Happy thread :)

Status
Not open for further replies.

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
i don't know either. when the "massive fraud" is found in the umpteenth GA vote audit maybe? they had to pause the counting because of a school prom (i think).

a twitter post i saw said tRump is mistaking the word reinstated for indicted. lamo
yeah that was Arizona and they had to store ballots next to where they bar-b-que. i swear to God on my children; that's how fvcking maniacal they are.
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
I love that they'll have to spend tens of millions to replace machines violated by non-professionals
Yep. It's going to be pretty tough explaining to the Arizona tax payer the millions upon millions of dollars they spent on this complete debacle.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Yep. It's going to be pretty tough explaining to the Arizona tax payer the millions upon millions of dollars they spent on this complete debacle.
It's going to be tough explaining where the money is coming from but the people behind this sham claim it's mostly coming from unnamed private sources. One wealthy donor could easily cover the costs, assuming Cyber Ninjas ever finishes the work. Seems as if they are taking their sweet time. lulz. Another dupe is getting soaked. People who inherit wealth are often incapable of managing it well.


The GOP-controlled Arizona Senate allocated $150,000 to the audit, one third paid up front. But that money was expected to cover just a fraction of the work. Now, as state officials project that the audit will continue into the summer, with just 500,000 of the 2.1 million ballots hand-counted to date, the costs keep climbing.


Bennett, the state spokesman for the audit and a GOP politician who served as Arizona's secretary of state from 2009 to 2015, said that the release of the total cost "is really not the Senate's responsibility." He said it's up to Cyber Ninjas whether to disclose how much in funds it's receiving and from where. So far, Cyber Ninjas has not done so, nor responded to CNN requests for that information. Bennett did say, "we're working on it."

"They are receiving money from opaque sources, and they are not disclosing that money," David Becker, a former voting-rights attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice and executive director of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation & Research, said of the Senate. "They can say it isn't coming to the Arizona Senate, but they're facilitating it; this would never have happened but for the Arizona Senate." Becker said it should be concerning that the Senate "handed ballots over to an inexperienced out-of-state firm and then said, 'fundraise off this, get as much money as you can.'"
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Man charged after confrontation over drone with sex toy at campaign event
New Mexico police arrested and charged a man over a confrontation involving a drone equipped with a sex toy at a campaign event, multiple outlets reported on Thursday.

According to the Bernalillo County Sheriff Office’s report, Bernalillo County Sheriff Manuel Gonzales III was speaking at his mayoral campaign event when a drone with a sex toy attached began hovering over him.

The owner of the drone, Kaelan Ashby Dreyer, 20, tried to grab the device but turned his attention to Gonzales, at which point he took a swing at the sheriff and started to yell statements at him, including “he’s a tyrant.”

After Gonzalez was struck, Dreyer was at some pinned to the ground and detained. Police then took the suspect into custody, according to the report.

Dreyer was charged with petty misdemeanor battery and misdemeanor resisting, evading or obstructing an officer.

He said he never intended to hit Gonzales but was upset over a question Gonzales was answering. According to the police report, “he did ball his fist and was just going to swing them through the air and leave the premises."
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top