"Bullies"
When I was in the 5th grade a bully and his two followers waited for me after school to rough me up. I was the smart, small, nerdy kid.
I mounted my purple stingray and tried to escape, but they grabbed the handlebars and stopped me.
I kept trying to escape, but things kept escalating. So I set the bike down and beat the crap out of the main bully.
With his two buddies watching in stunned amazement, I made sure to break his nose and gave him two black eyes. He did not return to school for over a week.
No one ever bullied me again, but I always felt bad about it.
While I was in high school, a bully drove out to our farm to beat me up. As he raced up the gravel driveway, my step-dad said, "If it comes to blows, make sure that you hit him first, that you break his nose, and that he sees stars."
I walked out into the driveway to meet my would-be assailant, remembering my earlier experience and my new advice.
As the big guy flew out of his truck, I quickly reached out my right hand for his.
My outstretched hand caught him off guard... and he took it.
I didn't let go, and I looked him dead in the eyes. He was way bigger than me.
But I didn't let go. I was a wirey but strong farmboy, and I wasn't letting go.
There were inches between our noses, eye to eye, he was blabbering on, and I had his right hand in my vice grip.
I wasn't letting go.
Finally, he'd said his piece, I let go of his hand, he got back in his truck, and he left.
There is more than one way to deal with a bully.
The first step is... don't back down.
The second step is to stare directly into their eyes.
What happens next is up to them.
If they insist, I'll open a can of whoop-ass on them.
But I'd prefer to stare them down and give them the time that they need to blow off steam.
All the while, shaking their hand.
After all, bullies usually have unresolved issues, and giving them the chance to avoid stupid mistakes is a charity. Opportunities they may later thank you for.
When I was in the 5th grade a bully and his two followers waited for me after school to rough me up. I was the smart, small, nerdy kid.
I mounted my purple stingray and tried to escape, but they grabbed the handlebars and stopped me.
I kept trying to escape, but things kept escalating. So I set the bike down and beat the crap out of the main bully.
With his two buddies watching in stunned amazement, I made sure to break his nose and gave him two black eyes. He did not return to school for over a week.
No one ever bullied me again, but I always felt bad about it.
While I was in high school, a bully drove out to our farm to beat me up. As he raced up the gravel driveway, my step-dad said, "If it comes to blows, make sure that you hit him first, that you break his nose, and that he sees stars."
I walked out into the driveway to meet my would-be assailant, remembering my earlier experience and my new advice.
As the big guy flew out of his truck, I quickly reached out my right hand for his.
My outstretched hand caught him off guard... and he took it.
I didn't let go, and I looked him dead in the eyes. He was way bigger than me.
But I didn't let go. I was a wirey but strong farmboy, and I wasn't letting go.
There were inches between our noses, eye to eye, he was blabbering on, and I had his right hand in my vice grip.
I wasn't letting go.
Finally, he'd said his piece, I let go of his hand, he got back in his truck, and he left.
There is more than one way to deal with a bully.
The first step is... don't back down.
The second step is to stare directly into their eyes.
What happens next is up to them.
If they insist, I'll open a can of whoop-ass on them.
But I'd prefer to stare them down and give them the time that they need to blow off steam.
All the while, shaking their hand.
After all, bullies usually have unresolved issues, and giving them the chance to avoid stupid mistakes is a charity. Opportunities they may later thank you for.
👍94❤55🔥13
"Disabilities"
At the K-12 private school where I've taught part time for 25 years (my 'recess') the median IQ is 145. These kids are a national treasure.
Over the years, about 1/2 of the students were "plain vanilla," no issues, just delightful brilliance.
About 1/4 of the students were burnouts from public school. Amazing minds who nevertheless struggled with boredom and being two standard deviations or more different than their peers.
Redeeming these minds was rewarding, watching the requickening of minds that had been numbed in their former circumstances.
The remaining 1/4 typically had a disability, such as severe ADD, autism, or aspergers. We only succeeded with about half of these lovely children, because sometimes their disability made them just too incompatible with their peers.
Every success in this last 1/4 was particularly rewarding. It often took lots of love and patience, but I would revel in their successes on graduation day.
Sometimes really bright people with disabilities just require patience.
At the K-12 private school where I've taught part time for 25 years (my 'recess') the median IQ is 145. These kids are a national treasure.
Over the years, about 1/2 of the students were "plain vanilla," no issues, just delightful brilliance.
About 1/4 of the students were burnouts from public school. Amazing minds who nevertheless struggled with boredom and being two standard deviations or more different than their peers.
Redeeming these minds was rewarding, watching the requickening of minds that had been numbed in their former circumstances.
The remaining 1/4 typically had a disability, such as severe ADD, autism, or aspergers. We only succeeded with about half of these lovely children, because sometimes their disability made them just too incompatible with their peers.
Every success in this last 1/4 was particularly rewarding. It often took lots of love and patience, but I would revel in their successes on graduation day.
Sometimes really bright people with disabilities just require patience.
❤99👍21
“Shiva / Oltmann / Clements”
The timing worked out that I was on the road, so I listened to the entire discussion last night. I didn’t take notes, since most of the time I was driving. My initial impressions:
A) Lots of good information, some of it more informed, some less. Much of it I can confirm from personal knowledge, some from people I trust, and some I cannot confirm. There are some things to follow up on before I would make a judgment on them.
B) “Peer Review” is an important process. But it is a discussion, not a proclamation. If done properly, the crucible of peer review produces a better product. So far we have only heard one side on several important questions.
C) I appreciate that Shiva wants to proceed in small bites—his scientific discipline is showing. Because if he just lists his critiques of everybody and everything, he opens too many cans of worms at a time to make constructive progress. It would also make him look arrogant and sounding like “it has to be my way or it isn’t correct.” Shiva is not the sole arbiter of truth, and real science is a slow, iterative, and methodical process.
D) There is a difference between material that one prepares for public general understanding, for legal documents, or material that one prepares for a scientific document. I know the difference; I have sixty peer-reviewed scientific publications, I have prepared several legal briefs, and I speak to the public on a regular basis. Last night’s session was not for the faint of heart.
E) Shiva eviscerated JP’s work last night. JP now needs an opportunity to respond so that the discussion can proceed productively. JP can then retract or revise his work accordingly. Shiva made several assumptions in his analysis that JP may need to address.
For example, implying that someone has little understanding of provisional ballots, under voting, or over voting are suspect assumptions for someone who has spent so much time analyzing these things. There is more likely miscommunication or mistakes that need clearing up.
F) Shiva made several claims about the Maricopa audit that demand answers. These should be addressed earlier rather than later.
G) Shiva incorrectly described a small portion of my work, dispatching with a straw man version of it. In fairness to him, he was not focused on it and likely does not yet understand it, since his representation suggests that he has a common misunderstanding of it. I look forward to discussing it more rigorously with him, but I think everyone agrees that this is not our current top priority.
H) In classic legal style, the Professor is systematically examining and cross examining the evidence. I appreciate this approach, and look forward to the cross-examination of what has been presented so far. I like the distinction he made between advocacy and representation. In the witness stand, a person should not simultaneously represent and advocate for a position. So if JP is given a chance to address the scathing critique of his work, he might do well to have a “lawyer” type person helping him.
Overall, worth my time listening, and I look forward to future installments if they represent a genuine dialogue, and not merely a set of one-sided pronouncements.
In re-reading my reflection, I noticed that I said nothing about Oltmann. Perhaps that is testament to an excellent interview—keeping the focus on the story, not becoming the story. It is the first time I’ve heard him, and I think he did a fine job.
The timing worked out that I was on the road, so I listened to the entire discussion last night. I didn’t take notes, since most of the time I was driving. My initial impressions:
A) Lots of good information, some of it more informed, some less. Much of it I can confirm from personal knowledge, some from people I trust, and some I cannot confirm. There are some things to follow up on before I would make a judgment on them.
B) “Peer Review” is an important process. But it is a discussion, not a proclamation. If done properly, the crucible of peer review produces a better product. So far we have only heard one side on several important questions.
C) I appreciate that Shiva wants to proceed in small bites—his scientific discipline is showing. Because if he just lists his critiques of everybody and everything, he opens too many cans of worms at a time to make constructive progress. It would also make him look arrogant and sounding like “it has to be my way or it isn’t correct.” Shiva is not the sole arbiter of truth, and real science is a slow, iterative, and methodical process.
D) There is a difference between material that one prepares for public general understanding, for legal documents, or material that one prepares for a scientific document. I know the difference; I have sixty peer-reviewed scientific publications, I have prepared several legal briefs, and I speak to the public on a regular basis. Last night’s session was not for the faint of heart.
E) Shiva eviscerated JP’s work last night. JP now needs an opportunity to respond so that the discussion can proceed productively. JP can then retract or revise his work accordingly. Shiva made several assumptions in his analysis that JP may need to address.
For example, implying that someone has little understanding of provisional ballots, under voting, or over voting are suspect assumptions for someone who has spent so much time analyzing these things. There is more likely miscommunication or mistakes that need clearing up.
F) Shiva made several claims about the Maricopa audit that demand answers. These should be addressed earlier rather than later.
G) Shiva incorrectly described a small portion of my work, dispatching with a straw man version of it. In fairness to him, he was not focused on it and likely does not yet understand it, since his representation suggests that he has a common misunderstanding of it. I look forward to discussing it more rigorously with him, but I think everyone agrees that this is not our current top priority.
H) In classic legal style, the Professor is systematically examining and cross examining the evidence. I appreciate this approach, and look forward to the cross-examination of what has been presented so far. I like the distinction he made between advocacy and representation. In the witness stand, a person should not simultaneously represent and advocate for a position. So if JP is given a chance to address the scathing critique of his work, he might do well to have a “lawyer” type person helping him.
Overall, worth my time listening, and I look forward to future installments if they represent a genuine dialogue, and not merely a set of one-sided pronouncements.
In re-reading my reflection, I noticed that I said nothing about Oltmann. Perhaps that is testament to an excellent interview—keeping the focus on the story, not becoming the story. It is the first time I’ve heard him, and I think he did a fine job.
👍105😢1
“Systems Approach”
One of the comments made in Oltmann’s interview of Shiva last night was really important to understand. Shiva said that we need to take a “systems approach.”
He is dead on, and many of us have been saying this all along. This has been especially apparent in Patrick Colbeck’s work, as laid out so meticulously on his LetsFixStuff website. Patrick has been harping on chain of custody and the myriad system vulnerabilities ever since I’ve met him. https://t.me/PatrickColbeck
In short, our current election systems are impossible to secure because they are rife with complexity and vulnerabilities. The moment you plug one hole, another is exploited.
People like simple explanations, but it ain’t simple. There is too much going on.
This is why my suggested remedy is to “Vote Amish.” All paper, no machines.
Keep it simple, stupid. Easy to manage, easy to audit, easy to secure.
There will always be fraud. But centralizing and automating our elections only enables fraud to be even more widespread.
KISS.
One of the comments made in Oltmann’s interview of Shiva last night was really important to understand. Shiva said that we need to take a “systems approach.”
He is dead on, and many of us have been saying this all along. This has been especially apparent in Patrick Colbeck’s work, as laid out so meticulously on his LetsFixStuff website. Patrick has been harping on chain of custody and the myriad system vulnerabilities ever since I’ve met him. https://t.me/PatrickColbeck
In short, our current election systems are impossible to secure because they are rife with complexity and vulnerabilities. The moment you plug one hole, another is exploited.
People like simple explanations, but it ain’t simple. There is too much going on.
This is why my suggested remedy is to “Vote Amish.” All paper, no machines.
Keep it simple, stupid. Easy to manage, easy to audit, easy to secure.
There will always be fraud. But centralizing and automating our elections only enables fraud to be even more widespread.
KISS.
👍58
“A War Without Generals”
Say that a neighboring country attacks us, and with their first strike they kill all of our leaders. They begin invading, capturing vast amounts of our country, the media, and our institutions.
Citizen militias begin forming everywhere, and the battle to reclaim our country gains momentum. Leaders emerge from the various successful efforts, and they discover and begin interacting with one another. But it’s tough when the enemy controls the media and means of communication.
Based upon their experiences, the field-promoted leaders begin to strategize. But what worked in one region does not apply in all the others. And they have different expertise, and so have been employing different tools.
All the while, the clock is ticking. Fortunately, the individual efforts have been successful enough to stall the enemy, even reclaiming lots of lost ground. But it has been difficult assembling a common strategy which combines all the efforts in order to bring a final death blow to the enemy. At least that is the thought.
But perhaps the best strategy is to continue supporting the individual efforts that are working, and not try to centralize the effort.
After all, we are winning.
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it?
On the other hand, maybe there is a limit to what can be accomplished without a more cohesive effort?
And maybe our strategies need to be more flexible anyway, since “No battle plan survives first contact with the enemy.”
I’m a states guy. I’m a community guy. I’m a We the People guy. I’m sticking with the grassroots.
The more you centralize things, the more corruption and inefficiency you end up with. (And the easier to target.)
Each person needs to enjoin the effort which makes sense to them.
Each and every citizen in every community.
At present, this is a guerrilla war.
Say that a neighboring country attacks us, and with their first strike they kill all of our leaders. They begin invading, capturing vast amounts of our country, the media, and our institutions.
Citizen militias begin forming everywhere, and the battle to reclaim our country gains momentum. Leaders emerge from the various successful efforts, and they discover and begin interacting with one another. But it’s tough when the enemy controls the media and means of communication.
Based upon their experiences, the field-promoted leaders begin to strategize. But what worked in one region does not apply in all the others. And they have different expertise, and so have been employing different tools.
All the while, the clock is ticking. Fortunately, the individual efforts have been successful enough to stall the enemy, even reclaiming lots of lost ground. But it has been difficult assembling a common strategy which combines all the efforts in order to bring a final death blow to the enemy. At least that is the thought.
But perhaps the best strategy is to continue supporting the individual efforts that are working, and not try to centralize the effort.
After all, we are winning.
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it?
On the other hand, maybe there is a limit to what can be accomplished without a more cohesive effort?
And maybe our strategies need to be more flexible anyway, since “No battle plan survives first contact with the enemy.”
I’m a states guy. I’m a community guy. I’m a We the People guy. I’m sticking with the grassroots.
The more you centralize things, the more corruption and inefficiency you end up with. (And the easier to target.)
Each person needs to enjoin the effort which makes sense to them.
Each and every citizen in every community.
At present, this is a guerrilla war.
👍54
"What We Know"
There are lots of different approaches and opinions out there in the Fix 2020 movement. But some things we know...
1) The 2020 general election was rife with fraud, sufficient to affect many outcomes, national and local;
2) Many of our senior election officials know it, but are unwilling to admit it publicly. Several have admitted it to me privately. One said, "If we told our clerks how much fraud was in our elections the whole state would blow up, and everyone would lose faith in our elections."
Ya think?
3) The establishment does not want to fix our (s)elections. There are a variety of reasons. Notice that I did not say "Republicans" or "Democrats."
4) The establishment is hiding the evidence and the data. If your government officials are hiding data from you, throw them out of office. Immediately. Elections belong to the people.
You can't fix broken elections with broken elections.
5) Because the establishment is hiding election information, those of us out here fighting this battle are forced to find indirect ways of exposing the fraud, such as statistics, canvassing, and incomplete audits.
6) Our current election systems have become so complicated, automated, and convoluted that the people running them have no idea how to secure them, and sometimes don't even know how to operate them properly.
7) Despite all these disadvantages, We the People are winning. The public Fix 2020 movement is growing, and 60% of the public now believes that the outcome of the 2020 general election was fraudulent.
Keep a level head.
Keep your pulse at 90.
Remember it is only Tuesday.
And most importantly, all of this is in God's timing, not ours.
Pray every day, be full of the Spirit, and embrace your calling.
There are lots of different approaches and opinions out there in the Fix 2020 movement. But some things we know...
1) The 2020 general election was rife with fraud, sufficient to affect many outcomes, national and local;
2) Many of our senior election officials know it, but are unwilling to admit it publicly. Several have admitted it to me privately. One said, "If we told our clerks how much fraud was in our elections the whole state would blow up, and everyone would lose faith in our elections."
Ya think?
3) The establishment does not want to fix our (s)elections. There are a variety of reasons. Notice that I did not say "Republicans" or "Democrats."
4) The establishment is hiding the evidence and the data. If your government officials are hiding data from you, throw them out of office. Immediately. Elections belong to the people.
You can't fix broken elections with broken elections.
5) Because the establishment is hiding election information, those of us out here fighting this battle are forced to find indirect ways of exposing the fraud, such as statistics, canvassing, and incomplete audits.
6) Our current election systems have become so complicated, automated, and convoluted that the people running them have no idea how to secure them, and sometimes don't even know how to operate them properly.
7) Despite all these disadvantages, We the People are winning. The public Fix 2020 movement is growing, and 60% of the public now believes that the outcome of the 2020 general election was fraudulent.
Keep a level head.
Keep your pulse at 90.
Remember it is only Tuesday.
And most importantly, all of this is in God's timing, not ours.
Pray every day, be full of the Spirit, and embrace your calling.
👍50
"The Machines Are Not Connected to the Internet"
This is the false phrase we often hear.
But what if it were true? There are other ways to monitor the election, because they ARE connected to the internet.
For example, county election officials record the sending and receiving of every ballot. That system is hacked.
The post office scans every piece of mail. Ballot out... ballot returned. And they sell that information.
The Dept of Motor Vehicles has everyone's information and signature. That system is hacked.
The more automation, the more mail-in, the more electronic, the less secure our elections.
Can we please just Vote Amish?
All paper, no machines. One day, in person, photo ID. No records or counting until the polls are closed.
This is the false phrase we often hear.
But what if it were true? There are other ways to monitor the election, because they ARE connected to the internet.
For example, county election officials record the sending and receiving of every ballot. That system is hacked.
The post office scans every piece of mail. Ballot out... ballot returned. And they sell that information.
The Dept of Motor Vehicles has everyone's information and signature. That system is hacked.
The more automation, the more mail-in, the more electronic, the less secure our elections.
Can we please just Vote Amish?
All paper, no machines. One day, in person, photo ID. No records or counting until the polls are closed.
👍40😢1
"What are they hiding?"
The State of Nebraska provides this lovely table, itemizing how every county votes. This table is right on their state webpage.
Kudos to Nebraska.
The state of Missouri has an awesome team of canvassers ("Missouri Canvassers") who have been asking for similar information from their Secretary of State.
But he WON'T give it to them.
Why not? What is he hiding?
Maybe it's the 25,000 voters missing from their voter rolls?
The State of Nebraska provides this lovely table, itemizing how every county votes. This table is right on their state webpage.
Kudos to Nebraska.
The state of Missouri has an awesome team of canvassers ("Missouri Canvassers") who have been asking for similar information from their Secretary of State.
But he WON'T give it to them.
Why not? What is he hiding?
Maybe it's the 25,000 voters missing from their voter rolls?
👍42
“Local Elections”
I was speaking with a county election commissioner today, and I showed him that there were 150 voters in his county that he couldn’t tell me who they were.
I assured him that it was a relatively small number... several other counties in his state had far more, and his number was orders of magnitude lower than what I usually find in other states.
He said, “Are you kidding? One of our most important local races was decided by less than 100 votes.”
Our enemy is stealing our country from the ground up, folks.
I was speaking with a county election commissioner today, and I showed him that there were 150 voters in his county that he couldn’t tell me who they were.
I assured him that it was a relatively small number... several other counties in his state had far more, and his number was orders of magnitude lower than what I usually find in other states.
He said, “Are you kidding? One of our most important local races was decided by less than 100 votes.”
Our enemy is stealing our country from the ground up, folks.
👍41🔥15
Thanks for asking. Several reasons:
1) Nellie is cute as heck;
2) People love it when I do this and miss it when I don’t;
3) Nellie exudes volumes of love. People sense this, it blesses them, and I like blessing people;
4) I want people to understand how cool Down Syndrome children can be. Maybe they will stop killing them before they are born. It’s the most common birth defect. If we weren’t killing them, we’d average about one in every 700 births, and the world would be far richer for it;
5) My sons don’t want the attention... typical teenagers. But Nellie loves it, and asks me almost every day I’m home to post something with her (she’s 24);
6) I learned during my Covid work that Nellie brings people hope and joy in the midst of our turmoil. I think her innocence touches a special place inside us;
7) I can’t imagine my life without Nellie. She brings me so much love and joy, and encourages me all the time. It is so wonderful, I want to share her with the world. It seems selfish to keep her to myself.
1) Nellie is cute as heck;
2) People love it when I do this and miss it when I don’t;
3) Nellie exudes volumes of love. People sense this, it blesses them, and I like blessing people;
4) I want people to understand how cool Down Syndrome children can be. Maybe they will stop killing them before they are born. It’s the most common birth defect. If we weren’t killing them, we’d average about one in every 700 births, and the world would be far richer for it;
5) My sons don’t want the attention... typical teenagers. But Nellie loves it, and asks me almost every day I’m home to post something with her (she’s 24);
6) I learned during my Covid work that Nellie brings people hope and joy in the midst of our turmoil. I think her innocence touches a special place inside us;
7) I can’t imagine my life without Nellie. She brings me so much love and joy, and encourages me all the time. It is so wonderful, I want to share her with the world. It seems selfish to keep her to myself.
❤279👍35😁3
I commented on this discussion yesterday, and people were asking me for the link. Here ya go...
I really don’t like hearing only one side of a story, so I hope that JP will have an opportunity to respond. They need to keep inviting him... he is claiming he was not invited.
Several of you came to my defense regarding Shiva’s incorrect representation and casual dismissal of some of my work. Clearly, you understand it better than Shiva. And since he was too quick to judge my work, perhaps he’s been too quick to judge JP’s as well.
This is why peer review is a process, not a proclamation. Shiva is merely another human being, not the sole arbiter of truth.
Shiva only briefly mentioned some of my work, but aggressively viscerated JP’s. They’ve already spoken to me about participating in a future discussion, but I think they should give JP first priority to respond. Shiva’s claims about JP and his work were quite damning.
https://rumble.com/vs3asa-election-fraud-roundtable-dr.-shiva-and-david-clements.html
I really don’t like hearing only one side of a story, so I hope that JP will have an opportunity to respond. They need to keep inviting him... he is claiming he was not invited.
Several of you came to my defense regarding Shiva’s incorrect representation and casual dismissal of some of my work. Clearly, you understand it better than Shiva. And since he was too quick to judge my work, perhaps he’s been too quick to judge JP’s as well.
This is why peer review is a process, not a proclamation. Shiva is merely another human being, not the sole arbiter of truth.
Shiva only briefly mentioned some of my work, but aggressively viscerated JP’s. They’ve already spoken to me about participating in a future discussion, but I think they should give JP first priority to respond. Shiva’s claims about JP and his work were quite damning.
https://rumble.com/vs3asa-election-fraud-roundtable-dr.-shiva-and-david-clements.html
Rumble
Election Fraud Roundtable: Dr. Shiva and David Clements
Dr. Shiva and David Clements join us live tonight to break down more of the evidence that the 2020 election was in fact stolen. If you want to support the show, you can donate here: http://bit.ly/cd-d
👍17
“My Priorities”
(Not necessarily in order...)
1) Supporting Mike Lindell’s various efforts;
2) Building and supporting a Fix 2020 movement across the country;
3) Teaching individuals and officials how their elections are being stolen;
4) Supporting grass roots efforts in every state;
5) Calculating and swimming in data, collecting evidence;
6) Being a husband, daddy, and a Christian.
It’s a lot for one guy to do, and I don’t always do as much in every category as I’d like. But I’m trying to be full of the Spirit, and so let God set my priorities. The battle is His, and everything is in His time.
I am a leaf on the river... what eddy will we explore together today, God?
There are some guiding principles. First, the movement itself is more important than obtaining more evidence. We already have sufficient evidence, we just need an awakened public demanding that we Fix 2020. And that movement is steadily growing. Awesome!
That being said, every new tidbit of evidence seems to red-pill a new batch of citizens. So there is a balance between research, auditing, canvassing, calculating, speaking, teaching, meeting, and supporting.
Phew! I also need time to recharge... it can be a grind. I now have so much more respect for our military folks, who fight for months on end with so little rest. This is my tour of duty.
I’m glad God’s in charge. He is outside of linear time, and so knows how everything turns out even before it starts. With that kind of reconnaissance, I’d be silly not to listen to the Spirit’s leading.
God’s given us hands, feet, and brains, and He expects us to use them.
(Not necessarily in order...)
1) Supporting Mike Lindell’s various efforts;
2) Building and supporting a Fix 2020 movement across the country;
3) Teaching individuals and officials how their elections are being stolen;
4) Supporting grass roots efforts in every state;
5) Calculating and swimming in data, collecting evidence;
6) Being a husband, daddy, and a Christian.
It’s a lot for one guy to do, and I don’t always do as much in every category as I’d like. But I’m trying to be full of the Spirit, and so let God set my priorities. The battle is His, and everything is in His time.
I am a leaf on the river... what eddy will we explore together today, God?
There are some guiding principles. First, the movement itself is more important than obtaining more evidence. We already have sufficient evidence, we just need an awakened public demanding that we Fix 2020. And that movement is steadily growing. Awesome!
That being said, every new tidbit of evidence seems to red-pill a new batch of citizens. So there is a balance between research, auditing, canvassing, calculating, speaking, teaching, meeting, and supporting.
Phew! I also need time to recharge... it can be a grind. I now have so much more respect for our military folks, who fight for months on end with so little rest. This is my tour of duty.
I’m glad God’s in charge. He is outside of linear time, and so knows how everything turns out even before it starts. With that kind of reconnaissance, I’d be silly not to listen to the Spirit’s leading.
God’s given us hands, feet, and brains, and He expects us to use them.
❤77👍26👎1😁1
“Racists and Grifters”
I find too often when I am winning a political argument based upon the data and the facts that I am suddenly labeled a ‘racist.’ But I’m not. Nevertheless, the ad hominem logical fallacy is deployed against me.
Lately, I’m seeing the label ‘grifter’ being bandied about. So I looked up the meaning. Basically, it describes someone who is gaining money or influence fraudulently; a con artist.
That’s a pretty serious charge. Like racism is pretty serious charge.
I encourage you to use such terms cautiously, and to make sure that you have first done your homework, so that your facts and arguments are sound, and so you are not merely resorting to ad hominem attacks.
And if you hear someone making such charges against anyone, ask them for their evidence.
I find too often when I am winning a political argument based upon the data and the facts that I am suddenly labeled a ‘racist.’ But I’m not. Nevertheless, the ad hominem logical fallacy is deployed against me.
Lately, I’m seeing the label ‘grifter’ being bandied about. So I looked up the meaning. Basically, it describes someone who is gaining money or influence fraudulently; a con artist.
That’s a pretty serious charge. Like racism is pretty serious charge.
I encourage you to use such terms cautiously, and to make sure that you have first done your homework, so that your facts and arguments are sound, and so you are not merely resorting to ad hominem attacks.
And if you hear someone making such charges against anyone, ask them for their evidence.
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“Racism”
As we demand election reforms, we are going to face frivolous charges of voter suppression and racism.
I think we should take on these charges head on.
The racism thing is easy. My friend, Kathy Barnette is a black woman. Really black. Beautiful black. She likes shaking someone’s hand and pointing out that she has a photo ID... and so does every other black person she knows. And they drive real good too. Boom! Right in their face. Gotta love her.
With regard to voter suppression, the evidence shows that there is massive ballot harvesting taking place in low income neighborhoods, halfway houses, homeless camps, and long term care facilities. You can bet we want to suppress this. These people are actually being disenfranchised.
Don’t run from these silly objections. Take the bull by the horns. Yeah, they’ll call you a racist. Big whoop. They want to steal our elections.
As we demand election reforms, we are going to face frivolous charges of voter suppression and racism.
I think we should take on these charges head on.
The racism thing is easy. My friend, Kathy Barnette is a black woman. Really black. Beautiful black. She likes shaking someone’s hand and pointing out that she has a photo ID... and so does every other black person she knows. And they drive real good too. Boom! Right in their face. Gotta love her.
With regard to voter suppression, the evidence shows that there is massive ballot harvesting taking place in low income neighborhoods, halfway houses, homeless camps, and long term care facilities. You can bet we want to suppress this. These people are actually being disenfranchised.
Don’t run from these silly objections. Take the bull by the horns. Yeah, they’ll call you a racist. Big whoop. They want to steal our elections.
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Welcome to communism.
https://www.governor.wa.gov/news-media/inslee-statement-efforts-stop-violence-fueled-election-lies
https://www.governor.wa.gov/news-media/inslee-statement-efforts-stop-violence-fueled-election-lies
www.governor.wa.gov
Inslee statement on efforts to stop violence fueled by election lies
Gov. Jay Inslee released the following statement today announcing his support for legislation currently being written that would outlaw attempts by candidates and elected officials to spread lies
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"My Boys"
Someone asked about my two boys (now 21 and 19 yrs). Here we are, hanging off the side of the CN tower in Toronto, about 1300 feet off the ground.
Trying to look like we were happy, but scared half out of our wits.
Mom made us do it.
Daniel is studying to become a minister, and Deryk is a musician.
Someone asked about my two boys (now 21 and 19 yrs). Here we are, hanging off the side of the CN tower in Toronto, about 1300 feet off the ground.
Trying to look like we were happy, but scared half out of our wits.
Mom made us do it.
Daniel is studying to become a minister, and Deryk is a musician.
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Forwarded from Marylyn Todd - NHVIG
For 208 years New Hampshire has hand counted their elections. In the largest election in New Hampshire’s history there was 814,000 people who voted. We have multiple towns in our state that use machines with less than 500 voters!! It is time to go back to our original heritage and hand count! William Gardner NH’s SoS, stated it will cost the state in total $150,000 to hand count. Which will save the state a tremendous amount of money!!! Although hand counting is more work, yes, but after all freedom is not free. The military literally puts their life on the line for you everyday I think one day every year to protect your voice it is worth the sacrifice to hand count!!! We’re talking one night every year!!!
These machines are not needed with our small precincts. When you learn the truth about these machines I gaurantee you would never use them to count your money never mind your most sacred right!!! Fight for your freedom and take back your voice! The time is now!!!
We need you to show up January 13 at 2PM
These machines are not needed with our small precincts. When you learn the truth about these machines I gaurantee you would never use them to count your money never mind your most sacred right!!! Fight for your freedom and take back your voice! The time is now!!!
We need you to show up January 13 at 2PM
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Comparing the official election report (Dated Dec 4th) with the voter rolls on Dec 4th for each county.
Both graphs show the same data; the lower one is simply amplified a factor of ten.
The Red bars show the number of ballots that were tallied, but not assigned to voters in the rolls.
The black bars show the number of registrants added or removed from each county's rolls.
Both graphs show the same data; the lower one is simply amplified a factor of ten.
The Red bars show the number of ballots that were tallied, but not assigned to voters in the rolls.
The black bars show the number of registrants added or removed from each county's rolls.
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“Their Own Data”
One of my favorite ways to make a point is to use someone’s own data. That way, they are forced to either retract their own data or to acknowledge the issue. Either way, the point is made.
Recently, in addition to some more complicated analyses, I’ve been downloading data from state webpages (their own data), comparing it with their own registration rolls (their own data), what the county officials report (their own data), and then with US Census values (publicly available data).
The very first obvious thing we find is that their own numbers do not reconcile. This exposes the fraud mechanism using their own numbers.
For example, they will have officially tallied more votes than are recorded in their rolls. Sometimes there is a huge difference.
Stated simply, states can’t tell you who voted in their own elections.
Stated differently, large numbers of votes were tallied from people who are either not on the rolls or their vote was not recorded in the rolls.
Boom!
Next, comparing their rolls with the census data reveals that they often have more people registered than they have people.
Boom!
Simple math. A minus B.
I can take the discussion deeper into the weeds of course, and predict how many people of every age are voting in every county, sometimes even the precise numbers of Republicans and Democrats.
But sometimes starting simplest is best. Just expose the problem first, then explore it in more detail.
And the easiest way to expose it is to use their own data and some simple math. A minus B. Then they are stuck. This is why so many states are hiding their data.
One of my favorite ways to make a point is to use someone’s own data. That way, they are forced to either retract their own data or to acknowledge the issue. Either way, the point is made.
Recently, in addition to some more complicated analyses, I’ve been downloading data from state webpages (their own data), comparing it with their own registration rolls (their own data), what the county officials report (their own data), and then with US Census values (publicly available data).
The very first obvious thing we find is that their own numbers do not reconcile. This exposes the fraud mechanism using their own numbers.
For example, they will have officially tallied more votes than are recorded in their rolls. Sometimes there is a huge difference.
Stated simply, states can’t tell you who voted in their own elections.
Stated differently, large numbers of votes were tallied from people who are either not on the rolls or their vote was not recorded in the rolls.
Boom!
Next, comparing their rolls with the census data reveals that they often have more people registered than they have people.
Boom!
Simple math. A minus B.
I can take the discussion deeper into the weeds of course, and predict how many people of every age are voting in every county, sometimes even the precise numbers of Republicans and Democrats.
But sometimes starting simplest is best. Just expose the problem first, then explore it in more detail.
And the easiest way to expose it is to use their own data and some simple math. A minus B. Then they are stuck. This is why so many states are hiding their data.
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