Sweet! Well done.
If you're carpooling from any of the remote rally points, masks and hand washing prior to eating shared food is good advice.
Crack the windows too (mimutemen and cowboy routes just blast the heat at your feet).
Especially if you will be confined with elderly relatives /in-laws when you return - - or just avoid them for two weeks after.
Thanks for sharing!
OP: on Friday night someone posted they had airline points to spare and offered them to anyone traveling to DC for the rally.
I don't have the link handy.
Thanks your primer, saved and printed!
Species: Pedetops memelordex Genus: Agilus Family: Tuba Order: MMMMMMMMMMMMMDCCCXLVIII Class: Navigator Phylum: Murus Kingdom: TDW Domain: USA
There were multiple crossings at various points, and only one was successful. Listen to this: https://vimeo.com/19990414#t=1325s
I like the change, too many Twitter reposts here.
Don't care what image is used, just want to skip to our original posts.
I know where to find twitter if I need to.
Also, if the unredacted EO-mandated will be released to the American public, I expect that to happen before 1/6 so we can petition our Congress. And we are entitled to see that complete report without redactions.
My guess is 1/2.
Sounds like there will be a vacancy in your IT dept soon.
Here's my take:
States appoint their Electors per Article II, and they do so however they decide.
Per 12th Amendment, Pence announces the official state-sanctioned EC outcome frome each to the joint session. He does not choose. Also per 12th, objections to any state EC result are settled with separate meetings. OP cites last example of this situation and that was decided by vote per Representative and Senator. Regarding majority of EC votes that survive objection, the 12th includes the phrase "whole number of Electors appointed". I take that to mean to total number of state-sanctioned EC votes reported. This year that is 538, so majority is 270. If neither candidate has that number, 12th Amendment states House delegations choose President, 26 to win.
20th Amendment puts timelines and conditions on winners, as well as contingencies for death of a candidate. Winners must be qualified, so maybe Binden's mental state or the immigration status of Harris' parents at time of her birth become an issue.
Anyway, u/AbrahamLincoln calls out a major hurdle during a contested election in this post. The onus is on each state to get their result right, and there is a high bar required for Congress to invalidate an EC outcome reported by any given state.
You're right the debate I've seen in other TDW comment threads centers on the phrase "whole number of Electors appointed".
To the glowie monitoring this site today, please congratulate Chris Hoffman, Special Agent in Charge, FBI, Cincinnati Division and his team on their work combating this IP theft.
Snowden's dump was cherry picked to find this, which was used to push "US military are war criminals" propaganda:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/apr/05/wikileaks-us-army-iraq-attack
Then he ran away to Russia:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/02/world/europe/edward-snowden-russia-citizenship.html
Number of House Representatives is capped at 435 -- see https://history.house.gov/Historical-Highlights/1901-1950/The-Permanent-Apportionment-Act-of-1929/
Sent you a DM with my guess.
There is a nice pre-game chant just barely audible starting at +5:40 elapsed https://youtu.be/dwnISPJomw4?t=340
Got some sleep and dug into the topic a bit more. I see at https://usconstitution.net/constam.html there are "four paths for an amendment":
- Proposal by convention of states, ratification by state conventions
- Proposal by convention of states, ratification by state legislatures
- Proposal by Congress, ratification by state conventions
- Proposal by Congress, ratification by state legislatures
Potential landmine here is "state conventions" -- from https://usconstitution.net/consttop_acon.html
A state convention differs from the state legislature in that it is usually an entirely separate body from the legislature. This introduces a different political dynamic into the amendment process.
But, as above, this is not unique to constitutional convention.
What is unique to a constitutional convention is the scope of change: possibly many amendments instead of just one.
Definitely term limits. I'm thinking one and done for President and Senators. Two for Reps.
Voter ID might be a special type of Real ID obtained with proof of citizenship and current address as of 30 days prior to election, including "a common machine-readable technology, with defined minimum data elements" for scanning at polling place check in or required to request absentee ballot.
I also think we might loose the 2nd Amendment. I can't recall the threshold but I think its lower during a convention.
My number is arbitrary but at the risk of hijacking your post here is some context for a lower ratio:
House Reapportionment to achieve and maintain 75k people:1 Rep ratio, instead of 750k:1
Thanks for sharing. Arizona video is intriguing. I found the segment from +1:30 to +2:45 elapsed especially clear. The transition at +2:15 elapsed is brilliant. The absentee pre-load charge has no context in the video, but seems fundamental to the presentation's theme. Is that an intentional omission?
I'd like to see the data attribution segment that follows (+2:56 elapsed) setup with a statement like the bullet on the summary slide highlighting that the data your team analyzed is the data on which SOS certified. That is essential and deserves stating at the start of the segment. The breakdown from Javascript to json to spreadsheet is great.
Was the term "Voter Fraud" preferred to "Election Fraud"?
Looking forward to watching your team's other videos later tonight.