Roger L. Simon’s “ The Disastrous 2020 Election Will Never
Be Resolved” is behind a paywall at The Epoch Times, but Instapundit has posted this extract:
It all began with mail-in
voting—that scandal-ready procedure that was the electoral equivalent of flying
over American states in B-52s as if they were behind enemy lines and dropping
ballots at random.
If one were to design a system by
which a democracy could be subverted, even destroyed, universal mail-in voting
(not, of course, normal absentee voting that requires the citizen to request a
ballot) would be at or near the top of a list.
What could go wrong?
It’s not just the obvious—dead
people voting, people who left the state voting, illegal aliens voting,
signatures no one could possibly recognize being authenticated, signatures with
no record, envelopes being back-dated, ballots found in gullies, ballots dumped
in gullies, ballot harvesting, foreign agents voting surreptitiously en masse,
deadlines that keep moving like the proverbial goal posts, and who knows what.
It’s an actual guarantee of
chaos—and that’s what we had and have.
No one will ever really know what
happened.
The pandemic was the excuse, but I
strongly suspect it was more than that. I suspect, in fact I’m sure, that the
intention of some was to utilize the pandemic to institute mail-in voting
because they knew it would create this chaos, almost like an Antifa for the
electoral system.
How do we know it was in some ways
intentional?
There was plenty of warning. Just
this June, 223,000 ballots in Nevada’s Clark County—17 percent of that county’s
electorate that includes Las Vegas—were sent willy-nilly to the wrong addresses
for their primary, according to the Public Interest Legal Foundation.
No evidence has been forthcoming
that this was corrected. PILF president and general legal counsel J. Christian
Adams calls mail-in voting “chaos that lends itself to fraud.”
PILF has posted a rather droll
video—if it weren’t so depressing—of their investigators going to some of these
registration addresses that turn out to be commercial businesses, not homes,
where the putative voter may or may not have once been employed (in some cases
no one seems to have heard of them). These include an abandoned mine, of all
things.
If you have access to The Epoch Times, the full article is
here.
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