Election Education
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The good, the bad, the ugly, but more importantly, the truth about our elections.
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I am working on the 4th tutorial sharing How to Audit an Election Through Public Records Requests, which will likely be the last one of this series. Originally I said there would be a 5th one, but I have decided to skip that. There is plenty of information available on CVRs and batch records. No need to cover it again. Plus these little videos are a lot of work for me with my limited skills and resources.

This 4th one covers voting system event logs. I will share as soon as it's ready.

The first three can be found here: https://rumble.com/c/EducatedElectors
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Election violations found during our audit of the public records.
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Hawaii election failures.
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Several federal laws thwart election integrity. They may have had good intentions at the time, or maybe not. Either way, federal law protects the opportunity for fraud to flourish.

Here are a couple examples.
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Wisconsin had an overwhelming amount of election violations in 2020. They can't run from accountability forever!
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Happening this week!
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Part 4 of How to Audit an Election Through Public Records Requests talks about the voting system event logs.

It's only a 15 minute video, you have time. πŸ˜‰

This is the last video of this series. An update isn't out of the question in the future, however.

I hope you have found these helpful. You know where to find me if you have any questions. Thank you all who helped by providing sample records! And thank you all for not giving up in this fight!

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From part 4, How to Audit an Election Using Voting System Event Logs
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Forwarded from Guy Smith
President Donald Trump has just re-Truthed the Gateway Pundit Article about FirstNet which described the Precincts in St. Johns County, FL.
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Forwarded from David Clements
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We have all heard them say, "It's not connected to the internet." But do they really know that? How can we be sure?

Last week Mike Lindell and team presented to the world a tool that the public can use to detect internet connections to the election systems.

Here is what we know so far about this tool.
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Everyone needs to be aware of how to respond to election malfunctions and interference.

If something is preventing you from submitting a ballot, you must hold your ground.

If the elections office is not able to process ballots, you need to find out why.

Make sure you have an emergency plan, and make sure everyone knows what to do in the event of an election emergency.

We are the only ones willing to hold anyone accountable. Address any issues immediately. If they say they will address something later, they won't. Holding them accountable later will not change the course of the election. Immediate action can.

There is a process that needs to be followed. It's that simple.
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If your county or state is resistant to the idea of hand counting, here is an idea.

Hand counting should be part of all election officials training, because it should be part of their emergency plan.

Get them used to the hand counting procedures, so they can see for themselves that it's not impossible or scary.

If you have it in place as a back-up plan, it will be a fairly smooth transition when the plug gets pulled on the machines.

Plus, how can they say they don't need to know how to conduct a hand count with the many cyber attacks and related risks of today's technology?

To summarize:

Introduce hand counting as the back-up plan, then pull the plug on the machines.
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Channel name was changed to Β«Election EducationΒ»
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