>>9326604 (lb)
I think I know what to do.
Just haven't done it yet. I think tomorrow is the day I start.
Hope when I do, Q team and Anons will back me up.
Lead by example.
Sure!
www.Twitter.com
There's your portal. It's only fun if you participate in the discussion!
no no no
no violence.
warfare = getting back into fucking with libtards on social media
I just want to do ALL the platforms, and it's a big task. Haven't made time to set it all up on the ghost computer yet
We don't need violence to prove a point.
That's [their] only retaliation to the truth.
o7
You could gather a lot of evidence from here and elsewhere, then make a flyer to hand out in public-
Put it up in public places like bulletin boards (grocery stores, churches, schools, or hand them out etc)
Small bites of hard-hitting info + a fitting graphic = the most powerful way to pass a message.
There's a really interesting story floating around where a postal worker was saying how the ballots that were mailed out were ending up all over the place, unorganized.
That might be a good one to get started.
I can't find it right now, but here's a new one I didn't know til now:
https://www.whsv.com/content/news/Pendleton-County-mail-carrier-charged-with-altering-absentee-ballot-requests-570777221.html
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (WHSV) — Days after West Virginia's secretary of state announced that his office was investigating an absentee ballot fraud scheme connected to the state's mass effort to send absentee ballot applications to all registered voters, a Pendleton County mail carrier is charged with attempted election fraud.
The Department of Justice announced on Tuesday that 47-year-old Thomas Cooper, a mail carrier for Pendleton County, has been charged with attempted election fraud.