Election fraud: beware of network election projections next Tuesday |
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Election fraud: beware of early network projections next Tuesday
By Jon Rappoport
Bev Harris' revelations about election fraud are exploding
across the Web. At blackboxvoting.org, she has exposed GEMS, a
vote-tabulating system used in 25% of the US vote. Intentional back
doors are installed in GEMS, allowing manipulation on a massive scale.
But keep in mind that major news networks always make their
projections of the winners on election night. This is another vector for
gross fraud. The projections are estimates. But once they are
announced, the game is over in most cases. In other words, declaring the
winner is a media event, owned and operated by the networks.
Here is a compilation, slightly revised, of the most-read
articles I've ever written. They were about the California vote on Prop
37, which tried and failed to mandate GMO labeling on food. The articles
explain a great deal about early projections:
November 8, 2012: "Did Prop 37 Really Lose Or Was It Vote Fraud?"
Hold your horses.
On election night, not long after the polls closed in
California, the media announcement came: Prop 37 was losing. A little
while later, it was all over. Projection: 37 had gone down to defeat.
But is that the whole story? No.
As of 2:30PM today, Thursday, November 8th, two days after the election, many votes in California remain uncounted.
I tried to find out how many.
It turns out that the Secretary of State of CA, responsible for elections in the state, doesn't know.
I was told all counties in California have been asked, not ordered, to report in with those figures. It's voluntary.
So I picked out a few of the biggest counties and called their voter registrar offices. Here are the boggling results:
Santa Clara County: 180,000 votes remain uncounted.
Orange County: 241,336 votes remain uncounted.
San Diego County: 475,000 votes remain uncounted.
LA County: 782,658 votes remain uncounted.
In just those four counties, 1.6 million votes remain uncounted.
The California Secretary of State's website indicates that Prop 37 is behind by 559,776 votes.
So in the four counties I looked into, there are roughly three times as many uncounted votes as the margin of Prop 37's defeat.
And as I say, I checked the numbers in only four counties.
There are 54 other counties in the state. Who knows how many votes they
still need to process?
So why is anyone saying Prop 37 lost?
People will respond, "Well, it's all about projections. There
are experts. They know what they're doing. They made a prediction..."
Really? Who are those experts?
For big elections, the television networks often rely on a
consortium called the National Election Pool (NEP). NEP does projections
and predictions. Did NEP make the premature call on Prop 37?
NEP makes some calls for the television networks, but NEP is
composed of CBS, CNN, FOX, NBC, ABC, and AP. It could hardly be called
an independent source of information for those networks.
NEP has AP (Associated Press) do the actual vote tabulating,
and NEP also contracts work out to Edison Media Research and Mitofsky
International to do exit polls and projections based on those polls.
Edison Media Research did the exit polls in the state of
Washington for this Election Day. How? They surveyed 1493 people by
phone. Based on that, I assume they made all the projections for
elections in that state, even though there is no in-person voting in
Washington, and voters can submit their ballots by mail, postmarked no
later than Election Tuesday. So how could Edison know anything worth
knowing or projecting about mail-in ballots on election night?
Both Edison Research and Mitofsky were involved in the 2004
election scandal (Kerry-Bush), in which their exit polls confounded
network news anchors, because the poll results were so far off from the
incoming vote-counts. Edison/Mitofsky are favorite go-to people at CNN.
So if NEP did the premature Prop 37 projections that handed
Prop 37 a resounding loss, there is little reason to accept their word.
We're faced with a scandal here. An early unwarranted
projection against Prop 37 was made, when so many votes were still
uncounted.
Those votes are still uncounted.
Why should we believe anything that comes next?
-end article-
Then, a month later, on December 10, 2012, I wrote this:
Food Democracy Now is weighing in on Prop 37 vote fraud,
having discovered that the California Secretary of State, in charge of
all elections in CA, has stopped posting updates on the ongoing vote
count.
From November 6 all the way to up to December 4, these
updates were posted daily on the Secretary of State's website.
Then...blackout. No more updates.
Maybe it has something to do with this: On December 4, YES ON
37 votes climbed over the six-million mark: 6,004,628. Food Democracy
Now reported it. Then, suddenly, the YES ON 37 votes reversed!
That's right. They went back to the previously reported number: 5,986,652.
This is apparently a new wrinkle in vote counting. You can
not only add votes, you can go backwards. You can lose 18,000 votes with
the flick of a wrist or the blink of a digital operation.
Now you see 18,000 Yes votes, now you don't.
The latest Food Democracy Now article on vote fraud mentions a
team of independent statisticians, who have found "statistical
anomalies" in the largest voting precincts of nine CA counties,
including LA, San Francisco, San Diego, Alameda, and Orange.
Also worth noting: I previously wrote about the Secretary of
State's "top-to-bottom" review (2007) of all electronic voting systems
then in use in CA. This review discovered fatal flaws in all four
systems...but then three of those systems were re-approved for use,
after being disqualified. I see no clear evidence that the flaws were
fixed.
The top-down review mentioned that Alameda County (one of the
counties the team of statisticians is now studying for fraud) had
purchased voting machines that turned out to be counterfeits. They had
been advertised as legitimate, but they weren't.
I'm told the Yes on 37 campaign is alert to Food Democracy
Now's charges of fraud, and they are considering a petition for a
recount. We'll see.
Of course, no recount will expose electronic fraud unless
very talented experts can examine the full range of electronic systems
now in use in CA.
-end of December 2012 article-
Finally, late in 2012, I wrote this:
I tracked the early media projection against Prop 37, on election night, to its most probable source, the Associated Press (AP).
AP, the giant wire service, is officially a non-profit owned
by 1400 member newspapers, who use its services and also contribute
articles. So AP is major media personified. Again, hardly a trusted
source.
And as everyone knows, the newspaper business in America is
dying. Its bottom line is sitting in a lake of red ink, and the lake is
sitting in an ocean of red ink.
That means these newspapers, and the corporations who own
them, have been re-financing their very existence with loans, and loans
to pay off earlier loans. That means banks.
Now you're getting into the oligarchy that owns this country,
and what that oligarchy wants; what they want to win, and who they want
to win...
-----end of Prop 37 articles-----
Back to the present, 2016. You see how this works. Media
organizations are relying on other media organizations, to which they're
intimately connected, to make the early projections on election night.
It's all a shell game, created to give the impression that "independent
organizations" are "objectively" analyzing the early vote returns and
coming up with "scientific projections."
Beware.
One media hand is washing the other media hand, and both hands belong to the same body.
Don't accept projections.
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Jon Rappoport
The
author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM
THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US
Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a
consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the
expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he
has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles
on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin
Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and
Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics,
health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world.
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