Election 2020 Election Fraud: Let's face it, this year will be a shitshow

f1onagher

Well-known member
The BBC has an item on the recount currently, with the helpful headline of "The story of Arizona's 'ridiculous" election recount" on the US & Canada page but loses the editorialization in the headline for the article page Arizona recount: Why Republicans are still tallying votes
Remember to archive links before sharing them. It doesn't matter if its an angry click or a gleeful click its still money in the parasites' pockets.

As for the actual story, if I had any doubts about the veracity of Arizona's elections the quite frankly seditious extremes the Democrats have gone to in order to spoil it would have convinced me otherwise.
 

Bacle

When the effort is no longer profitable...
Founder


So Dominion and Maricopa County are trying to veto the election audit by refusing to hand over the passwords to certain routers and machines, despite the AZ State Senate ordering them to and designating the Cyber Ninja's to conduct the audit.

This mess is showing why it is going to be very hard to ever figure out the real results of 2020's election, and how far the voting machine companies believe their power extends.
 

Zachowon

The Army Life for me! The POG life for me!
Founder
They have to give up a lot in thier lawsuit against My pillow guy.
So it would be better to do it now instead of then
 

LindyAF

Well-known member
They have to give up a lot in thier lawsuit against My pillow guy.
So it would be better to do it now instead of then

They say the issue is the firm doing the auditing, not giving up the passwords in general, which they say they have already done before with a different firm. (I only use "they say" here because I haven't verified it myself, I have no reason to think otherwise).
 

Zachowon

The Army Life for me! The POG life for me!
Founder
Do they? Because it seems like nobody has the power to force them to do so.
Wouldn't a judge's warrant be sufficient?
Yes, a judge warrant should do
They say the issue is the firm doing the auditing, not giving up the passwords in general, which they say they have already done before with a different firm. (I only use "they say" here because I haven't verified it myself, I have no reason to think otherwise).
Ahh
 

Duke Nukem

Hail to the king baby
1erFWGe5.jpeg


I guess the clowns that deleted the data didn't realize that doesn't get rid of it completely .
 

What's the sitch?

Well-known member
When I get rid of an old computer I manually disassemble the entire thing, cut all the wires into multiple pieces, take apart the motherboards and hard drives cut them apart as past I can and scrape/scratch/beat them with a crowbar and hope for the best. Even then I am never really sure if it was good enough if someone really wanted to spend time on it.

I also split the pieces over multiple garbage deliveries
 

Terthna

Professional Lurker
When I get rid of an old computer I manually disassemble the entire thing, cut all the wires into multiple pieces, take apart the motherboards and hard drives cut them apart as past I can and scrape/scratch/beat them with a crowbar and hope for the best. Even then I am never really sure if it was good enough if someone really wanted to spend time on it.

I also split the pieces over multiple garbage deliveries
You do realize that destroying anything besides your hard drives is utterly pointless; right? Because nothing else in your computer stores any data.
 

What's the sitch?

Well-known member
Making them have to scrounge for pieces and manually re attach it to another computer(instead of just using the one I have destroyed) reduces the odds an effort will be made in the first place(partially due to no longer resembling a computer). Compared to if I just wrecked the hard drive.

But yes I do realize most if not all the data is on the hard drive (supposedly).
 
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Terthna

Professional Lurker
Making them have to scrounge for pieces and manually re attach it to another computer(instead of just using the one I have destroyed) reduces the odds an effort will be made in the first place(partially due to no longer resembling a computer). Compared to if I just wrecked the hard drive.

But yes I do realize most if not all the data is on the hard drive (supposedly).
Not most, not supposedly; all. Every single speck of data, aside from the BIOS settings, is contained solely within your hard drive; I used to want to be an IT Technician, and you're damn near making me want to pull my hair out at all the wasted effort and computer components. Heck; there are ways to delete the data from your hard drives so thoroughly, that it would be exceedingly difficult (if not outright impossible) to recover anything from them.
 

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