There are now two usps whistleblowers stating that their distribution centers were intentionally backdating ballots to tge say before the election. They forced the machines to do this.
Wouldn't these manual overrides invalidate the data?
If they had envelopes in the first place, did you see Rudy's podcast yesterday? Can't remember if it was PA or MI or WI, but they had a huge stack, opened and exposed to the public, sitting on the sidewalk.
I have this service. It scans all mail to whatever location my change-of-address form says I live at. It scans the exterior of all my relatives mail in the same residence even though they have no idea I can see the exterior of every envelope they get and they never authorized it.
One of the duties I had working in a law office was processing incoming mail. If you send something to an old address and the correspondence is forwarded to a different address, USPS will send you a little postcard-looking document with a scanned image of the envelope, the address you used, and the correct address the correspondence was forwarded to.
There are now two usps whistleblowers stating that their distribution centers were intentionally backdating ballots to tge say before the election. They forced the machines to do this.
Wouldn't these manual overrides invalidate the data?
It would explain why they destroyed all those envelopes in PA.
If they had envelopes in the first place, did you see Rudy's podcast yesterday? Can't remember if it was PA or MI or WI, but they had a huge stack, opened and exposed to the public, sitting on the sidewalk.
I don’t know anything about the mail system, but I found this post about bulk mail tracking pretty interesting. https://thedonald.win/p/11PpPGZVVk/important-usps-imb-tracking-numb/
I have this service. It scans all mail to whatever location my change-of-address form says I live at. It scans the exterior of all my relatives mail in the same residence even though they have no idea I can see the exterior of every envelope they get and they never authorized it.
USPS updated their ability to track ALL mail after the Anthrax mailings.
Somebody has access to this info somewhere... question is; was the swamp drained enough to get to it? (Stuck in the mud?)
One of the duties I had working in a law office was processing incoming mail. If you send something to an old address and the correspondence is forwarded to a different address, USPS will send you a little postcard-looking document with a scanned image of the envelope, the address you used, and the correct address the correspondence was forwarded to.
I signed up for this program after I recently moved in to my new house. It's pretty useful to spot mail that should be getting to me, but does not.
I used informed delivery.
Unfortunately, it's not very reliable. I've received first class mail that wasn't included in the daily digest.
I don't know if it's because it wasn't scanned, or if it wasn't properly matched to my account and included in the digest.