Anonymous ID: 2ac49d Nov. 15, 2020, 11:37 a.m. No.11657943   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8014 >>8039 >>8091

>>11657371 (lb/pb)

>>11657339 Nothing would get other anons, WW, more involved as well

 

Does any of this sound familiar?

 

"A large group of crowbar-wielding men, accompanied by lawmakers loyal to Yanukovich, smashed their way into the Ukraina state printing house (see video) two weeks ago, claiming that millions of excess presidential ballots were being produced there to enable fraud by Tymoshenko's camp.And this week a coalition of lawmakers including Yanukovich's Party of Regions and Yushchenko's Our Ukraine passed a new law to radically amend the rules for 33,000 local election commissions, which are responsible for local vote tallies. Yanukovich claimed the new rules, which might enable the representatives of a single party to certify voting results, were needed to head off an expected attempt by Tymoshenko to paralyze the vote count in his stronghold of eastern Ukraine. Tymoshenko told journalists that the law, which was signed by Yushchenko on Thursday, "paves the way for massive election fraud" by Yanukovich."The very fact that this law was passed just a few days before the election is a terrible scandal. How can you change the rules just before the voting?" says Olexandr Sushko

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2004_Ukrainian_presidential_election

 

Yellow Revolution Philippines A contested snap election on 7 February 1986

 

Bulldozer Revolution Yugoslavia Serbians adopted an approach that had already been used in parliamentary elections in Bulgaria (1997), Slovakia (1998) and Croatia (2000), characterised by civic mobilisation through get-out-the-vote campaigns and unification of the political opposition.

 

Rose Revolution Georgia The Rose Revolution in Georgia, following the disputed 2003 election

 

Orange Revolution Ukraine The Orange Revolution in Ukraine followed the disputed second round of the 2004 Ukrainian presidential election

 

Tulip Revolution Kyrgyzstan The Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan (also sometimes called the "Pink Revolution") was more violent than its predecessors and followed the disputed 2005 Kyrgyz parliamentary election.

 

Jeans Revolution Belarus A second, much larger, round of protests began almost a year later, on 19 March 2006, soon after the presidential election. Official results had Lukashenko winning with 83% of the vote; protesters claimed the results were achieved through fraud and voter intimidation

 

Grape Revolution Moldova There was civil unrest all over Moldova following the 2009 Parliamentary election due to the opposition claiming that the communists had fixed the election.

 

Green Movement Iran The protests began in 2009, several years after the main wave of colour revolutions, although like them it began due to a disputed election, the 2009 Iranian presidential election.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colour_revolution

 

Any questions?