It's widely acknowledged that Kennedy was elected in 1960 through election fraud in Chicago, and LBJ also reportedly gained office through election fraud; I don't recall its locus though.
Michele asked me recently, what happens if irrefutable proof comes out that Biden stole the election? First I laughed, since I've seen enough irrefutable proof already, then I just said, you think Big Media is going to acknowledge anything like that? It bothers her a lot.
I have a similar attitude to Matt, but contrary to my friend Matt, I have zero doubt. The statistics and shenanigans pulled are off the charts. The unanimous blocking of audits of contested counties. Maricopa county, Arizona has refused to comply with an Arizona state legislature subpoena for their election materials and machines. From blocking monitoring of the ballot processing in key Democrat stronghold counties, to unconstitutional changes to state election rules, to MASSSIVE deployment in Democrat strongholds of privately funded ballot drop boxes, to lax mail-in ballot verifications, and the plethora of statistically impossible data patters. There is no way the election was not a fraud. They almost got North Carolina too. We have freaking video from your state Matt, showing the fraud in process. They lied about a water main break, got everyone to leave (media and observers), then broke out four cases of fraud to run through the tabulators.
I've investigated this issue intensely, watched all the state legislature/GOP evidentiary hearings with testimony, and especially the federal senate committee hearing with sworn testimony. You cannot watch that and doubt the election was stolen.
The election was both rigged via media burying Biden scandals and demonizing Trump for the virus and stolen. Zero doubt.
I watched a documentary a couple of years ago about how and why the decorations appearing in the White House are what they are.
Those busts are part of the White House's art collection. Incoming Presidents and First Ladies get to choose from the list of things they want and where they go.
All of this is going on from like 6am to noon on the day of the inauguration so that when the new guy walks in, everything is where he wants it. It's a fury of activity, quite fascinating to me being in logistics. There is a lot of manpower and planning dedicated to what goes on behind the scenes.
Oh, I know they get to choose - it's all set dressing.
A socialist "labor" activist isn't very reassuring, though, considering the extreme left-leaning party this puppet-president represents.
I'm also not thrilled that he got rid of the military branch flags that President Trump kept on display, as an honor to our troops. Not surprised...but not thrilled.
This is subscriber content, but he said I could share it publicly, so hopefully this link will work. Let me know if it doesn't work and I'll download the audio and host it myself.
I didn't know Julio Cesar Chavez was a Socialist. I know he and his compadres stopped illegals from coming into the country and taking jobs of legal immigrants. They got violent with them and sent them packing. He'd likely be a Trump supporter today.
Blake, we agree that Trump won. I predicted that he would be inaugurated on the 20th, I was wrong on that. I did not expect (how foolish of me) that the steal would succeed. I am disappointed, but hopeful. Trump showed to the world who the Swamp are. As you say, they are Big Tech, Big Media, and if I may add, Democrats and (I will get into trouble saying this) Republicans. Democrats and Republicans are the Uniparty.
Thank you to whomever took that down. The last thing I need is my teenage daughter looking over my shoulder and seeing that. My home office doesn't have a door, it's a big open archway and my 60 inch main computer screen is visible to the top of the stairs and also in the kitchen.
Got this from Erick Erickson this morning, transcript of his radio monologue about the state of the Georgia Republican party.
Georgia Republicans have some trouble and that trouble is spilling out into what to do about Donald Trump and his supporters. This is highlighted by Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Congresswoman from Northwest Georgia. She was banned from Twitter for 12 hours. Remember Maxine Waters? She's the dummy Democrat who always says obnoxious things and has encouraged people to get in people's faces and show up at their houses and harass them and all that. Marjorie Taylor Greene is the Republican's Maxine Waters. She's an embarrassment to the party and everybody knows it, but she's got a hardcore constituency and Republicans don't want to say anything. Last week, she went after Gabe Sterling from the Secretary of State's office saying that he cost the GOP two seats., Actually, Marjorie Taylor Greene and the state party cost the GOP these seats. Her part of the state had the worst turnout of Republicans. It came after two months of telling people that the race was going to be stolen.
There were signs all over North Georgia saying “don't vote”. If you went up 75 from Atlanta to Adairsville, GA there was a big sign when you got off the interstate that said, "They're going to steal it again. Don't vote." Republicans in the state internalized the stolen election nonsense and cost themselves two Senate seats. Thanks to them we'll have to suffer with Jon Ossoff as the US Senator for the next six years.
We've got redistricting coming up and they're going to have to deal with Marjorie Taylor Greene, who may want to run for governor or the Senate. Some Republicans I've talked to said they would like to redistrict Marjorie Taylor Greene out of Congress. They claim she's an embarrassment, not fit to be in Congress. Well, I disagree with her being unfit for Congress because the voters put her there. But, do they redistrict her out or not? There is a fear if they redistrict her out, she might try to primary challenge Brian Kemp or run for the US Senate against Warnock?
It's the laws of unintended consequences that are keeping Republicans in Georgia up at night. My suspicion is that they're going to look at all of the districts and make some tweaks. The Republicans want to bolster themselves. They want to do what they can to stay in power. One of the things that the Republicans are thinking of doing is sacrificing some Republican votes to Lucy McBath's district, letting Lucy McBath stay to ensure the Republican districts stay strong and sacrifice Carolyn Bourdeaux as the Democrat of the Seventh Congressional District.
There is some consideration of moving some of these districts around, the 11th and the 14th, for example. The 11th is Barry Loudermilk's district. One rumor flying around is to merge Loudermilk and Greene into a district with more suburban Republicans in order for Loudermilk to oust Greene. They would then connect parts of McBath and Bordeaux’s districts together while stretching Hank Johnson’s district a bit into Gwinnett County. That then allows some shifting around to make a Republican district for someone like Richard McCormick to run again and pick off Carolyn Bourdeaux.
But then the Republicans have other problems. What do you do about Brian Kemp? Does Marjorie Taylor Greene run against him? Does someone pro Trump run against him? What about Vernon Jones? Kemp is a great governor and the Trump side of the part would be foolish to try to take him on.
Vernon Jones in the State House is now switching to the Republican party. There are some who think he wants to run against Warnock. He could rally the Trump base, but he has enough baggage that he probably could not win a general election against Warnock. The GOP in Georgia has to be careful with what they do. They don't have a ton of options, but there's something the Republican party has in Georgia that it can use to its advantage. The GOP here has a bench. The Democrats don't have a very big bench because they've been out of power. Stacey Abrams has also so overshadowed the party that others in the Democratic Party are precluded from running. You're going to have Raphael Warnock running. The Democrats will make race a key part of 2022 against Brian Kemp and Geoff Duncan.
Here's my prediction for the GOP in Georgia. You're going to have some tweaks to the election laws in the state. You're probably going to have a concerted Republican effort to push Brad Raffensperger out . Then you're going to have the GOP say, "We fixed the problems. The Democrats can't steal it now. You've got to come back." They will hope like hell that the Republicans turn back out. Brian Kemp is probably going to try to get the legislature to let him create some sort of super pac. In Georgia, outside groups are restricted in how they can fund state races. It's different from federal races. The governor to an extent has to rely on the Georgia Republican party, but there is no trust right now between the elected leaders of the state and the Georgia Republican party.
There's a growing sentiment among a lot of our elected leaders that David Shafer is trying to use his position as chairman to run for office again. The elected Republicans partly blame Shafer for the Senate runoff losses. They argue, rightly, Shafer talked down the election and picked fights in the state. The Democrats have multiple outside entities helping Abrams already and coordinating. Governor Kemp will need something similar so he does not have to rely on a sclerotic Georgia Republican Party.
Then there is the state legislature. The simple fact of the matter is if the GOP wants to shore up its strength in the state legislature, it's got to make sacrifices. It's got to sacrifice some of its own until they can figure out a way to get the suburbs back. But here's thing. This is a mistake that I think too many Republicans and others fall into too often. One of the things Republicans do is they decide, "It's over. It's done. Demography is destiny. Let's hold on as best we can and hope for a miracle." I think the Republican party in Georgia and nationally need to stop buying into that nonsense. The fact of the matter is Republicans did see their gains in the Hispanic and black community, except in the runoff here in Georgia.
But even then, when you looked down on South Georgia, as I said would happen, a number of black farmers voted for David Perdue. Ossoff and Warnock were able to make gains, but it was actually in South Georgia Ossoff did not do as well as Warnock because black pastors, in fact, did not turn out the vote for Ossoff as much as black farmers did for David Purdue. Purdue got closer to Ossoff than Loeffler did to Warnock because of black farmers in South Georgia. There are gains to be made by the GOP demographically in the state. I'm afraid the Speaker of the House institutionally in the state seems to take the position that we should be more moderate. We should be more Democrat in some of what we want to do. That is a mistake
The Republicans in Georgia have an opportunity to show that conservatism works over the next two years and focus on jobs and the economy. Most people, Republican and Democrat alike, will vote for the party that gives them jobs and improves the economy. As the Biden Administration advances policies like a $15 an hour minimum wage and other things that are going to start stifling the economy, Brian Kemp and the GOP in Georgia have the opportunity to benefit the Georgia economy and more importantly, benefit local jobs. One of the biggest criticisms about Nathan Deal and Sonny Perdue is that they tried to bring to Georgia out of state Fortune 500 companies to create jobs here. What actually happened is those companies came here for tax advantage, but then they brought people with them from out of state and they fundamentally transformed the urban and suburban areas in Atlanta and made them more Democrat.
Brian Kemp's approach as really the first lifelong Republican elected as governor since reconstruction is, "Let's make Georgia businesses bigger and let's provide them opportunities to expand outside of Atlanta and create jobs and opportunity down in Southeast Georgia, down in Southwest Georgia." If Republicans grow Georgia jobs from Georgia companies for Georgians, they have a path to reelection that is very straightforward. It all comes down to the fundamentals. It comes down to the basics. There's no need to think about these five dimensional chess rules. Do things that benefit people and benefit their pocketbook, and they will reward you at the ballot box, regardless of the letter next to your name. It's a basic political lesson that the Republicans of Georgia need to remember.
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Talk about a butterfly effect. The highlighted passage in red above is of particular interest to me, because it refers to this guy getting control over part of the county I live in.
Donald Trump is breaking away from the (CCP) Uniparty by forming the Patriot Party.
This may be my naivety talking, but something tells me that Trump has the military on his side, or at least certain key figures within the military. It seems to me that by calling it the "Patriot Party" Trump is indicating that the military is on his side.
Patrick, it's true that orders have to go through different ranks within the military. This makes planning complicated.
"As to the Lords of the Internet censoring the news/search engines/communications/etc. to influence the election, you ain't seen nothing yet."
Jack Dorsey just came out saying that banning Trump from Twitter was a divisive move.
Joe Biden has called for unity and healing, yet here we have Dorsey admitting that banning Trump was divisive. A lesson to be learnt is that there cannot be unity and healing when there is censorship.