Wait, is she the same person as the "I saw food trucks, but they didn't have enough food" lady from the telly?Yep, look for yourself:
Yes, and you can see the case in the link above.
Wait, is she the same person as the "I saw food trucks, but they didn't have enough food" lady from the telly?Yep, look for yourself:
Yes, and you can see the case in the link above.
YesWait, is she the same person as the "I saw food trucks, but they didn't have enough food" lady from the telly?
Are you for real? POTUS is the COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF and you want soldiers do the tabulation? Just being present at the polling station is unacceptable. You know literally nothing about how free elections look like.The military would work better in the tabulation rooms. Nobody's going to sneak a USB around when the penalty for being caught doing so would be the firing squad.
Actually, let's just have the military do the actual tabulation, and have civilians be the watchers. Boom, problem solved.
No, it is not okay, because the credibility of a witness is a wider consideration of their general honesty and reliability than what they write on a statement. I'm sure her affidavit was written after consultation with lawyers, who potentially tidied it up. Her outburst in the hearing suggests she is prone to believing wild conspiracy theories, there is her obvious partisanship, and aggressively declaring to be true things she cannot reasonably ascertain. This context then has to be applied to her perception of events described in the affidavit.What she writes in her affidavit and what she says in the heat of the moment, on national television, in front of an unofficial (as in not a courtroom) cross-examination by House Reps, may be two different things, and that's okay.
So she's free to lie and distort without fear of repercussions to the hearing then? Okay.So yes, as far as her affidavit goes. What she says outside of that is not under penalty of perjury.
Quite likely we do. Giuliani possibly means just cases overseen by him personally. I would include other stuff from his allies - there is very likely to be co-ordination where relevant.Rudy would know, and he said the answer, at the time, was 3.
You and he must have different definitions of who "Trumps Team" consists of.
1) "Inconclusive" is not the same as falsified. This sort of detail is important, and that's why I say exaggerate and distort with respect to the poll watchers, although it applies here too. This is a deliberate attempt by that Twitterato to make things seem worse than they really are. This is similar to "Ron" posting that video and very clearly intimating fraud on Twitter, but when challenged by the alleged journalist (whom he later asked to show him her breasts), retreats to a very strict interpretation of his affidavit. Likewise, Ron's other... 'interesting' posts on Twitter suggest he might not be the most reliable and unbiased observer.Why do you think that?
That is completely not how that works.The military would work better in the tabulation rooms. Nobody's going to sneak a USB around when the penalty for being caught doing so would be the firing squad.
But it is very much how something else works, so there's that.That is completely not how that works.
I was never Trumpist. I never had any great desire to defend a man who's basically an average Democratic president. But when people pretend he's Hitler, they need a reality check. That being said, to those concerned, my low comment count lately is a combination of me being real life busy and these threads moving too freaking fast, and I don't feel like reading 7 pages of petty insults to get back up to speed every time I log on.Tstorm always struck me as a republican first, and "trumpist" when its convenient, and since mainstream reps don't seem to be disputing the outcome of presidential election...
I don't know if you are aware of this but the army are really good at infiltration. If you're worried about sneaking, the last people you should leave in charge is the army (except maybe the CIA.) They would be way more effective at stealing elections covertlyThe military would work better in the tabulation rooms. Nobody's going to sneak a USB around when the penalty for being caught doing so would be the firing squad.
Actually, let's just have the military do the actual tabulation, and have civilians be the watchers. Boom, problem solved.
Without meaning to derail this serious thread about important issues, but there's a fair few people claiming that the US military is losing those sorts of skills due to the nature of the wars they've been fighting for the last generation or more.I don't know if you are aware of this but the army are really good at infiltration.
True, though as special forces are only a small part of the US military, the generalisation stands, I think. Apparently camouflage discipline is suffering as well, and possibly small unit tactics. Most certainly there's a lack of experience in having to deal with serious enemy artillery or air power.I think it largely depends on what units you are looking at. Special Forces under JSOC are probably as good at infiltrating and remaining undetected as they always have been, whereas infantry units in general are likely to be less proficient in the day to day operations that their WW2/Korea predecessors were good at, such as fieldcraft and infiltration en masse.
So, this is based on the changing media treatment of mail-in ballots, rather than on any demonstrable evidence of mail-in ballots being insecure?For paper ballots, mostly.
What's unsafe and unsecure about this election, specifically, is the unprecedented numbers of mail-in ballots, which is conveniently thanks to covid.
For years, as I have shown, mail-in ballots were called unsecure and open to fraud. Everyone knew this. The media knew this. MIT knew this. But then, once covid happened, all of a sudden the narrative was pushed that they're "safe and secure" without any security upgrades or changes to the system.
Here's the audio;No, I haven't seen that. Can you link the video?
Matthew Brann & Rudy Giuliani said:Brann: What standard of review should I apply, and why? What standard of review should I apply in this case —
Giuliani: On a motion to dismiss? I mean I think the normal one, which is that you, you have to deem the factual allegations to be correct, and even if they are correct, you have to find that there’s no merit, no legal merit, no legal theory on which we can get relief.
Brann: Well let me ask you then, are you arguing strict scrutiny should apply here?
Giuliani: No, the normal scrutiny should apply. If we had alleged fraud, yes. But this is not a fraud case.
Brann: …So if that’s the case, why don’t Secretary Boockvar’s and the counties satisfy the standard of review you’re talking about? If it’s not strict scrutiny, and it’s the standard of review you’re implying, why don’t their actions satisfy this?
Giuliani: I’m sorry, I don’t really understand the question, your honor.
Brann: Well this is how I would look at it. I would think that it’s a standard of review of strict scrutiny, potentially. You’re not sure that that’s the case. I’m not imposing my...
Giuliani: Maybe I don’t understand what you mean by “strict”.
The part of my post immediately following the part you quoted started with the words "such as", and gave two examples.Such as?
There will be a decline in skills (or perhaps practical application, theory may be in a better state) and experience under any circumstance if they are not exercised. Arguably, in that sense, even low intensity conflict is preferable to none at all.Without meaning to derail this serious thread about important issues, but there's a fair few people claiming that the US military is losing those sorts of skills due to the nature of the wars they've been fighting for the last generation or more.
BothIs this thread still talking about the election results? Or about the government as a whole?
Ah, gotcha. I have some friends that wanted Trump to win, and boy were they going on about how Trump was going to win by suing the states and crap like that. I pointed out once that Trump is kinda a bad person and got something along the lines of this: "We support his beliefs, not the man himself." No matter what someone believes, if they can't make things happen or work well with others then they can't do much of anything besides piss people off now can they? I didn't want Hillary to win in 2016, but it wasn't like I wanted Trump to win. I feel like we haven't really had good choices for the election in a while.Both
Why, do you think that opens up an avenue for the vote to be manipulated? Are you afraid biased parties will tamper with the process and commit fraud?Are you for real? POTUS is the COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF and you want soldiers do the tabulation?
Well he doesn't seem to believe anything, except getting the crowd to like him. He didn't lock up Hilary, drain the swamp, or get Mexico to pay for the wall.Ah, gotcha. I have some friends that wanted Trump to win, and boy were they going on about how Trump was going to win by suing the states and crap like that. I pointed out once that Trump is kinda a bad person and got something along the lines of this: "We support his beliefs, not the man himself." No matter what someone believes, if they can't make things happen or work well with others then they can't do much of anything besides piss people off now can they? I didn't want Hillary to win in 2016, but it wasn't like I wanted Trump to win. I feel like we haven't really had good choices for the election in a while.