Anonymous ID: 22d8ed Nov. 8, 2018, 6:41 p.m. No.3809925   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9939 >>9975 >>0045 >>0221

>>3809819

4 generations in Cobb County, and it looks like I'm going to have to be the one who leaves this Kennesaw State-student and diversity-afflicted county behind.

Way to go, real estate developers. Lie in this traffic choked bed you made. Growth driven by sheer greed and nothing else. Real estate developers are the scum of the earth.

Anonymous ID: 22d8ed Nov. 8, 2018, 6:47 p.m. No.3810054   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0076 >>0170 >>0188 >>0207 >>0345 >>0416

Anon hypothesis:

It is possible that Homeland Security has been conducting a voter fraud investigation for months.

 

Supporting data:

In May 2017, POTUS signed EO # 13799:

 

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

 

The Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity (PEIC or PACEI), also called the Voter Fraud Commission, was a Presidential Commission established by Donald Trump that ran from May 11, 2017 to January 3, 2018. The Trump administration said the commission would review claims of voter fraud, improper registration, and voter suppression. The establishment of the commission followed through on previous discredited claims by Trump that millions of illegal immigrants had voted in the 2016 United States presidential election, costing him the popular vote. Vice President Mike Pence served as chair of the commission, while Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach served as vice chair and day-to-day administrator.

 

On June 28, 2017 Kobach wrote a letter in conjunction with the Department of Justice requesting personal voter information from every state. The request was met with significant bipartisan backlash and a majority of states refused to supply some or all of the information, citing privacy concerns or state laws.

 

Trump's creation of the commission was criticized by voting rights advocates, scholars and experts, and newspaper editorial boards as a pretext for, and prelude to, voter suppression.

 

On January 3, 2018, the commission was disbanded by Trump, with a statement from the White House blaming many states' refusal to turn over information as well as legal disputes. At that time Trump asked that the investigation be transferred to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which already holds much of the requested state voter data and oversees immigration records. The acting DHS press secretary said that Kobach would not be advising or working with DHS, and the White House said it would destroy all the state voter data collected by the Commission.

 

AHA YES, BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE:

 

https://www.usnews.com/news/politics/articles/2018-01-05/trump-ends-election-integrity-commission-but-voter-fraud-probe-continues

 

"In his executive order, however, Trump didn't shut down the investigation or acknowledge that voter fraud is a non-issue, as his critics had demanded. Instead, he turned the investigation over to the Department of Homeland Security, a cabinet-level agency that has access to much of the data the commission requested but couldn't get from the states.

 

The move triggered alarms among voting and civil rights advocates, who point out that the commission's work – which many on the left viewed as a pretext for a new round of voter-ID laws – can now continue behind closed doors, exempt from open meetings and public-records laws.

 

"Trump isn't giving up on his quest to remove people from the voter rolls," Ari Berman, an elections expert and investigative reporter, wrote in Mother Jones on Thursday. "The effort is just going underground."