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@BevHarrisWrites
PART 4 - Joe tells us how to rig paper ballots
JB: Let me tell you something young lady, I'd love to tell the House and the Senate, on the floor, in the capitol of the United States of America. I can take any paper system you got out there and with one person in one precinct, one crooked election officer, you can control that election all day long. Think about it. You'd say "How?"
BH: Sure, I'll say "How?" Educate me.
JB: Okay. One election officer is all I need, that handles the ballots. He makes a mistake earlier that morning and gives me two instead of one. All right? I go in, and I vote mine, take it over and put it in, and I'll stick one in my shirt. Take it outside. I vote like that all day long, have the people mark their ballots outside, take the ballot in, bring me a blank ballot out. At the end of the day, the last person going through the door, I'm going to make sure it's my buddy, and he's going to have two ballots, the election officer's going to hand him one, and he's going to start towards the machine, and he's going to turn around and go back and say "I'm sorry you gave me two." You ain't gonna be missing no ballots.
BH: Okay, why is there a machine. I missed something.
JB: I just controlled the election all day long by voting paper ballots.
BH: Okay let me understand. The person who's putting it in their shirt is the election official, right?
JB: No, no, no, no, no. I'm talking about a voter that has been paid to go in and see this particular election officer. He hands him two ballots that morning. Okay. Accidental. Whatever you want to call it. And he votes the one, then he votes, takes it over to the machine, he puts it in, it counts, he takes the one in his shirt and gives it to the guy outside somewhere, that guy stops the next voter that he's supposed to pay, gives him a ballot already marked, that voter brings out him a blank ballot, he marks it for the next person, that voter brings him out a blank ballot, you do that all day long, and like I said the last person goes in, he's got a blank extra ballot. And he tells the election officer, he says, "I'm sorry, you've made a mistake here, you gave me two, so he hands it back to him. There's no count whatsoever that's off. You've got all the ballots accounted for.
BH: Yeah, you have the blanks, yeah that's right.
JB: You've voted everybody in that precinct how you want to vote that day. That's how simple it is, young lady.
BH: Okay. That's true. But you'd have to get a lot of people involved.
JB: No I just said, one election officer.
BH: But you'd have to get a lot of voters involved. Because every voter there would have to agree to take a payment.
JB: (Chuckles.) Believe me. It's done every day. It's done every day.
BH: Okay, so you're saying that – I mean, how many – in order to say, flip the governor's race, remember when they had the primary last May and there was only like a few hundred votes separating the Democrat, Beshear or whoever it was – well let's say a few thousand. It would be tough to do a few thousand votes that way, wouldn't it? Without a lot of—you'd have to have a person for every vote.
JB: Like I say, you know, it could happen in one precinct, it could happen in 10 precincts in that county, it could happen in 20 precincts in that county. It just depends on how crooked that county happens to be.
BH: I'm really interested in what you're telling me.
JB: That's one way. And I hope you understand, okay, that's one way that you can do it.
BH: How do you recruit people to pay them off?
JB: I'm not doing it.
BH: I mean, not you, but how would they, because it seems like—
JB: I don't use paper ballots.
BH: I know that there's folks that really are concerned about paper ballots.
JB: We are in Kentucky. We really don't want it. We don't want paper ballots.
8:28 PM · Nov 16, 2024
https://x.com/BevHarrisWrites/status/1858004294605353000