Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 5:34 a.m. No.24692699   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2710 >>2714 >>2762 >>2821 >>2869 >>2908

>>24692638

>Eric Coomer Contradictions: 2022 vs 2026 Testimony

>>24692640

 

 

Mesa County, CO Findings Corroborated by Venezuela Whistleblower Disclosures

 

Patrick Colbeck

May 11, 2026

 

Tina Peters, former Mesa County Clerk, was convicted and sentenced to nine years in prison. Tina Peters honored her oath to the Constitution by exposing critical flaws in the election system. Instead of recognition, she faced relentless persecution. Her story is told in the documentary “Selection Code”.

See Selection Code

Same Election Theft Features Evident In Venezuela Also Found In Mesa County, CO

 

The forensic images of the Dominion Voting System Election Management System (EMS) Server obtained before and after the server was “updated” by Dominion technicians reveal a significant number of common features between the Smartmatic system allegedly used to steal elections in Venezuela and the Dominion EMS server implemented in Mesa County, CO. This correlation appears to validate assertions that electronic voting systems had been used to manipulate election results in the United States.

SAES Data Utility Tool

 

Mesa County forensic investigations documented that the Election Management System (EMS) server and vote tabulation database could be accessed, altered, and manipulated using admin credentials and standard database utilities—such as SQL Server Management Studio, which acts as an internal “utility tool” analogous to the SAES. This provided the capability to inject or bulk alter voting data outside standard channels, bypassing normal machine workflow and detection, enabling large-scale undetectable manipulation.

Database Manipulation and Batch Reprocessing

Log File Overwrites

Remote Access

Encryption and Password Vulnerabilities

Digital Ballot Image Manipulation

Foreign Oversight

Fake Voter Registrations

Manufactured Results

Selective Auditing

Foreign Supply Chain

Mesa County, CO EMS Server Forensic Analysis Reports

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 5:37 a.m. No.24692710   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2714 >>2762 >>2821 >>2869 >>2908

>>24692699

>Database Manipulation and Batch Reprocessing

Mesa County’s forensic analysis identified unauthorized creation of new adjudication and tabulation databases during ongoing elections, followed by the digital reloading of tens of thousands of ballot records. This process made the original voter intent unrecoverable, and allowed for selective reprocessing and potential injection of new records, invisible to ordinary officials or observers. The whistleblower described the use of Smartmatic’s “SAES data utility” to emulate voting machines, inject votes, and manipulate results by selectively processing or transmitting data without detection in Venezuela. Both described the use of system tools or utilities built for legitimate testing, but repurposed or misused to subvert election integrity, and both noted resulting broken chains of custody for thousands of ballots

>Log File Overwrites

Mesa County reports found critical system audit logs were set to small sizes and configured to auto-overwrite as new entries were generated, leading to erasure of election event records during counting and tabulation. The Venezuelan official testified that similar log-overwriting was configured in the Dominion system in the U.S., so that once the log filled, new data would erase previous information, making post-election audits impossible. In Venezuela, they often used a dedicated server to aggregate logs but noted that, in practice, no one would check those logs, negating auditability.

>Remote Access

Mesa County’s system was found to have 36 wireless devices enabled and network ports open to the world, allowing remote or even wireless alteration of databases using simple tools such as a cell phone, with minimal authentication and no effective firewalling against outside intrusion.

>Encryption and Password Vulnerabilities

Mesa’s analysis found exposed source code, plain-text passwords, and weak or self-signed encryption that could allow an attacker administrative access to the vote databases and facilitate undetected data manipulation. The Venezuelan testimony highlighted similar problems with Smartmatic—the source code was readable to anyone with access, and passwords were stored in plain text, making breaching the system trivial for insiders or attackers.

>Digital Ballot Image Manipulation

The Mesa County database and infrastructure allowed for the digital ballot images to be relinked or altered without modifying the associated audit data, meaning that manipulated digital images could be substituted into the record, with no reliable method for officials to detect changes. Venezuelan testimony confirmed the potential to change digital ballot representations in the database, making the audit of original votes or images effectively impossible—mirroring the manipulation seen in Mesa.

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 5:38 a.m. No.24692714   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2762 >>2821 >>2869 >>2908

>>24692699

>Mesa County, CO Findings Corroborated by Venezuela Whistleblower Disclosures

>>24692710

>Foreign Oversight

Both sources note that key Smartmatic engineers who built the system in Venezuela now work for Dominion or have advised on U.S. election systems, facilitating the transfer of techniques, vulnerabilities, and software components between Smartmatic, Sequoia, and Dominion.

>Fake Voter Registrations

Reports show vulnerabilities that enable the addition of phantom (non-existent) voters and ballots:

 

Adjudication database manipulation and missing hash records for ballot images provided a pathway to introduce ballots in numbers that did not match valid voter registration or chain of custody records.

 

Weak system-level authentication and lack of integrity audits for mail-in ballot batches allowed creation/import of untraceable “new ballots” or adjustment of voter records.

>Manufactured Results

Manipulation of results in Mesa County was facilitated by unrestricted capability to change, overwrite, or re-export results from the EMS and tabulator databases. The forensic team demonstrated the ability to generate “official results” on pre-election days or after polls had closed, often by selectively including or excluding batches—mirroring war room-style direction of result manipulation described for Venezuela.

>Selective Auditing

Auditors in Mesa County were denied full access to all system modules and forensic data; vendor and Secretary of State provided only pre-sanitized or “safe” databases and partial access during investigations, controlling the scope of independent review and obscuring core manipulation mechanisms. The process was tightly controlled, similar to the selective auditing resulting in superficial assurance and deep systemic manipulation cited by the Venezuelan whistleblower.

>Foreign Supply Chain

The Venezuelan whistleblower confirmed that Smartmatic and Dominion equipment, manufactured in China or Taiwan, often came with pre-configured firmware and internal modems, which could be covertly enabled—sometimes outside the control of software settings. This presents a supply chain and remote access threat that is undiscoverable by ordinary administrators or officials.

>Mesa County, CO EMS Server Forensic Analysis Reports

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 6:36 a.m. No.24692821   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2824 >>2838 >>2859 >>2869 >>2908

>>24692699

>>24692710

>>24692714

 

 

Pre-2020 Election Plans to Destroy Livelihoods of Trump Supporters

 

Patrick Colbeck

February 11, 2026

 

"We will use our positions of corporate prominence to lock out all Republicans from future corporate jobs, media interviews, etc."

Stuart Karaffa (he/him)

Designer

 

During the June 2020 timeframe, a national coalition of subversive organizations conducted what they referred to as “Election Simulations”. These simulations were conducted via video conferences that were recorded by a whistleblower and shared with journalist Millie Weaver. These sessions included plans for civil unrest, media manipulation, and leveraging insiders to contest election results. Their tactics included efforts todestroy the livelihood of “Trump supporters”. Trump supporters such as Mike Lindell appear to have been targeted by such tactics in the wake of the 2020 election.

 

These simulations appear to have been organized by Nadine Bloch who was affiliated with the leftist organization “Beautiful Trouble”. The “Election Simulation: Timeline to a Meltdown” video conference featuring Bloch as moderator included participants from all over the country representing many different organizations.

Beautiful Trouble is an international network and resource platform dedicated to empowering grassroots movements through creative, nonviolent activism. It provides tools, trainings, and strategic resources to help organizers make campaigns more effective, innovative, and “irresistible” by blending art, humor, mischief, joy, and strategic nonviolence.Origins and Format

 

It began as a collaborative book project: Beautiful Trouble: A Toolbox for Revolution (published in 2012 by OR Books, edited by Andrew Boyd and Dave Oswald Mitchell).

The book compiled insights from over 70 activists, artists, and strategists, along with 10+ grassroots organizations (e.g., The Yes Men/Yes Lab, Ruckus Society, Code Pink, The Other 98%, Beyond the Choir, Nonviolence International, and others).

It evolved into an open, evolving online toolbox (beautifultrouble.org), a strategy card deck/game, additional publications (like Beautiful Rising for Global South perspectives and Beautiful Solutions for liberation-focused ideas), and a global training network.

All core content is licensed under Creative Commons (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0), allowing free sharing and adaptation.

 

Mission and Focus

 

Core belief: People power, combined with creativity (humor, art, cultural resistance, guerrilla theater), can drive transformative social change and resist oppression, authoritarianism, inequality, and injustice.

Emphasizes nonviolent direct action, strategic planning, anti-oppression principles, intersectional solidarity, and maintaining nonviolent discipline.

Resources cover:

Tactics (e.g., flash mobs, blockades, dilemma actions, puppetry/”puppetista” work).

Principles (e.g., maintain nonviolent discipline, make the invisible visible, pillars of power).

Theories (e.g., revolutionary nonviolence, abolition, anti-oppression).

Stories of real campaigns (from Billionaires for Bush to Black Lives Matter creative actions, global protests).

Methodologies for organizing and building resilience.

 

Activities and Impact

 

Offers trainings (virtual/in-person, from short webinars to multi-day intensives) on strategic nonviolent action, creative campaigning, and movement-building. Over 15,000 people trained historically.

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 6:37 a.m. No.24692824   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2838 >>2843 >>2858 >>2859 >>2869 >>2908

>>24692821

>Pre-2020 Election Plans to Destroy Livelihoods of Trump Supporters

 

Supports movements worldwide (e.g., Paris, Harare, Los Angeles, São Paulo) and has been used in classrooms, protests, and campaigns.

Produced related works like multilingual card toolkits (e.g., Beautiful Action Trainer Modules for nonviolent workshops) and guides for digital activism or pandemic-era organizing.

Maintains an active presence on social media (Instagram @beautifultroublehq, Facebook) and partners with groups focused on justice, climate, abolition, and more.

As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit (Beautiful Trouble Inc., based in New York), it relies on donations and has reported modest revenues/expenses in public filings.

 

Key Figures

 

Andrew Boyd (co-founder, author, activist; also involved in Climate Clock).

Nadine Bloch (Training Director; artist-activist focused on creative cultural resistance, nonviolent strategy, and direct action; frequent contributor to Waging Nonviolence and related publications).

A dispersed, collaborative network of artist-activist-trainers rather than a traditional hierarchical organization.

 

Beautiful Trouble positions itself as a “DIY revolution” resource hub, inspiring activists to innovate while staying rooted in nonviolent, people-powered principles. It’s widely praised in progressive circles (e.g., by Naomi Klein) as elegant and practical for creative resistance.

 

https://electioncrimebureau.com/pre-2020-election-plans-to-destroy-livelihoods-of-trump-supporters/

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 6:45 a.m. No.24692843   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2858 >>2908

>>24692824

> NadineBloch(Training Director; artist-activist focused on creative cultural resistance, nonviolent strategy, and direct action; frequent contributor to Waging Nonviolence and related publications).

 

The nameBlochcame up on Consecha dig who are one of groups organizing Newark riots

Emily in this case. Related?

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 6:49 a.m. No.24692858   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2891

>>24692843

>>24692824

 

 

Nadine Bloch

nadine.jpg

 

ETC, Executive Training Conductor

 

Nadine Bloch is an outside-the-box activist artist, political community organizer, strategic nonviolent actionista and the Training Director for Beautiful Trouble. Her work explores the potent intersection of art and politics, where creative cultural resistance is not only effective political action, but also a powerful way to reclaim agency over our own lives, fight oppressive systems, and invest in our communities — all while having more fun than the other side! In addition to contributing content to Beautiful Trouble, Beautiful Rising, and We Are Many: Reflections on Movement Strategy from Occupation to Liberation (2012, AK Press), she is the author of Education & Training in Nonviolent Resistance (2016, USIP) and the co-author of SNAP: An Action Guide to Synergizing Nonviolent Action and Peacebuilding (2019, USIP.) Find more of her writing on arts & activism at WagingNonviolence.org.

 

https://beautifultrouble.org/bio/nadine-bloch

Anonymous ID: 8d113d June 8, 2026, 6:57 a.m. No.24692891   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908

>>24692858

>Nadine Bloch

 

Index of Interviews

 

Over a period of about sixteen months, beginning in October 1999, WTO History Project staff interviewed more than 80 organizers of and participants in the Seattle protests. The interviews were transcribed and nearly all of the interviewees gave their permission to post the transcripts on the Internet. These transcripts are available below in pdf format.

 

The Adobe Acrobat Reader may be downloaded for free by clicking here.

 

Additional interview transcripts not linked here are available from the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections (Collection: WTO Seattle, Accession Number 5177-003).

 

Viewing the Interview Transcripts

 

Click on Interviewee Name to open the interview

Click on search to perform a search on the interviewee's name within the digitized portion of the collection using the multimedia database CONTENTdm

Click on the organization name to perform a search on the organization name within the digitized portion of the collection using the multimedia database CONTENTdm

 

Interview Indexing

 

Click here to view the interview indexing in CONTENTdm

(but use the links below to read the interviews)

 

Note: Not all searches return results

 

All interviews may be used for academic and research purposes, provided the WTO History Project is credited with the material and contacted regarding its use.

 

Interviewee: Nadine Bloch

Affiliation: Direct Action Network / Ruckus Society

Interviewer: April Eaton

Date of interview: August 15, 2000

Interview Summary:

Longtime activist, puppet maker and artist Nadine Bloch worked with the Direct Action Network

(DAN) and the Ruckus Society in organizing WTO protests. DAN was an instigating force in

making the WTO protests a global and national call to action. The Ruckus Society organized a

pre-WTO action camp to train activists in the skills such as non-violent civil disobedience and

street theater. DAN’s key role in organizing the protests, Bloch says, was to provide the

framework to connect people and build strength in numbers, often using the Internet. Bloch

notes that DAN’s non-hierarchical approach teaches people that they can take their future in their

own hands by being creative and proactive. Bloch outlines her involvement in organizing non-

violent protests, the over-reaction of Seattle police, and attempts by DAN and the Ruckus

Society to draw attention to the WTO’s corporate agenda.

 

https://depts.washington.edu/wtohist/interview_index.htm