Anonymous ID: 45ca61 Nov. 1, 2024, 7:23 a.m. No.21875434   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5454 >>5805 >>5819 >>5846

>>21874333, >>21874553 Guy throws cellphone onto ground right in front of Trump, these assassin's and terrorists will try anything ,stay on your toes everybodyPN

 

Take a look at these clips.

  1. The SS guy to the right of Trump saw the phone thrown down, and didn't respond at all, and barely moved or noticed the other SS running up.

2.The SS guy on the left is about 8'-10' behind him, ran up and in 1 or 2 seconds kicks the phone away

 

There's something very wrong with the picture, the SS guy on the right should have been on top of that phone asap. He needs to be removed from the "close detail' near Trump because his reaction time is so slow.

Anonymous ID: 45ca61 Nov. 1, 2024, 8 a.m. No.21875554   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21872865 Tucker Carlson: 'I Was Mauled By A Demon!'PN

 

Video attached, 3:59 minutesTucker explaining in detail, he said he was physically mauled, he had actual claw marks on his sides and they were bleeding

Anonymous ID: 45ca61 Nov. 1, 2024, 8:19 a.m. No.21875640   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5646 >>5653 >>5763 >>5875

Top election official says colleagues gave Elon Musk ‘hand-delivered’ notes to stop him from spreading misinformation

BYSASHA ROGELBERG November 1, 2024, 7:11 AM UTC

 

Elon Musk is accused of rampantly spreading election misinformation, and it has been a thorn in the side of election officials working double time to try and mitigate the spew of unfounded claims about meddling and alleged voter fraud. Some officials have even gone to measures like dispatching personal notes to the CEO of Tesla and X, who endorsed Donald Trump in July following as assassination attempt at a rally in Butler, Pa.

 

“I’ve had my friends hand-deliver stuff to him,” Stephen Richer, the Maricopa County, Ariz. recorder, told CNN. Richer, a Republican, has come under fire from conservatives for defending the 2020 election outcome that Trump lost.

 

But so far, the efforts of Richer’s colleagues have fallen short.“We’ve pulled out more stops than most people have available to try to put accurate information in front of [Musk],” Richer said. “It has been unsuccessful.”

 

Musk cast false information about election security, including insisting Americans vote in-person and on paper, citing a debunked conspiracy that ballot machines switched votes, at a Philadelphia town hall event on Oct. 18. Musk historically has voted by mail, and his super PAC, America PAC, has encouraged mail-in voting.

 

His social media platform X has also failed to quash election lies. A report from Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) on Wednesday found X’s Community Notes feature “failed to counter false” claims about the election, with 209 of 283 (74%) analyzed posts not showing notes correcting false information.

 

Election officials were prepared to fight misinformation this election after Trump’s fervent efforts to dispute the outcome of the 2020 Presidential race, but the sheer volume of online misinformation—and lack of tech to combat it—has proved frustrating for some.“Flagging things as mis- and disinformation is not helpful anymore on Twitter, especially when you have Elon Musk himself pushing mis- and disinformation about elections,” Democrat Barb Byrum, Ingham, Mich., county clerk, told Fortune. “We can report a threat, but nothing happens.”

Headaches for election officials

 

The effort to counter election lies has been an uphill battle, officials said. As of August, Musk’s false election claims gained 1.2 billion views on X, according to the CCDH analysis.

 

“The truth of the matter is that mis- and disinformation will travel around the world and grow many legs long before I’m able to sit down at my desk and have a sip of coffee,” Byrum said.

 

Officials like Richer have taken to the platform to have a direct dialogue with Musk. In a post on X, Musk reposted and reaffirmed an unsubstantiated claim by the Trump-aligned America First Legal, which introduced a lawsuit suing 15 Arizona counties for allegedly refusing to remove undocumented migrants from voter rolls. Richer responded on X in September, saying he’s previously offered his office as a resource to Musk to correct previous claims the CEO has made about Arizona elections.

 

“Sadly, these lawsuits are no longer interested in actually winning,” he said. “They’re just PR stunts that masquerade as lawsuits.”But there’s a downside to officials trying to combat false claims over social media. Trying to put out misinformation fires is a poor allocation of time and energy from officials concerned with continuing to organize an election just days away, saidLarry Norden of New York University School of Law’s Brennan Center for Justice.(Ah Ha Ha Ha they should rename it Brennan Center of Vote Cheating but lying about it.)

 

“It’s distracting,” Norden told ABC. “We are putting a huge load on election officials, and if, on top of that, they have to respond to a guy who boosts his own content on his own network to spread lies, it’s distracting from the essential work that they need to do. That is troubling.”

 

https://archive.is/1U8vC#selection-947.0-1110.0

Is Richter a Werewolf, he looks like one?

Anonymous ID: 45ca61 Nov. 1, 2024, 8:32 a.m. No.21875694   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5763 >>5794 >>5875

Election surveys sent by MyPillow CEO-linked group prompt FBI referral

Election officials warn the survey effort could be "misleading."

ByJosh Margolin and Sasha Pezenik November 1, 2024, 6:03 AM

 

White powder isn't the only strange thing that has been sent to election officials across the country this season.A series of emails sent by a group led and funded by MyPillow CEO and election denier Mike Lindell have been referred to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, according to federal officials, after election officers across the country began finding what they said were misleading email messages. Those emails included a survey asking for, among other things, sensitive personal information from those tasked with overseeing the voting process and details about their offices' cybersecurity systems. The messages explained the group was looking to help boost the nation's election integrity.

 

In an early September email to local election officials, obtained by ABC News, Lindell's "Election Crime Bureau (ECB)" said the group was "investigating what steps have been taken" across the country to "ensure the security of the upcoming 2024 election." The email asked recipients to take a survey about the Center for Internet Security (CIS), a nonprofit focused on cybersecurity that has been working with election offices to prepare for next week's election and subsequent vote counting.

 

The survey asked if recipients have a "membership agreement" with CIS and its Elections Infrastructure Information Sharing and Analysis Center (EI-ISAC), an initiative funded by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to protect local election offices. It also asked for recipients' home addresses, what network and endpoint cybersecurity protections they had installed, and if those protections had been "provided by" CIS.

 

Within two hours of finding out about the survey,CIS put out an alert warning that its Cyber Threat Intelligence team had "received multiple reports" of the "Misleading Email to Election Officials" that could falsely "lead a recipient to believe" the note was from their EI-ISAC. The group recommended that staff "not click on any links in these emails or respond to them," and report any suspicious emails to their Security Operations Center.

 

CIS said it also notified the FBI and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), the branch of the Department of Homeland Security that is working with local election officials to safeguard the election.

CISA referred ABC News to the FBI for comment, which declined to do so.

Acting fast was a "top priority" to counteract any confusion sewn by the missives, Marci Andino, vice president of the EI-ISAC at CIS, told ABC News – not to mention the possibility of a phishing or swatting attempt.

 

"We are here to increase the cyber security posture of election officials," Andino said. "There's no legitimate reason why you would need their home address. They feared that they were being set up for swatting." In the dynamic and toxic threat environment in which the election is occurring, the survey's attempt to harvest details about elections' cybersecurity protections was also eyebrow-raising to election officers.

 

"That was a red flag for members," Andino said – since revealing how a given county protects its system could also help a potential malicious actor ferret out the vulnerabilities. Poll workers and election staff around the country have been receiving threats of physical violence and in many locations have had to undergo security training.

 

"I'm not sure if the questions in that survey crossed the line or not, but either way I'm not excited about information like that getting out to the public," said Joseph Kirk, the election supervisor in Bartow County, Georgia. He had received the ECB survey – it had landed in his spam folder

 

"We didn't do anything wrong and you can take that to the bank," Lindell said. "I just want to help save our country."

 

(all this because of a survey?sick people)

 

https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/election-surveys-mypillow-ceo-linked-group-prompt-fbi/story?id=115374587

Anonymous ID: 45ca61 Nov. 1, 2024, 8:38 a.m. No.21875712   🗄️.is 🔗kun

InteractivePolls @IAPolls2022

📊Final polling by @Rasmussen_Poll

 

PENNSYLVANIA

🟥 Trump: 49%

🟦 Harris: 47%

 

NEVADA

🟥 Trump: 49%

🟦 Harris: 47%

 

NORTH CAROLINA

🟥 Trump: 50%

🟦 Harris: 47%

——

PA Senate

🟦 Casey (inc): 46%

🟥 McCormick: 46%

 

NV Senate

🟦 Rosen (inc): 50%

🟥 Brown: 41%

 

NC Governor

🟦 Stein: 49%

🟥 Robinson: 40%

——

@AmericanThinker

| 10/25-30 | 2,367 LV

 

https://rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/partner_surveys/election_2024_trump_leads_in_pennsylvania_nevada_north_carolina

11:17 AM · Nov 1, 2024 ·22.3K Views

 

https://x.com/IAPolls2022/status/1852369493550338134