- Joined
- Oct 27, 2011
- Messages
- 113,924
- Reaction score
- 53,574
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Conservative
The trick is to create legal ballots that don't end up in the hands of legal voters.
Here are some of the ways...
Perhaps Congress and the President should focus on creating laws that prevent this kind of stuff from happening.
Here are some of the ways...
Ballots mailed to vacant lots -- or in Arizona, street corners.
Ballots sent to apartment buildings without the unit or APT number.
Ballots sent to college dorms for students registered there for decades.
Ballots sent to fraternities with a 105-year-old student.
Ballots sent to churches -- which have no bedrooms, thus cannot be someone’s domicile.
Ballots for the person who moved -- over a year ago.
Ballots mailed to hotels and casinos.
Ballots where the address was modified -- by the voter commission (as in Arizona) -- the week those ballots went out, thus missing the recipient.
Ballots sent to Manchurian restaurants, laundromats, banks, and 7-Elevens -- all of which are not valid addresses for voters.
Ballots sent to UPS and FedEx boxes -- sometimes to a dozen people living in that little box.
Ballots sent to the apartment building -- but the address is the clubhouse -- which has no bedrooms.
Ballots sent to the 22,000 new voters in a single county entered just days before the election -- who were invisible to Arizona Republican candidates in 2022.
Ballots sent to Mr. Gonzales, Mr. Gonzalez, Mr. Gonzalles, all at the same address with the same date of birth.
Ballots sent to the Wisconsin college dorm that has 1,000 registered voters but can house only 250 adults.
Ballots sent to the 11 adults at the single-family Houston home that is 823 square feet with one bedroom and one bathroom.
Ballots mailed to people registered at an address in 2020 but the building was not built until 2022.
Ballots sent to the rehab facility for dozens of people who claim it as a residence for years. (Rehab is not a “years” thing.)
www.americanthinker.com
Ballots sent to apartment buildings without the unit or APT number.
Ballots sent to college dorms for students registered there for decades.
Ballots sent to fraternities with a 105-year-old student.
Ballots sent to churches -- which have no bedrooms, thus cannot be someone’s domicile.
Ballots for the person who moved -- over a year ago.
Ballots mailed to hotels and casinos.
Ballots where the address was modified -- by the voter commission (as in Arizona) -- the week those ballots went out, thus missing the recipient.
Ballots sent to Manchurian restaurants, laundromats, banks, and 7-Elevens -- all of which are not valid addresses for voters.
Ballots sent to UPS and FedEx boxes -- sometimes to a dozen people living in that little box.
Ballots sent to the apartment building -- but the address is the clubhouse -- which has no bedrooms.
Ballots sent to the 22,000 new voters in a single county entered just days before the election -- who were invisible to Arizona Republican candidates in 2022.
Ballots sent to Mr. Gonzales, Mr. Gonzalez, Mr. Gonzalles, all at the same address with the same date of birth.
Ballots sent to the Wisconsin college dorm that has 1,000 registered voters but can house only 250 adults.
Ballots sent to the 11 adults at the single-family Houston home that is 823 square feet with one bedroom and one bathroom.
Ballots mailed to people registered at an address in 2020 but the building was not built until 2022.
Ballots sent to the rehab facility for dozens of people who claim it as a residence for years. (Rehab is not a “years” thing.)

A Line of Defense Against Mail-in Ballot Fraud
One of the best things about a segment on the War Room, after virtually meeting Steve Bannon, is the incoming mail two days later. The RNC, the Trump Campaign, almost every Republican state party chairperson believes the road to 2024 electoral vic...
Perhaps Congress and the President should focus on creating laws that prevent this kind of stuff from happening.