And I recently bought a new popcorn machine for my kitchen...
Uh, I voted for GEOTUS as well as my other single female friends. Now maybe you saw some people that identified as women voting Democrat.
Oh, I didn’t know that. But at time I needed that, the iPod hadn’t even been invented! :-p
Sorry to hear that! :-(
Let’s sponsor RSBN to broadcast a MAGA Thanksgiving parade we patriots can start participating in, beginning next year. :-)
Make sure you have a backup recording of those voicemails. Some years back I’d heard of a family whose young adult daughter had died and they kept her voicemails...only a few years later the phone company had some glitch and all were deleted.
My parents are both gone and though I have no voicemails, I have cassette recordings of their voices (there were no mp3s back then).
I had to keep scrolling down then found the text.
Biden is suffering from Electoral Disfunction.
Probably why they did OCR was so the text could be searchable by computer or on website/online search engine. Had just images been released, there would’ve been no way of quickly indexing the content.
Now is he going to start sniffing, grabbing, and harrassing himself xerself??
Hey, why bother with unemployed Hollywood actors? Just import all those people living on the streets in San Francisco and make them Biden’s staff. Not only will it clean up the area, but Biden and they could hold common dialogues, since neither can be understood by anyone else through their mumblings and incoherent ramblings anyway.
If you want a bigger picture of it all, I was doing some "digging" tonight through some old online newspapers. While I was commenting on a post (https://thedonald.win/p/11QRkHo4m8/who-the-fuck-wrote-this-2006-off/), I detailed how I found lots of interesting online articles about Smartmatic, even back to 2004.
Tell anyone thinking it's relevant that it's as relevant as the World Series being scored by how many total runs each team made in the total Series, not by how many games were won by each team.
But that one's not a dog named Tucker.
This is the only Tucker I'll watch anymore:
I was about to post this and the servers went down. I think Smartmatic knew I was writing about them. :-P So I'm posting a copy I made of what I was going to post.
Hey, I think all of us need to follow up on this. These articles are really interesting. I noticed some of these "free" clips had been done just days ago. We need to get all of these articles (all 400+) out to the public.
This article I just read, from 20 April 2004, was telling how Smartmatic of Boca Raton, FL was making untested voting machines and got Venezuela to scrap their 6 year old voting machines in exchange for touch-screen ones "from a tiny South Florida company whose machines have never been used in an election anywhere."
It continues..."The switch --coming as President Hugo Chavez maneuvers to avoid a recall referendum--has sparked a fury among his opponents who say the new machines from Boca Raton-based Smartmatic Corp could be used to manipulate the tally in a recall vote and other elections."
In a secret selection process, a five-member board of Venezuela's election council had approved the Smartmatic machines, with two of the five voting against it. There had been no disclosure who the contract bidders were, nor information given about the machines at time of the selection.
It goes on to say that Smartmatic's "partners" were publicly owned CANTV telephone monopoly and Bizta, a private Venezuelan software firm. Also partnered with Santander-Serfin Bank (of Mexico). Other names associated with Smartmatic's Murgica were Robert Cook, former Unisys executive. It says Smartmatic incorporated in 2000, all five board members, including Murgica and his dad, were listed at the same Boca Raton home address.
And it mentions John Hopkins University computer science professor Aviel Rubin as studying voting systems and stating that the printing of a paper receipt is important for a secure voting system. However, he also says a printer doesn't guarantee a fraud-proof election. He'd never heard of the company and implied a machine like that could have ability to do fraud. "Somebody writes the software in the machines, and then you don't know what the software is doing. It can pretend to be working all day and then send out the wrong results at the end of the day."
Good news: a subscriber "clipped" these articles below. That means the article is free for others to view without a subscription, just as long as they're registered. So I'll be able to view these images for free:
Clipping: "Smartmatic Venezuela has ownership 2of2" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Friday, May 28, 2004 - 203
Clipping: "US Panel Probels Smartmatic 1of2" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Saturday, July 15, 2006 - 23
Clipping: "US Probes Smartmatic 2of2" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Saturday, July 15, 2006 - 28
Clipping: "Smartmatic 2006" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Wednesday, March 29, 2006 - 158
Clipping: "Smartmatic wedding" El Nuevo Herald Miami, Florida Wednesday, July 21, 2004 - 6
Clipping: "Smartmatic Venezuela Chavez Recall 1of2" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Tuesday, April 20, 2004 - 1
Clipping: "Smartmatic Venezuela Chavez Recall 2of2" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Tuesday, April 20, 2004 - 2
Clipping: "Smartmatic $60 million Contract from Venezuela for Untested Voting Machines" The Miami Herald Miami, Florida Tuesday, April 20, 2004 - 228
Spez: If there are others who want to research all the Newspapers.com articles on Smartmatic, we should start a special post or have some place to post transcripts of all these articles. It might help with the lawsuits, who knows. I have the 400+ article list of those articles from 2004-2006. I did copy/paste from the Newspapers.com results. But we might want to go more in depth with years after 2006, too.
I wish my Newspapers.com subscription hadn't expired years ago...and not being able to afford to renew. However, because I still have my registration, I can get in to do searches which shows preview of the search word in the article. However though I can't access the actual newspaper images unless I pay, due to a technique I've learned in searching, to manipulate the URL, I can read the OCR text of articles. (A benefit of being an autie gal! LOL)
The problem with OCR is, it's computer interpreted where letters in some words might be off...such as letter a or e might be shown as o in the OCR version. But at least one can get the idea of what the article's about.
That said, I did a search and found lots of references to Smartmatic that should be researched, mainly in Florida newspapers such as the Miami Herald. Smartmatic first appears in 2004 articles.
I'll do a followup comment of all the dates and page numbers of newspapers where I found mention of "Smartmatic". But it's so time-consuming, I hope other pedes will take up the torch and post all these. Last I knew, there was a 2 week Newspapers.com trial version you could get for first time subscribers. The actual newspaper images would be best to have along with the text version.
I'm just giving one OCR transcript, which was actually in Spanish but I translated it to English via Google Translate since that was faster doing a copy/paste than taking the time to translate it myself. (This is not the entirety of the article, just what I could glean from the OCR.) The majority, though, are English language newspapers.
From "El Nuevo Herald" Miami, Florida Thursday, November 30, 2006, Page: 2
[They are] Investigating if Smartmatic Evaded Taxes
Smartmatic is a firm whose owners are Venezuelan citizens and that last year acquired Sequoia Voting Systems of California through which it expanded its penetration in the United States electoral market. Sequoia, which is not the subject of federal investigation, provides electronic voting machines in the United States. District of Columbia and 16 states including Palm Beach County in Florida On the other hand, Smartmatic has become the main supplier of electoral technology for the National Electoral Council (CNE) of Venezuela and will be in charge of the presidential elections of the next Sunday, December 3 According to a dossier of the papers related to the federal investigation to which El Nuevo Herald had access, the firm allegedly paid a midtimiUonary commission to a well-known former Venezuelan military to obtain a $ 90 million contract with the CNE to automate the voting for the Revocational Referendum of August 2004 The federal investigations also seek to determine determine whether or not the firm failed to pay the US Treasury more than $ 12 million in taxes in the last two years, including about $ 4 million that it allegedly transferred to the parent company of the holding company in Barbados from the funds obtained by the second contract obtained with the CNE for the 2004 regional elections in Venezuela In a statement Smartmatic affirmed that the allegations of alleged irregularities are “baseless allegations” of former employees dismissed by the firm and that it denied any illegality in its corporate operations “We have recently come to believe that two former Smartmatic employees are making unsubstantiated allegations about the company and appear to be acting inconsistently with separation and confidentiality agreements with the company,” stated the statement The two federal inquiries launched in Washington on South Florida and Caracas try to see if the complex scheme of companies created by Smartmatic in Curaz In the Netherlands, Barbados, and in the state of Delaware, it allegedly contributed to the firm's tax avoidance or if, on the contrary, the financial operations were transparent and legal.According to the Smartmatic documents, it made seven payments to Morris Loyo, a retired Air Force captain Venezuelan with extensive connections in the Chavista government before the recall referendum was held, which apparently were not reported to the IRS Then there were supposedly two other payments to Loyo after the electoral event that were declared and that were part of a contract between Smartmatic and the former military The deal stipulated a sales commission of $ 15 million for having helped to obtain the contract of just over $ 90 million for the referendum In total, the Boca Raton firm paid Loyo $ 4128,850 through nine transfers to a former military account at Banco Hapoalim BM in New York indicate the papers "In Smartmatic's tax return corresponding to 2004 only appears declared as sales commissions a total of $ 15 for medicines and medical devices referred to in the study with millions to Mr. Loyo when in reality he received at least an additional $ 26 million in payments not declared to the IRS ”said a source familiar with this inquiry. To this Smartmatic responded that Loyo worked for the firm as a“ lobbyist and independent contractor to help secure electoral contracts in Venezuela in the same way as many North American vendors. they employ lobbyist...
I'll add another comment with all the papers that covered Smartmatic that I found. There are over 400 articles, though some might be duplicate articles covered in multiple cities.
Take mine, too!
I watch OANN for free online at USTVGO.TV which has mirror site at USTV247.TV
they said we were all uneducated white males.>
Wow! They are so wise. Guess I must be a tranny kind of uneducated male, then, because I've worn girl clothes all my life and I like guys (who all must be gay when they flirt with me). And I only have a lowly undergraduate degree, not a graduate degree, so I must be quite uneducated! And, I'll have to disregard the small percentage of Hispanic ancestry in my DNA, to be 100% white.
Pronounced Fowe and Foks
Considering all those immigrants flooding Canada from terrorist/communist countries, the staff there probably aren't even real Canadians.
With a studio, popcorn scents the whole apartment. Makes up for no bedroom.