I apologize, I really can't keep track of the difference between your arguments, SilentPony's arguments, Agema's arguments, and the arguments of all the other people in this topic.
Or, in fact, between those arguments and ones you've dreamt up during a fever.
Anything that isn't already publicly available. Let's have every signature made public. Every address. Every absentee application. Every ballot. Matt Braynard had to fundraise and pay tens of thousands of dollars to get access to all the data that he used in his examination.
Every... address and ballot made public. So, your solution is to dox the entire population of the US, and then end the fundamental democratic principle of the private ballot.
I was thinking more of the "why aren't they coming out and saying anything about the evidence we've already seen?" question. Their necks are on the line if they admit that fraud happened on their watch.
But in your scenario, yes, if an honest official wanted to call out another official, their neck wouldn't be on the line.
They would just be dismissed by the other higher-ups who were in on it, like all the other workers who tried to speak up about what they saw, and were dismissed.
Here's one example of that.
So we're back to just allegation, then. And that goes for the "evidence we've already seen"; the stuff we actually have already seen is so pathetically weak that we don't need anyone to specifically say it didn't happen. Half of it is just circumstantial allegation, often showing a complete lack of understanding of procedure (like that yahoo who complained that officials stopped them handwriting fucking lists of voters). The rest is really shitty, untransparent data analysis from people like Braynard. But even so, we do have officials coming out and stating that nothing untoward happened-- like at that State Park Arena voting centre.
There's nothing the witnesses could do. If they don't come out and give statements, you say they should do if they believe it was all fine. If they do come out and give statements, you say they're liars.
I don't remember any "context" that makes it okay to selectively enforce the rules with the intention to harm republicans and republicans only.
That didn't happen. This is just, yet again, regurgitating the allegation. Over and over. It doesn't become more persuasive the twentieth time.
I'm just talking about this one video of the lady telling the other workers to "just count".
Even speaking generally, no. I'll stop believing it's a conspiracy if an actual investigation happens.
No, you won't. There is nothing that can be done to convince you. As soon as the investigation were to conclude, you'd merely adjust the conspiracy to include those investigators.
Nobody is expecting you to believe that.
If those independents want to give testimony that contradicts the testimony we've already heard, they're free to do that. But they haven't.
By all means, let's pit contradicting testimony against each-other in a court of law and let the truth come out. Only one side doesn't want that. Republicans are happy to have their day in court, aren't they?
...no, they're not. They keep dropping the material allegations of fraud as soon as it gets to court.
So, what, exactly? You want defendants to pre-emptively send witnesses to court to present statements about... things they're not being officially accused of? The fundamental order of the justice system just in reverse? We're getting into Kafka's Trial territory.