Canadian parliament sits on two sides of a room (The party of the government sits on the rightside of the Speaker). So it has to switch back and forth. Also parliamentary rules or conventions dictate that members address the speaker of the house and not the intended recipient (the Prime Minister in this instance). These probably throw off how the editting and camera work is done in comparison to America.
Ripley (Alien), Dana (Ghostbusters), Osbourne (Basic), Queen Amadalla (Star Wars Prequels), Leia (Star Wars Triology), Sara Connor (Terminator), Jo Harding (Twister), Lenina Huxley (Demolition Man)....
Could probably go on with portrayals of good female characters....
Crowder is usually good at giving us the time of his releases. There is no "soon" with him, unless it's something like his 'Change my mind" segments, or some undercover operation he used to do. However, he still wants them views.
I think the only thing that's really needed is the National guard to secure the room....
Anyone entering or leaving the area is searched (strip search if necessary), the door is locked and an armed guard standing ready.
Now you can no longer bring in a box of votes without it being logged in at the very least. Can't sneak it in in your lunch box.
Edit: Every single ballot box should be signed by atleast 2 poll workers selected by and from each party (4) as well as the head poll worker(s) from each party at the time the box is sealed.
Hell I'd just rent out a small hotel, lock the place down completely and have the counters stay for the night(s). Use their ball room or conference area for the counting.
Honestly what you guys need is no more mail in ballots, early voting only at government offices, voter ID, and the purple ink stuff. Oh and Federally regulated election guidelines (I would then divide elections into federal and state elections instead of all at once).
This is what I was thinking. They seem too tight, especially front and left, too do much manuvering that ought to be required for the job. Left and right look more like stewardesses than nurses (I assume there would be different "uniforms" for different types of nurses). The single piece long tight dress uniform (front) I think is out of place in modern day nursing. Back right looks normal though. Idk could just be the hospital policy on uniforms, but I've never had a nurse like these one (Canada).