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xelalieNeilAlex 4 points ago +4 / -0

^^^^ This is I am 100% sure happened, when our 2016 Vice President election race was happening... In the middle of the night the losing candidate magically lost his lead as well!

This has to stop all around the world, fuck these globalists!

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Thermopylae_MMXX [S] 2 points ago +2 / -0

Smartmatic, a U.K.-based voting technology company with deep ties to George Soros, has provided voting technology in 16 states including battleground zones like Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Virginia. Other jurisdictions affected are California, District of Columbia, Illinois, Louisiana, Missouri, New Jersey, Oregon, Washington and Wisconsin.

In 2005, Smartmatic bought-out California-based Sequoia Voting Systems and entered the world of U.S. elections. Examples of its work are Venezuela, where it has been facilitating elections since 2004 when it “won a bid to provide Venezuela with a reliable voting system.” and Cook County, Illinois in 2006, Smartmatic signed what at the moment was the largest election automation contract in US history.” Cook County includes Chicago and its suburbs, a geographic zone that has historically and lately been subject to criticism for voter fraud.

Lord Mark Malloch-Brown vice-chairman of George Soros’s Investment Funds, as well as his Open Society Institute, a Vice-President at the World Bank, as Vice-Chairman of the World Economic Forum, chairs International Crisis Group and Centre for Global Development, distinguished fellow at the Yale Centre for the Study of Globalisation and is the author of “The Unfinished Global Revolution”.

In addition to a close relationship with Soros, Malloch-Brown has worked with consulting firms that are well-connected to Bill and Hillary Clinton. He was an international partner with the Sawyer-Miller consulting firm - Sawyer-Miller ran the communication contract for Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential run and the head of communications for Hillary Clinton’s unsuccessful 2008 presidential bid.

Smartmatic has already encountered controversy in the presidential contest. It ran the online balloting for the Utah Republican caucus last March, when many critics said it was impossible to secure personal electronic devices that are used to register and vote.