Karnal wrote on May 10
th, 2022 at 3:19pm:
Dnarever wrote on May 9
th, 2022 at 4:42pm:
Frank wrote on May 9
th, 2022 at 3:07pm:
Please tell me that you are not this dumb you posted this for a joke right?
From the video:
"What are the orange dots?"
"They're the drop boxes."
"And what are the blue... tracks?"
"That is a smoothed-out pattern of life, so that we could take the - sort of the movement of the individual cell phone signals - marry them together into something that's visual..."
...
You've got to give it to him, Dnarever. If the old boy's able to dismiss all the fact-checks and go with an explanation like that, anything is possible.
True the Vote founder Catherine Engelbrecht teamed with data analyst and election intelligence expert Gregg Phillips in a lengthy probe in which researchers tediously combed through two petabytes of data. As Engelbrecht told WND in a video interview (video below), they uncovered a highly coordinated operation in key battleground states carried out by left-wing groups that collected mail-in ballots and paid "mules" to stuff them in unattended drop boxes, typically in the middle of the night.
The AP's primary claim was that the cellphone location data is not precise enough to determine whether or not an individual actually visited a particular drop box. Innocent people, the news wire contended, may have been caught up in their data.
In a 2018 opinion in the Supreme Court case Carpenter v. United States, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote that when the government "tracks the location of a cell phone," it "achieves near perfect surveillance as if it had attached an ankle monitor to the phone’s user."
And Engelbrecht points out in the movie that the data in Georgia was used by law enforcement as a test case to help law enforcement solve a cold murder case of a young girl.
Engelbrecht noted that the criteria they used to identify a person as a ballot trafficker was intended to rule out individuals who might merely have been passing by. The person not only had to have made multiple trips to multiple drop boxes, he or she also had to have made at least five visits to one or more of the non-profit, left-wing organizations that turned out to be a nexus of ballot traffic.
In Atlanta, the researchers identified 242 people who went to an average of 24 drop boxes and eight organizations during a two-week period.
"We want to absolutely ensure that we don't have false positives, meaning including people that should not have been included," said Phillips. "We're not in any way saying that this is all there is."
"There were several different violent BLM Antifa riots in Atlanta, and in one of them, we had three dozen of our mules participate in these violent riots," Phillips said. "There's an organization that tracks the device IDs. Across all violent protests around the world, we took a look at our 242 mules in Atlanta, and sure enough, dozens and dozens and dozens of our mules show up on the ACLED databases."
Phillips replied that with "the lower bar of five dropbox visits and just three illegal ballots per drop, we find election fraud on an astonishing scale in Wisconsin, 83,565 illegal votes were trafficked in Wisconsin, in Georgia 92,670. In Pennsylvania, 209,505. In Michigan, 226,590, and Arizona, 207,435."
"Using this calculus," he said, "
Trump would have won all the key states and the final electoral vote 305 to 233." Some 4 million minutes of video reveals "an organized effort to subvert a free and fair election," Phillips continued.
"This is organized crime. You can’t look at this data in its aggregate and believe anything otherwise."
https://www.wnd.com/2022/05/2000-mules-true-vote-respond-ap-fact-check/