It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: Gryphon66
originally posted by: MerkabaMeditation
originally posted by: Gryphon66
a reply to: MerkabaMeditation
There's been a count, a recount and an audit ... if you are speaking of Georgia.
How many times does Mr. Trump need to lose?
Lies, no full audit.
-MM
So now it's a "full" audit ... we call that moving the goalpost.
The audit was the legally prescribed test in Georgia law.
The recount was by hand.
The count has been certified.
originally posted by: Gryphon66
a reply to: HalWesten
The signatures in Georgia were validated as they have been and as State law requires. The use of the Dominion machines actually took our State's voting from being entirely electronic to having a paper trail.
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, said that not only is it entirely possible to match signatures, but that the state requires it.
When a voter requests an absentee ballot on a paper application, he or she must sign it. Election officials compare that signature to the signature in voter registration files before a ballot is sent to the voter, Raffensperger said.
When those ballots are returned, the required signature on the outer envelope is compared to signatures in the voter registration system.
The allegations about DVS most relevant to the election outcome in Georgia are that votes tallied on a Dominion vote tabulator were somehow manipulated on a statewide basis to elevate the count in favor of the Democratic presidential candidate. It is important to understand that this is not possible—not on a machine-by-machine basis, not by alleged hacking, not by manipulating software, and not by imagined ways of "sending" votes to overseas locations. But even if it were possible, it would have been discovered in the statewide handcount of votes.
Dominion's systems are secure as certified by the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC). In fact, all voting systems must provide assurance that they work accurately and reliably as intended under federal U.S. EAC and state certification and testing requirements. Further, Dominion source code is verified and secure. Third-party test labs chosen by the bipartisan U.S. EAC and accredited by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) perform complete source code reviews on every tabulation system that is federally certified in the U.S.
originally posted by: Gryphon66
originally posted by: Bluntone22
Well of course it should be canceled.
If he can’t hold a rally he can’t hold a party.
All those dead voters couldn’t attend anyway.
Someeone noted above it's going to be virtual.
And, if you have any evidence of dead people voting that haven't been identified yet, please contact your local elections commission.