The main concern with mail ballots is they break the chain of custody. They could be coming from anywhere, even from shops out-of-state.
The main fraud takes place inside the tabulators, and over the internet. Then the paper companies that make the ballots kick into gear, and print pre-voted ballots to match the manipulated result, and th…
The main concern with mail ballots is they break the chain of custody. They could be coming from anywhere, even from shops out-of-state.
The main fraud takes place inside the tabulators, and over the internet. Then the paper companies that make the ballots kick into gear, and print pre-voted ballots to match the manipulated result, and the ballots are shipped to the counting centers, so they can be mixed into the batches of real ballots, so any recount will give the desired result.
It's election fraud on an industrial scale, in a command-and-control system. This isn't the same 'ole "the same voters coming in to vote as dead people" scheme that used to exist in corrupt locales. This is "cheat anywhere and everywhere," and it doesn't take many people to pull off.
The best answer is get rid of the digital election systems, and go old-fashioned: paper ballots, same-day voting, and one-day counting.
The main concern with mail ballots is they break the chain of custody. They could be coming from anywhere, even from shops out-of-state.
The main fraud takes place inside the tabulators, and over the internet. Then the paper companies that make the ballots kick into gear, and print pre-voted ballots to match the manipulated result, and the ballots are shipped to the counting centers, so they can be mixed into the batches of real ballots, so any recount will give the desired result.
It's election fraud on an industrial scale, in a command-and-control system. This isn't the same 'ole "the same voters coming in to vote as dead people" scheme that used to exist in corrupt locales. This is "cheat anywhere and everywhere," and it doesn't take many people to pull off.
The best answer is get rid of the digital election systems, and go old-fashioned: paper ballots, same-day voting, and one-day counting.