What's my argument here, then?
It took 4 days to come close to certifying the elections by the MSM. Very much africa-tier. It's called election-day, not election-week.
In this exchange? Your argument essentially amounts to a glorified "no you" wherein you're positing that the electoral shenanigans are on Democrats rather than Trump et al, and that they're simply objecting to him trying to overturn their chicanery. Generously, we might see this as reflective of your apparent lack of research into the subject matter.
I'll be blunt, Iron. You've made it clear that you don't have any practical understanding of how the process works, and by all appearances no real desire to learn it. For instance, it's called Election Day because that's the day that votes are
cast, not because that's when the definitive results have to be known and announced. The Trump campaign called foul, and that's evidently all you needed to believe them. You don't know the timeframes involved. You don't seem to give a damn about the exacerbating circumstances that would affect those timeframes, such as COVID's role in making this a record setting year for mail-in votes, efforts in the weeks leading up to the election to cripple the Post Office's ability to perform its duties and thus delay the arrival of mail-in votes by forbidding overtime, removing public mailboxes, reducing staff, and throwing out mail sorters. Never mind that courts ruled to pass a deadline extension so as to account for the delays in mail delivery expected as a result of those factors so long as the evidence indicated that the mail-in ballots had been in the mail by Nov 3.
Nor do you apparently care to do the due diligence that would tell you just how transparently baseless (see Donald J. Trump for President Inc. v. Philadelphia County Board of Elections), toothless (none of the suits have a scope that would overturn the results), and frankly bizarre the Trump campaign and its supporters' suits have been. There's literally a case where a woman demanded that her state stop counting votes because she claimed to believe her neighbor had illicitly cast her vote for her. Said vote had been signature verified and the signature was a match for what they had on file. When she talked to election officials about it on Oct 28 and disputed that it was actually her ballot, they gave her the option to challenge her ballot and cast a new provisional ballot, she refused...and then claimed to have been simply turned away from the polls. Setting aside that she's effectively suing the state over her own deliberate inaction, the demanded relief has absolutely
nothing to do with her case and is so far outside its scope as to make it hard to believe that it wasn't a flimsy excuse for partisan action.
And that's before we even get into the fact that the only 'evidence' many of these cases brought to the table doesn't actually qualify as such. For instance, let's take the case predicated on the star witness claimed that an unknown individual had allegedly heard discussions about voter fraud. That's not just inadmissible hearsay, it's inadmissible hearsay
of inadmissible hearsay. To quote the court itself: "This 'supplemental evidence' is inadmissible as hearsay. The assertion that Connarn was informed by an unknown individual what 'other hired poll workers at her table' had been told, is inadmissible hearsay within hearsay, and plaintiffs have provided no hearsay exception for either level of hearsay that would warrant consideration of the evidence. See MRE 801(c)"
And you want to cite delay in the certification?
That's on Trump et al and his supporters, and it again ended up being predicated on the plaintiff making shit up whole cloth. Or to quote the court directly: the plaintiffs did "not offer any affidavits or specific eyewitness evidence to substantiate their assertions ... Plaintiffs' allegation is mere speculation. Plaintiffs' pleadings do not set forth a cause of action" See also Donald J. Trump for President v. Benson, and Donald J. Trump for President v. Boockvar. Or we could perhaps talk about the two Republicans on the Michigan Board of State Canvassers, who were holding up that state's certification on the explicit grounds of Trump's
long-debunked rhetoric and who by their own accounts have been getting calls from Republicans to convince them not to certify the vote. See what I mean about you not doing your homework?
Moreover, it's worth recalling that Trump does this song and dance literally
every time he competes, and especially if he doesn't win. The guy was railing against how the 2016 election was
obviously rigged against him in the weeks leading up to the 2016 election (and months before this one). Curiously, as soon as he won the electoral college those claims evaporated and he started bragging about how resounding his victory was. When he found out that he lost the popular vote, he started claiming that he
actually won the popular vote, it was just that
millions of illegitimate votes made it seem otherwise (a claim he pulled out of nowhere and has never been able to substantiate). He railed against the Emmys as rigged against him because the Apprentice lost to the Amazing Race in 2004-2006. Any time he doesn't like the results, he claims the results only happened because of foul play. He claimed that Obama's reelection in 2012 was proof that America was not really a democracy and that the American people needed to "fight like hell and stop this great and disgusting injustice". He claimed that he didn't actually lose the Iowa Caucus to Ted Cruz, but that Cruz stole it, and that - wait for it - the results should be invalidated (sound familiar?). "Based on the fraud committed by Senator Ted Cruz during the Iowa Caucus, either a new election should take place or Cruz results nullified." Hell, for this election he actually laid it bare that he'd assume the election to be fair if he won but unfair if he lost. "The only way we're going to lose this election is if the election is rigged".
Every. Goddamn. Time. It's always "Heads I win. Tails they cheated". And it's always a baseless claim he jumps out the gate with. No evidence, he just assumes it to be true for the sake of his ego. This case is no different. As shown repeatedly in court, they don't actually have evidence of large scale fraud. They're simply refusing to accept that Trump could have lost legitimately and are working backwards from that conclusion to speculate that large scale fraud
must exist, and that that without it Trump would have not only won but would have had a landslide victory in which he won by "millions of votes".
It's the same canard Trump pulled with the Emmys. The same one Trump pulled with Obama's reelection. And the Iowa Caucus. And the 2016 election until Trump winning the electoral college made them immediately change their tune. And
then, it's just like they did with the popular vote after that. Let me reemphasize that: As soon as he learned of the results he immediately went from "the results will be fraudulent" to "the part I won is legitimate but the part I didn't win is fraudulent". "Heads I win. Tails they cheated". Or, in his own words months ago, "The only way we can lose is if cheating goes on". They're
brazenly throwing shit at the wall and hoping that something will stick. How many times does he have to pull this stunt before you start being skeptical and actually give his claims a long hard look instead of simply assuming them to be true?