This is a must read if you want to live in a free society.
A lot of eyes are on Virginia's off-year gubernatorial election coming up on Tuesday because many see it as a bellwether for next year's midterms. I ask "bellwether" for what? That's because it's harder than ever to determine "winners" and "losers" because the entire process has become so riddled with irregularities and weirdness. In a word, fraud. And by design.
If by chance there are tallies that show Dem Candidate Terry McAuliffe behind or having lost, you can bet his campaign would not ever accept the results. They would keep "counting" votes at least until Friday or until they can concoct a win. That's just the way it is these days.
For a general look at how corrupt our electoral process has become, read Joy Pullmann's excellent wrap-up: https://thefederalist.com/2021/10/29/7-insane-things-i-just-learned-about-how-u-s-elections-are-rigged/
Pullmann shares some of the shocking back stories in Mollie Hemingway's bestseller Rigged: How the Media, Big Tech, and the Democrats Seized Our Elections.
I published two pieces in the Federalist last week that relate directly as well as indirectly to this coming Tuesday’s gubernatorial election in Virginia. I hesitate to use the word “election” since there are now so many ways to hide fraud. Worse, there are many ways to render elections unverifiable and unauditable.
Ironically, those who push for chaos-by-design—such as the mass mailing of official ballots and no photo ID requirement--claim that such things make elections “free and fair.” Here’s a link to the first piece In which I address that folly: https://thefederalist.com/2021/10/28/democrats-claim-free-and-fair-election-in-virginia-while-rigging-it-again/
If we ever get out of this mess, it will because we finally realized that the only way to secure free and fair elections is to guarantee that all voters have the right to vote in person, at their local precinct (not a clearinghouse early voting center,) and in secret. And no state or local (and certainly not federal) government has the right to take that away from people by forcing universal mail-in balloting. There is really no other way to protect freedom of conscience in elections. I've therefore concluded that voting securely--in person, in a local precinct, and in secret--should be a constitutional right. Here’s the second piece that sums up what a truly free and fair election should look like:
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