Time for the self doxx as we prepare to go public with all of the information we've found proving election fraud.
I'm representing a group of data scientists and other volunteers who've been working on the problems we've seen since election night. Here's who I am, so you know that I've been with you guys since long before most of you have ever heard of the_donald:
Here was our first video giving a teaser as to the aspects of the steal: https://rumble.com/vbu6xh-election-night-errors-how-did-that-happen.html
Here was the second video going into data from Arizona: https://rumble.com/vbyvln-a-close-look-at-the-data-arizona.html
Here's the third video asking you to contact your legislators: https://rumble.com/vc2u2t-call-your-legislators-protect-the-republic.html
I'm asking for your feedback on our videos, your arguments for/against things, and your help to get our legislators to fulfill their constitutional duties and investigate the stolen election.
Thank you -- it's an anomaly in the dataset that we identified as well, but it appears to have an answer that is more complicated than can be resolved here. If you can, please keep digging, and see what insights you can bring to it -- DM me if you have anything about it you want to talk about.
We're focused on certain practical aspects of that data that can prove fraudulent activity while only being tied to hard data sources. For instance, we validate that data of the Arizona side to a timeseries from the AZ secretary of state site that happened to be scraped on election night here: https://github.com/az-data-guru/az_results_files
Excellent summary, Pede.