>>9658775 lb
>he is still theoretically working in the best interest of the country?
He never was.
>>9658775 lb
>he is still theoretically working in the best interest of the country?
He never was.
>>9658141 lb
>The sources said foreign governments can analyze this information, and understand how the US government (USG) collection is done, and may change the way they communicate, effectively going dark.
Too late. It's already been read from the WH lawn.
Someone in the PLA has prolly already read it twice by now.
7:29
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xoXvn32L55A
June 1, 2020
Looks like a hairlline to me.
By getting as many healthy & intelligent patriots working as volunteers inside as many boards of elections as possible. The time to act is now.
This story was released 1 hour ago.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/investigations/2020/06/18/coronavirus-election-workers-often-higher-age-risk/3206270001/
COVID has the potential to disrupt Election Day with unexpectedly undermanned polling stations if infected poll workers can't show up, or if healthy poll workers decide the risk of getting infected by voters is too great. The concern is underscored by the demographics of the nation's Election Day poll workers: One in every four is 70 or older, according to federal Elections Assistance Commission data, and COVID-19 has proven to be especially deadly to the elderly.
Should older poll workers stay home, some precincts will simply close, creating longer lines at the remaining poll locations and potentially disenfranchising voters. That, in turn, can also push more voters into a single closed building, creating another COVID risk factor.
Local election officials across the country are only now recruiting for the November contest, so it's not yet known whether orders of masks, gloves, hand sanitizers and other protective gear will keep older poll workers feeling safe enough to come back.
Poll workers over the age of 60 have for years been a boon to the elections officials needing people to man polling locations. People in their 60s, 70s, 80s and older make up more than half of election day poll workers in the District of Columbia and 31 states submitting poll worker ages to the federal Elections Assistance Commission.
"A lot of seniors have more flexibility in their schedules," said Miami-Dade County Florida Deputy Supervisor of Elections Suzy Trutie. "You could be looking at a two to three week commitment."
Even before COVID's appearance, recruiting poll workers was a perennial challenge, and age a key concern. In Big Horn County, Wyoming, long time workers โare getting too old to work or have died,โ an election official wrote in a 2018 report to the Elections Assistance Commission.