Tuesday, November 17, 2020

HOW MANY VOTES????

A new add to the "daily read" list is meaning in history.  The author is retired FEEB who spent some time in SE Wisconsin.  You'll notice that he has his head screwed on straight.  IMHO.

So he suggests that we ought to look at an essay in American Thinker.  It's about numbers.

Of voters.  Total.  Nationwide.

Sit down.

Let's take a glance at past presidential voting totals and compare them to this year's:

2008: 129,500,000.

2012: 127,000,000.

2016: 129,000,000.

Got the baseline?  Remember, '08 was the first Obama election.  And '16 was the first chance to vote a woman (I know) into the Presidency.

So what's the number for THIS year?

SIT DOWN!!

2020: To date (November 16) — 151,890,753 — and the vote count still isn't complete, because California is still corruptly continuing to harvest votes and won't be done until almost Christmas!

ONE HUNDRED FIFTY ONE MILLION, EIGHT HUNDRED NINETY THOUSAND, SEVEN HUNDRED FIFTY THREE............and counting.

Nothing to see here.  Move along.

You'd think that Gina Haspel would have better control of her Election Fraud machinery than that.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not surprising in the least. Trump and Biden weren't well liked by the opposing side, so they came out in droves. Funny, because if Trump had won with those same number that you suggest are unbelievable, you would go into spin narrative and say the record numbers only show his popularity.

Dad29 said...

No, they did not "come out in droves." Plenty of proof that the machines did all the work--along with some very damn busy printing-presses in Georgia.

Next?

Anonymous said...

The reality is that the American electorate came out in droves.

Trump stated 100 percent he would win no matter what. If he won, there was no fraud. If he lost, there was massive fraud. That is insane. And the fact that Republican candidates performed better than Trump in down-ballot races means voters split their votes. Enough Republicans/Blue Dog Democrats had made up their minds in the weeks before the election that Trump was not what they expected of a president and voted accordingly. And do not forget increased black turnout rates and Trump’s drop in support among white men.