Anonymous ID: 6cc8f1 Nov. 30, 2022, 9:53 a.m. No.17854538   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4552 >>4650 >>4695 >>4924 >>4981 >>5068 >>5156 >>5214 >>5224

RNC and Ronna fucked up again, but major conservative voters overwhelmed Monday and Tuesday. Early voting ending on Friday this week.

 

GA anons listen to this get all friends and family out to vote for Hershel

 

"Ronna McDaniel Failed": Republican Counties Had No Contingency Plan For Early Voting Court Ruling Leading To A Large Head-Start For Warnock, John Fredericks Reports

Anonymous ID: 6cc8f1 Nov. 30, 2022, 9:56 a.m. No.17854564   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4924 >>4981 >>5068 >>5156 >>5214

30 Nov, 2022 05:29

US Space Force to track North Korean missiles

 

The newest branch of the US military recently established its first command post in the Indo-Pacific region

The United States Space Force is working to create an early warning system for North Korean missile launches, a top commander has revealed, hoping to step up surveillance following a record number of weapons tests by Pyongyang this year.

 

Addressing a webinar held by the Washington-based Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies on Tuesday, US Space Command head General James Dickinson outlined the service’s plans in the Indo-Pacific, where it set up its first-ever component command unit last week.

 

“We are looking at how we integrate a sensor architecture that gives us as much warning as possible in terms of any type of missile activity out of North Korea,” he said, noting that Washington would share information with regional partners and allies and seek ways to “incorporate commercial sensors” into the new warning system.

 

Though the Space Force only established its first operational unit in the Indo-Pacific just days ago, Dickinson observed that the branch already maintained a “coordination relationship” with the broader military, and would continue to develop those ties.

 

Operating under INDOPACOM, the American command responsible for East Asia and the Indian subcontinent, the new Space Force unit appears largely focused on China. Ahead of its creation, Chief of Space Operations B. Chance Saltzman declared that it is “essential that we stand up the service component at INDOPACOM” given that Beijing is America’s “pacing threat” and top competitor. With the latest remarks from Dickinson, however, Pyongyang also appears to be a priority for the new unit.

 

The decision to extend the Space Force presence into Asia comes amid soaring tensions in the region.

 

Led by the US, recent joint drills with South Korea and Japan have triggered a flurry of retaliatory missile tests by Pyongyang, including two ICBM launches this month alone. US lawmakers have also continued periodic visits to Taiwan – enraging Beijing, which sees the island as part of its sovereign territory – while American warships have transited the contested Taiwan Strait on a near-monthly basis this year.

 

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US Space Force to track North Korean missiles

rt.com

 

https://www.rt.com/news/567402-space-force-korea-missiles/

Hmmm interesting!

Anonymous ID: 6cc8f1 Nov. 30, 2022, 10:38 a.m. No.17854751   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4817

Gould is the Election official that runs elections from AZ that was threatened with being arrested is he voted. He said is he did vote no all of their votes wouldnt be counted and they would have lost two new republican seats. What state would make that rule? Fucked up, but interesting convo with Bannon

 

The Arizona Establishment's "Clearly Incompetent" For Still Not Knowing How To Run An Election: Ron Gould Slams Election Officials For Disenfranchising Voters Across Numerous Counties

Anonymous ID: 6cc8f1 Nov. 30, 2022, 10:56 a.m. No.17854794   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4797 >>4803 >>4924 >>4981 >>5068 >>5156 >>5214

County under a cloud: Maricopa's decade-long history of election issues, from 2012 to 2022

Maricopa County's handling of elections in 2022 is "yet another disgrace in a long line of disgraces," said Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem.

 

1 of 2

As voters, poll workers, and observers have voiced their concerns about issues they witnessed on Election Day in Maricopa County, Ariz., a review of the county's history shows 10 years of election issues under various election officials.

 

Numerous issues occurred at vote centers on Election Day in Maricopa County earlier this month, from election machine problems to hours-long lines, according to widespread reports. However, election issues are not unique to the 2022 midterms in Maricopa, as some began a decade ago.

 

During the 2012 presidential general election in Maricopa County, key races went undecided for two weeks after Election Day as a result of "record numbers of provisional and early ballots" remaining uncounted after polls closed, according to the Arizona Republic. The outlet said that "Arizona was embarrassed on the national stage."

 

In the 2014 midterm election, despite a decrease in voter turnout, there were still days-long delays in counting early votes, attributable to most of the counties in Arizona stopping their count of early ballots between 12 p.m. and 2 p.m. the Monday before an election to prepare for Election Day, the Arizona Republic reported. As a result, mailed-in early ballots that arrive after that time and early ballots hand-delivered on Election Day have to wait to be counted.

 

During the 2014 election, more than 75% of the 34,000 valid provisional ballots were cast by voters who went to the polls anyway, even after receiving their early ballot, according to the Republic. (The outlet noted that this was also an issue during the 2012 election.)

 

Despite a new e-poll system that was designed to direct voters to their correct polling location if they arrived at the wrong one, there were still 2,800 provisional ballots cast at incorrect polling locations in 2014.

 

"With e-poll books, theoretically that number should be zero," the Maricopa County Recorder's spokesperson said at the time, according to the Republic.

 

During the 2016 primary election, the number of polling locations in Maricopa County was reduced to 60, but voters could vote at any location, rather than being assigned to one. However, with 1.25 million eligible in-person voters at the time, this reduction of polling places from more than 200 in the 2012 presidential primary, and 400 in the 2008 presidential primary, caused hours-long lines.

 

At one polling location in 2016, between 600 and 700 voters waited in line for more than three hours to vote, and a poll worker told voters at one point that they had run out of ballots. Another location had some voters wait until after midnight to cast their votes due to long lines, even though polls closed at 7 p.m.

 

The Obama Justice Department sent a letterto the Maricopa County Recorder's Office after the 2016 primary inquiring about the election issues, which occurred under Helen Purcell, a Republican who had held the office since winning the 1988 election. Amid these issues, Purcell lost her 2016 reelection race for county recorder to Democrat Adrian Fontes.

 

Two years later, leading up to the 2018 midterm primary election, then-Maricopa County Recorder Fontes, who is expected to be certified as the winner of the 2022 secretary of state election on Dec. 5, revealed his plan to change how elections were conducted the week before Election Day.

 

The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors was concerned about the significant changes made by the new recorder with little notice beforehand.

 

On primary Election Day in 2018, dozens of polling locations failed to open on time due to technical issues with election machines. The recorder's office initially claimed the issue was due to the election machine contractor not providing enough workers to set up. However, the contractor said that they provided more than enough workers but that the county "failed to provide a setup and coordination schedule" for their technicians and the county troubleshooters.

 

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/maricopa-countys-decade-long-history-election-issues-2012-2022

Anonymous ID: 6cc8f1 Nov. 30, 2022, 10:57 a.m. No.17854797   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4803 >>4924 >>4981 >>5068 >>5156 >>5214

>>17854794

County under a cloud:

2 of 2

 

After the 2018 election, the county's Board of Supervisors retook control over Election Day voting from the recorder's office, limiting Fontes' election responsibilities to overseeing voter registration and early voting.

 

The current recorder, Republican Stephen Richer, defeated Fontes in the 2020 election, vowing to tighten up and depoliticize the chronic maladministration of elections in the county, but after taking office he emerged as an often acerbic critic of GOP efforts to audit the disputed 2020 election in the county and tighten election security. In 2021, Richer started a political action committee, funded by Democrats, that supports Republican candidates who "acknowledge the validity of the 2020 election and condemn the events of January 6, 2021 as a terrible result of the lies told about the November election," according to a press statement announcing the PAC's creation.

 

Following the 2020 presidential election, the Arizona state Senate conducted an audit of the presidential election, which flagged a large number of voters who potentially voted in Maricopa and at least one other county in the state.It said 5,295 voters cast ballots in Maricopa and at least one other county using "the same first, middle, last name and birth year."

 

CyberNinja, the cyber security firm that conducted the audit, also raised serious questions about the possible deletion of data from Maricopa County's election computers.

 

A separate review of Maricopa County's mail ballots in the 2020 election found that more than 200,000 ballots with signatures did not match voter files and were counted without being reviewed.

 

During the 2022 midterm election, Maricopa County experienced numerous issues with election machines, from printers that print ballots to ballot scanners. Eleven Republican roving attorneys visited 115 out of the 223 vote centers in Maricopa County as observers on Election Day and found that 72 of them (62.6% of the visted sites) "had material problems with the tabulators not being able to tabulate ballots, causing voters to either deposit their ballots into box 3, spoil their ballots and re-vote, or get frustrated and leave the vote center without voting," according to a report compiled from their observations by Mark Sonnenklar, a roving attorney with the Republican National Committee's Election Integrity program in Arizona.

 

The Arizona attorney general's office raised concerns regarding the administration of the Nov. 8 election in Maricopa County in a Nov. 19 letter to the county attorney's office inquiring into the widespread irregularities reported in the county on Election Day.

 

On Sunday, the county replied to the letter, saying that it followed the law on Election Day and the election problems were "regrettable." However, the county maintained that "every lawful voter was still able to cast his or her ballot."

 

The deadline for Arizona counties to certify the midterm election with the secretary of state's office was Monday. Maricopa County certified its election despite the testimony of a procession of residents — including voters and poll workers — urging them not to based on their Election Day experiences. Cochise County, meanwhile, chose not to certify despite the threat of a lawsuit, while Mohave County certified with two supervisors noting they voted "under duress."

 

The state deadline to certify its election is Dec. 5.

 

Arizona state Rep. Mark Finchem, who ran as the GOP nominee against Fontes in the secretary of state election, told Just the News on Tuesday that Maricopa County's handling of the 2022 election is "yet another disgrace in a long line of disgraces."

 

Maricopa County didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday

 

https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/maricopa-countys-decade-long-history-election-issues-2012-2022

Anonymous ID: 6cc8f1 Nov. 30, 2022, 11:48 a.m. No.17855003   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5048

Flannel Friday with Gregg Phillips

MG Show

November 17, 2022

23,918 Views

 

Anons you’ve to listen to Gregg Phillips on the MG show, Nov 17, what the court tried to do to him and Catherine. Their lawyer had to go into hiding because the judge forced him to read out loud a confidential informant. The FBI wouldn't protect the lawyer from the Chinese and Konnech leader etc