Here’s Why So Many Republicans are Involved in Covering Up 2020 Election Fraud

Some will call this a “conspiracy theory” and dismiss it outright. Question their logic, but more importantly question their motives. This from basedunderground.com.

Here's Why So Many Republicans are Involved in Covering Up 2020 Election Fraud (1)

The 2020 presidential election, plus dozens of city and state elections, were stolen. This is known based on careful analysis over the past few months of everything investigators could get their hands on. From affidavits to videos and from data analyses to anecdotal reports, the conclusion was reached with 100% certainty that massive, widespread voter fraud took place and it was more than enough to swing the elections in the wrong direction.

It’s important that readers understand we’ve put unprecedented efforts into finding and disseminating the information to prove it, but the roadblocks have been insurmountable. To say it’s like David vs Goliath would be apropos because David was only able to win with the support of God Almighty and only God could overcome the concerted effort to suppress the truth in this case.

 

Through our investigative travels, one common theme kept popping up. It became so ubiquitous that I assumed it was common knowledge that many important members of the Republican Party were directly involved in the conspiracy. It isn’t just Georgia Governor Brian Kemp or Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. There are more Republican hands in this filthy voter fraud pot than I would have ever imagined before, which is why I’m shocked so few seem to realize it. Like I said, we thought it was common knowledge that the reason this was so successful was because Republicans were running cover.

What is now known is that for many of them, it wasn’t by choice. There are three ways to make people do things they don’t want to do: Bullying, Bribery, and Blackmail. The last “B” in the bunch is what turned many Republicans to the dark side. To understand this, here’s just a small part of the background information.

Republicans were the first ones targeted by the “digital voter fraud” bait. Voting machine companies went to GOP candidates starting in 2002 and gave them ways to win. It ramped up over the years until the Obama era when as many as ten percent of the major Republican candidates who won did so through voter fraud. That’s a tough pill for many Republican voters to swallow, but it’s true. A good writeup by Jennifer Cohn in 2018 details it nicely, focusing on Georgia as the epicenter of voter fraud (imagine that!).

I’m jumping ahead, but for more details involving voter fraud, click HERE to go to the original article.

Georgia’s governor, Sonny Perdue, appointed Brian Kemp to the office of Secretary of State [in early 2010. Kemp then won the 2010 election for a full term], replacing Karen Handel who had left office to pursue an unsuccessful bid for governor.

Kemp expressed no interest in replacing Georgia’s paperless machines, and the national media gave him little grief.

But that had begun to change, courtesy of the Georgia 6th District special election in 2017. On March 3, 2017, a little more than a month before the primary, Politico and other national news outlets reported that the FBI was investigating a breach at Georgia’s Center for Election Systems at Kennesaw State University.”

And a few weeks later, equipment “used to check-in voters at the polls” — including a “flash card with a voter list” — was stolen from a parked car.

A concerned national election integrity advocate, Marilyn Marks, filed a lawsuit to compel Kemp to use hand marked paper ballots (counted on optical scanners) in the race. But Georgia Secretary of State Kemp swiftly defeated it on a procedural technicality (sovereign immunity), declaring that the machines are “safe and accurate.”

Kemp assured voters that Georgia’s voting machines could not be hacked because they aren’t connected to the internet. But he omitted to mention that all voting machines, including those in Georgia, must receive programming before each election from centralized election management systems that can and often do connect to the internet.

Kemp also omitted to mention that Georgia uses a single flash drive to upload its election results from a central tabulator to an online Election Night Reporting System and then reinserts the same flash drive into the same central tabulator for the next round of results. Thus, if the flash drive becomes infected with malware from the online reporting system, it could spread the malware to the central tabulator and change the results from each polling place as they are uploaded.

I’m jumping ahead again to the November 6, 2020, U.S. Senate primary in Georgia.

On the night of the primary, Ossoff was poised to win the primary outright with 50.3% of the vote when the counting stopped, causing a stir on social media (and presumably elsewhere).

An hour or so later, CNN announced that there had been a “technical glitch” in Fulton County. According to the local news, the glitch involved a “rare memory card problem.”

When the counting finally resumed around 11:00 p.m., Ossoff’s total had dropped from 50.3% to 48.6%.

You catch the “glitchy” pattern started here, right?

Yes, this has been an abbreviated telling of the whole truth, but please understand that the only way to keep so many important players in the Republican Party quiet was to make sure they were complicit in the overall voter fraud conspiracy that has been in place for nearly two decades in the state of Georgia. They were hooked in and when it came time for people to start asking questions, they had to do everything they could to cover it up for the sake of self-protection.

Bottom line: Kemp and Raffensperger will soon be shown to the world to be dirty. And Georgia election results will be dissected and the election will likely have to be re-accomplished.

Many more details are available. Click HERE to go to the original article.