In the Numbers

For the legacy media: no one has denied the fact that an election took place, so to call people ‘election deniers’ is a mistruth. Instead, 83 percent of Americans polled by Gallup in May think our election system is suspect, so ‘fair-election skeptic’ is far closer to the truth.

The truth. You ought to try it sometime.

Studying everything I could get my hands on has led me to believe the ‘red wave’ that rural Nevada expects may not happen. Rural, in this case, is the media label given to every county in the state that is not Washoe or Clark Counties.

In other words, the legacy media believes people who live in these outlier counties are hicks, rubes, and know-nothings. But this is an aside and not the main subject.

The ‘red wave’ might not happen because of an algorithm shared by Washoe and Clark counties and embedded in voting machines. While not connected to the Internet or routers, they are programmed to tabulate ballots using the same algorithm.

These three images are from a lawsuit filed by Nevada Gubernatorial candidate Joey Gilbert, challenging the outcome of the June primary, in August. They show the algorithm in its entirety, and unless one is good at mathematical computation, which I am not, it is impossible to understand.

 

 

This final calculation is the easiest to break down. Here, read it for yourself:

 

Gilbert lost the court challenge as District Court Judge William Wilson decided not to accept the plaintiff’s experts. So, if the algorithm is still shared, it is easy to see that the election can, and most like will be rigged for whatever the desired outcome.

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