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[personal profile] peristaltor
From this:

Newly obtained computer schematics provide further detail of how electronic voting data was routed during the 2004 election from Ohio’s Secretary of State’s office through a partisan Tennessee web hosting company. . . .

The flow chart shows how voting information was transferred from Ohio to SmarTech Inc., a Chattanooga Tennessee IT company known for its close association with the Republican Party, before the 2004 election results were displayed online. (Emphasis mine)




Techie Candy


Though the article also interviews another expert who finds the schematic "inconclusive," Spoonamore continues by noting something very, very odd:

Spoonamore notes that on election night in 2004, he observed what he calls the "Connally anomaly," in which eight Ohio counties that had been reporting a consistent ratio of Kerry votes to Bush votes suddenly changed at about 11 pm and began reporting results much more favorable to Bush. Election tallies in these counties, plus a few others, also showed the unlikely result of tens of thousands of voters choosing an extremely liberal judicial candidate but not voting for Kerry.

Spoonamore immediately suspected that a Man in the Middle attack had occurred but had no idea how it could have been carried out. It was not until November 2006 that the alternative media group ePluribus Media discovered that the real-time election results streamed by the office of Ohio's Secretary of State at election.sos.state.oh.us had been hosted on SmarTech's servers in Tennessee. . . .

By then, SmarTech had become embroiled in the White House email scandal, during which it was discovered that accounts at rnc.com, gwb43.com, and other Republican Party domains which were hosted by SmarTech had been used by White House staff, instead of their official government email accounts, to avoid leaving a public record of their communications. When subpoenaed by Congress, the White House said the emails had been accidentally deleted. (Emphasis mine.)


Folks, Darwin did not concoct his Theory of Natural Selection by examining one damned finch. He followed his suspicions down several lines of inquiry, arriving at what William Whewell called the Consiliance of Induction, "the unification of knowledge between the different branches of learning." In this story we have (based on exit polling) the highly unlikely Ohio 2004 election results, a blip in the election night results coverage that changed at a fix time, a subsequent scandal involving the same involved third party where emails are erased en masse, completely by a suspect computer schematic showing exactly how the same involved party could have changed election results. Consiliance achieved.

For all of you overseas who constantly wonder why we stupid 'Mericans elected those jackasses that have consistently worked to destroy our planet's future over the last eight years, know this: We didn't.
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