Top O' the BriefingHappy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Beldynweck just knew that t
By Stephen Kruiser
Top O’ the Briefing
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Beldynweck just knew that this would be his breakout year on Freak Night at the Tri-County Interpretive Maraca competition.
If I had a deep knowledge of the workings of the Supreme Court I would be writing about the kneecapping that the subject of yesterday’s Briefing — Judge James Boasberg — got yesterday, which Sarah wrote about. Perhaps I can whip up some snark about Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s irritating mean girl phase later in the week.
For far too long now, American elections have been a hot mess of “anomalies,” as the defenders of the status quo like to put it. You and I, of course, would say ” deliberate fraud.” I would prefer to say something much worse, but this is a family site.
There have been questions popping up in elections as far back as I can remember in my voting lifetime, which covers a considerable number of years. Those questions have always been asked by those of us on this side of the aisle. Democrats insist that voter fraud doesn’t exist. On the rare occasions that they will cop to the possibility that it does, they say it’s very rare.
They seem to not have a real grasp on the definition of “rare.”
Then 2020 came along, and the election anomalies piled up like horse manure during a stable hand strike. People who don’t even pay that much attention to politics were raising their eyebrows. Conservatives who do pay attention to politics wondered if there would ever be another election that they could trust.
Fortunately, there is some progress being made in the restoration of some integrity to the election process. My good friend Stephen Green was the bearer of good news in a column that he wrote yesterday:
But what about five million zombie voters? Imagine the elections they could flip (and almost certainly have). Well, you no longer have to because five million is the number of fake or ineligible voters removed from the rolls by the good folks at Judicial Watch in just the last few years — with a million of them coming from deep-blue New York City alone. Makes you wonder just how indigo their mood truly is.
Judicial Watch announced late last week that “its analysis and use of voter registration lists has led to lawsuits and legal actions under the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA) that have resulted in the removal of five million names from voter rolls in nearly a dozen states and localities” since 2019…
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE… (pjmedia.com)
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