victory: Since its inception, Google Trends has predicted every single presidential election from 2004 on. The candidate with the most Google searches during the election year has won each race. This year, Trump has the largest lead in Google searches on record, roughly tripling Biden’s total.
This suggests that the voting public wants to learn more about the president, while Biden is something of an afterthought, a proposition supported by the significant enthusiasm gap between the two.
Voters also seem to be more enthusiastic about their personal situations than conventional wisdom might suggest. A full 56 percent told Gallup this month that they are better off today than they were four years ago.
Ever since Reagan asked that famous question during a 1980 debate and an overwhelming majority of voters decided that they weren’t and voted for him over the incumbent Carter, pollsters have asked voters if they are indeed better off than they were when the current president was first elected.
In 1984, just 44 percent said they were. Reagan won in a landslide. In 2004, just 47 percent said they were. George W. Bush still won re-election. In 2012, 45 percent believed they were better off than when Obama was first elected. He still won re-election by nearly as large a margin as he did in 2008.
------------------------------------
and to the scoundrel a-hole who stated there was no fraud, you are nothing but a cheat lowlife who supports the theft of the civil rights of 10s of millions of Americans. Joe Biden lost, scumbag.. and you are a piece of shite
This post was edited on 6/23/22 at 8:32 pm
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:37 pm to JJJimmyJimJames
18 out of 19 bellweathers - 95% certainty
So, you’re a smart group if you’re reading WeLoveTrump.
I’m sure you’ve already figured this out, but if not let me spell it out for you.
Trump won this election on a GRAND scale.
19/20 grand.
95% grand.
The Biden campaign had to cheat big to overcome Trump’s lead and they couldn’t do it all across the country.
They had to focus their efforts in 7 key states.
Which ones?
Oh, the ones you’ve been hearing about for 3 weeks now….GA, PA, MI, WI, MN, NM, AZ.
And specifically only in big metropolitan areas in those states.
They couldn’t cheat in every single country all across the country.
And that’s why you’re seeing all of these “statistical impossibilities”.
Because they couldn’t “fix” the data everywhere, only in the key places where they knew they had to cheat to win.
So you end up with a whole lot of things that don’t make any sense.
And that, my friends, is called FRAUD.
Pure and simple.
So, you’re a smart group if you’re reading WeLoveTrump.
I’m sure you’ve already figured this out, but if not let me spell it out for you.
Trump won this election on a GRAND scale.
19/20 grand.
95% grand.
The Biden campaign had to cheat big to overcome Trump’s lead and they couldn’t do it all across the country.
They had to focus their efforts in 7 key states.
Which ones?
Oh, the ones you’ve been hearing about for 3 weeks now….GA, PA, MI, WI, MN, NM, AZ.
And specifically only in big metropolitan areas in those states.
They couldn’t cheat in every single country all across the country.
And that’s why you’re seeing all of these “statistical impossibilities”.
Because they couldn’t “fix” the data everywhere, only in the key places where they knew they had to cheat to win.
So you end up with a whole lot of things that don’t make any sense.
And that, my friends, is called FRAUD.
Pure and simple.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:48 pm to JJJimmyJimJames
Muh bellwethersralliesyardsigns!!!!!!
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:53 pm to RuLSU
quote:
Trump lost because people didn't vote for him.
Biggest dumb arse post of the day
Posted on 6/23/22 at 8:58 pm to Jjdoc
Is the Salesforce deal implemented yet, and if so, can it have it's part in all of this so far this year?
Posted on 6/23/22 at 9:23 pm to TGFN57
quote:bellweathers and 50 legit articles and proof of fraud...
Muh bellwethersralliesyardsigns!!!!!!
Treat it lightly asswipe.. YOU are the FCKG scoundrel who doesnt care that the civil rights of tens of millions of American were severely violated.
Heading for the barrel of a gun Mr laugh it off
Posted on 6/23/22 at 9:38 pm to JJJimmyJimJames
The only thing I'm laughing at is completely gullible, mom's basement living clowns like you.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 9:46 pm to TGFN57
quote:I dont think you could possibly be more wrong about who You are addressing.
The only thing I'm laughing at is completely gullible, mom's basement living clowns like you.
not a surprise for low IQ carneytrash like you..
Posted on 6/23/22 at 9:48 pm to TGFN57
quote:
The only thing I'm laughing at is completely gullible, mom's basement living clowns like you.
Posted on 6/23/22 at 10:08 pm to Jjdoc
Funny how when the Dominion machines are off, it's in the Dem's favor. 
Posted on 6/24/22 at 1:19 am to Jjdoc
quote:
The Dekalb District 2 Commission race was the only candidate race to be audited and it found the electronic vote totals were completely wrong.
What do you think the chances are that someone hacked dominion and screwed up their software so it did the fraud but not the electronic cover up to make the fraud so obvious no one can deny the ability of the equipment to be hacked and controlled remotely to throw an election?
Posted on 6/24/22 at 4:44 am to Jjdoc
Then why did the dumb f Republican on TV say they only had 4 dead votes?
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