Anonymous ID: dec7ed May 17, 2019, 9:12 a.m. No.6521545   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Q!!mG7VJxZNCI

12 Dec 2018 - 4:10:18 PM

 

Anonymous

12 Dec 2018 - 4:08:08 PM

>>4280189

Will voter fraud in CA ever be brought to light?

 

>>4281387

Yes.

"Watch CA" was deliberate.

Q

 

Huge new string of criminalities surround California's failed 'motor-voter' system

 

California's election has unsettled many, given the role of ballot-harvesting in supposedly flipping Reagan-country Orange County entirely blue in the last midterm.

 

But the details rolling out now are getting far more disturbing. RealClearPolitics investigative reporter Susan Crabtree has put together a string of criminalities surrounding the way California runs its elections which makes one wonder if California has adopted the Venezuela Model of electoral goverance.

 

She starts with a sickening new report that California's election was hacked through its "motor-voter' system, the system the state has to register as many votes as possible. If a California resident applies for a drivers license in the state, he (or she) gets registered to vote whether he likes it or not. An applicant can only say 'no' to the registration, not 'yes,' the 'yes' is embedded into the system. It's a set-up that relies on the "honor system" for a voter's claims of valid citizenship to vote and there is no verification.

 

Naturally, such a system is vulnerable to foreign cyberattacks from abroad and one actually happened, from Croatia, and it was one they tried to cover up.

 

Up until now, most of us in this state have been pretty confident that our election was hack-proof because it involves paper ballots filled in with a stylus pen on punch-card. It's pokey, but no one can change the ballot a voter casts. This hack is done at a higher point upstream in the system, where voters have no control, and they can't even watch their vote being changed by the computer system (as the Venezuelans could) to know there was fraud going on.

 

Here's the other disturbing implication of the hack - Crabtree notes that activists say there now are privacy concerns. What a normal person might ask from that is whether some Big Brother manipulating this hackable system might be knowing and recording just how you vote. If hackers can do it, you can bet the state counting the ballots can do it.

 

It's certainly cause for concern.

 

One can only hope that the slew of lawsuits wending their way through the state's courts can have an impact. There are quite a few fair-minded judges in the state and one can only hope that a case lands on one of their dockets.

 

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2019/05/huge_new_string_of_criminalities_surrounding_californias_failed_motorvoter_system.html

 

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2019/05/17/californias_botched_motor-voter_rollout_hovers_over_2020_140349.html

Anonymous ID: dec7ed May 17, 2019, 9:23 a.m. No.6521616   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1659 >>1774

Appeals court rules Trump end of DACA was unlawful

 

The ruling comes as the legal battle over the termination of DACA continues. The Supreme Court is weighing whether to hear several cases over the end of the program.

 

https://thehill.com/latino/444239-appeals-court-rules-trump-end-of-daca-was-unlawful

 

USSC here we come!

Anonymous ID: dec7ed May 17, 2019, 9:43 a.m. No.6521746   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Federal government awards funds for 2018 fires, wind events

 

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – This week, the federal government announced it is making available more than $491 million in assistance grants for major 2018 California wildland fires and wind events, including last year’s Mendocino Complex fires.

The award for California was part of nearly $1.5 billion in funding awarded by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development to support seven states in their recovery from major disasters that occurred last year, from Hurricane Michael and Hurricane Florence, to California’s devastating wildland fires, among them, the Camp, Carr and Mendocino Complex.

HUD said the funds are provided through its Community Development Block Grant – Disaster Recovery Program and will address seriously damaged housing, businesses and infrastructure in hard-hit areas of these states.

The agency said the program requires grantees to develop “thoughtful recovery plans informed by local residents.”

“Last year’s disasters left damaged homes, businesses and infrastructure in their wake,” said HUD Secretary Ben Carson. “These recovery dollars will help the hardest-hit communities in these states and allow for residents to put their lives back together again.”

California received approximately $491,816,000 for two separately declared disasters.

 

https://lakeconews.com/index.php/news/61205-federal-government-awards-funds-for-2018-fires-wind-events