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Message Subject QAnon: It's on, don't panic ii
Poster Handle Mr Tibbs
Post Content
From 2014

...


How the intelligence community controls your vote

Critics of internet and computer voting have an axiom: the election is never over until the cybervote comes in. Now there is a Spanish-based company planning to count U.S. overseas and military votes from Europe. It also has the technology to manufacture, manipulate and rig the vote count. Welcome to the world of Scytl. This spooky new world is held together through a complex assortment of interlocking directorships and investment deals.
The dangers to free and fair elections posed by electronic voting are well documented. Partisan goals can be achieved through the subversion of the central tabulation via an attack on the voting network. Wealthy politicians or their friends can invest in and own the voting machine manufacturers. The manufacturers themselves can be openly partisan. The threat to the universal franchise posed by the intelligence community controlling the manufacture of voting equipment from design and development to sales and integration outweighs all previous dangers.

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 Quoting: Pepperroni


did i really hear this pronounced as "scittle" today? like the damn candy?
 Quoting: PrezElect Heavy Metal Machine


All the more reason that paper ballots and the ink well are the only way to vote, in every election until eternity!!!!
Low tech is soo safe in some cases, and one of those is the voting. Thee machines have been around a while .... I just wonder if they had not cheated the vote for years, who would really be running the world. Perhaps not the damn globalists ..!!!
I love Skittles .......
 Quoting: Misspurrrrrect


We still vote by paper ballots here in Australia, voting is compulsory and we have a national electoral commission who run the voting, so no different rules across the country.

Yes we have had cases of ballots going missing but usually this can be traceable by the electoral commission, when we turn 18 we register with the commission to vote.

Voting day we turn up to polling places in our electorate give our name and we are then crossed off the registered voters roll.

You cannot vote if you are not on the roll however you can register to give a absentee vote at the polling places.

We have postal voting again registered and applied for at the electoral commission, we also have early voting as if you are travelling or attending functions, weddings whatever on election day, up until recently you had to have a good reason to apply and register for early voting, I think the rules have been lifted a little to apply easier now?

I think our population allows for our voting to be pretty straight forward although somewhere like America I think it could be implemented if a unified national commission controlled the voting across America.
 
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