The Biden-Harris Department of Justice announced on Monday the arrest of 24-year-old Skyler Philippi, who prosecutors claim plotted to use a weapon of mass destruction to bomb a Nashville energy facility, as part of what Attorney General Merrick Garland called a "violent white supremacist ideology."
In his Monday statement, the attorney general revealed, "the FBI had already compromised his plot," and charging documents reveal the federal agency first gained knowledge of Philippi in June.
By a 59% to 33% likely voters are concerned about vote-by-mail making cheating easier. Every group but Democrats, liberals, those making over $200,000, and those who went to graduate school thinks that mail-in ballots make vote fraud easier. While all the other groups are concerned, young people are more concerned than older people. Blacks, Hispanics, […]
Read MoreThe Georgia Supreme Court ruled Monday that Cobb County may not accept absentee ballots after Election Day.
Last Thursday, the Cobb County Board of Elections said that it had not sent out more than 3,000 absentee ballots in a timely manner and would mail them via express shipping or overnight delivery the next day, according to Democracy Docket. Three voters sued, arguing that there was not enough time to ensure the ballots would be received in time to be counted.
Lancaster County Commissioner Ray D’Agostino on Monday updated voters on an investigation into 2,500 suspicious voter registration forms that were flagged to the county’s elections board last month, confirming that 17% of the forms so far are fraudulent.
A total of four Pennsylvania counties are investigating possible fraudulent voter and mail-in ballot applications in the final spin into Election Day. Those counties are Cambria County, Lancaster County, Monroe County, and York County. York and Lancaster both uncovered thousands of potentially fraudulent applications, while Cambria and Monroe saw less than 50 each.
The Constitution Study with Host Paul Engel – Censorship wears many disguises today, from “inclusiveness” to “disinformation.” Microsoft’s “Inclusiveness Checker” reminds me of political correctness from the ’80s and ’90s—language control by so-called experts. While I avoid offending others, some truths must be told, especially around election integrity, where honest questions inspire confidence rather than discouraging voters.
Read Morehttps://bonginoreport.com/top-stories/nearly-1-billion-spent-on-political-ads-in-just-the-last-week
Read More‘This should give us confidence in the safeguards built into our election process,’ Secretary of State Al Schmidt says.
Read MoreOn 29 October, Batie-Smoose filed a 33-page sworn declaration with officials at SJSU, the Mountain West Conference, and the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA), exhorting these bodies to investigate (1) the overt favouritism that she believes her school has shown to Fleming, at the expense of Fleming’s 18 female teammates; and (2) the unsettling measures that SJSU officials have allegedly taken in order to suppress expressions of concern from these affected women.
Until Slusser finally went public with her concerns in recent weeks, everyone involved with the SJSU women’s volleyball team seems to have been scared to even mention the fact that Fleming is transgender—despite also being required to pretend that Fleming’s biologically male status is athletically inconsequential.
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