"Proof"
As an expert witness in legal proceedings before I've learned that how a court looks upon evidence is different than how a scientist or mathematician does.
For example, evidence presented in court that is determined likely to be correct is considered to be proven factual. The legal is standard is "better than 50/50."
In real science, we acknowledge that we can never know anything for sure until we know everything.
And in Geometry, we insist that a "proof" must connect every dot, detailing every step of logic. Otherwise a theorem is not proven.
In real life, we make decisions all the time based upon our gut and intuition. We almost never require rigorous thinking before we make our decisions. It simply isn't feasible.
And all these modes of thinking can become confused in casual conversation, because we tend to use technical terms imprecisely.
Communication is tricky business.
As an expert witness in legal proceedings before I've learned that how a court looks upon evidence is different than how a scientist or mathematician does.
For example, evidence presented in court that is determined likely to be correct is considered to be proven factual. The legal is standard is "better than 50/50."
In real science, we acknowledge that we can never know anything for sure until we know everything.
And in Geometry, we insist that a "proof" must connect every dot, detailing every step of logic. Otherwise a theorem is not proven.
In real life, we make decisions all the time based upon our gut and intuition. We almost never require rigorous thinking before we make our decisions. It simply isn't feasible.
And all these modes of thinking can become confused in casual conversation, because we tend to use technical terms imprecisely.
Communication is tricky business.
❤52👍37🔥6🤔4
"Eighty Dots"
..........,..........,..........,..........,..........,..........,..........,..........
I've listed eighty dots for you, with commas separating sets of ten.
Imagine that each dot represents one year of your life... how are you doing?
The first twenty years you are essentially growing up.
During the next twenty you typically pursue a career and raise a family.
The next twenty you collect wealth and plan for retirement.
The last twenty you need to give back. To your God, your family, and your country.
(If you happen to get twenty more extra dots, then you are luckier than most.)
I turn 61 tomorrow. Most of my dots were enjoyed in a country where I could live fairly free. And America has been very good to me. Instead of serving in the military, I was blessed to go to college and university on scholarships and to pursue a career in science. So now it's my turn to serve my country.
Especially because the last few dots have been devastating to individual liberty; America is in crisis.
Sounds rewarding and exciting! My next twenty dots spent serving my God and my country, fighting evil and to restore liberty for my children.
God willing.
..........,..........,..........,..........,..........,..........,..........,..........
I've listed eighty dots for you, with commas separating sets of ten.
Imagine that each dot represents one year of your life... how are you doing?
The first twenty years you are essentially growing up.
During the next twenty you typically pursue a career and raise a family.
The next twenty you collect wealth and plan for retirement.
The last twenty you need to give back. To your God, your family, and your country.
(If you happen to get twenty more extra dots, then you are luckier than most.)
I turn 61 tomorrow. Most of my dots were enjoyed in a country where I could live fairly free. And America has been very good to me. Instead of serving in the military, I was blessed to go to college and university on scholarships and to pursue a career in science. So now it's my turn to serve my country.
Especially because the last few dots have been devastating to individual liberty; America is in crisis.
Sounds rewarding and exciting! My next twenty dots spent serving my God and my country, fighting evil and to restore liberty for my children.
God willing.
❤202👍29🔥16
"Arizona, Part I"
YouTube deleted so many of my early videos...
Since I am going to be in Arizona on Sunday, I uploaded these slides from my first Arizona analysis in 2021.
A new, updated report is imminent!
https://rumble.com/v14mhk1-arizona-report-slides-april-2021-dgf.html
YouTube deleted so many of my early videos...
Since I am going to be in Arizona on Sunday, I uploaded these slides from my first Arizona analysis in 2021.
A new, updated report is imminent!
https://rumble.com/v14mhk1-arizona-report-slides-april-2021-dgf.html
Rumble
Arizona Report Slides, April 2021 DGF
First analysis of Arizona 2020 general election data.
👍45🔥8❤2👎2👏2
"Computer Algorithms"
Because I grew up with them, I understand modern computers intimately. I've built them at the transistor level, programmed the earliest chips in machine and assembly code, and learned dozens of computer languages and programs over the years.
So when I was asked to investigate the massive election fraud that took place during the 2020 General Election, it should come as no surprise that I recognized several computer algorithms at work. And because I am a physicist and enjoy 'swimming' in massive sets of data, it is also not surprising that I was able to recognize several patterns that enabled me to work backwards, figuring out several of the computer algorithms that were manipulating our elections.
But early on, I learned that most people could not understand my methodology and mathematics, and so I migrated toward the simpler equations and explanations.
One of my favorite legislators in Pennsylvania taught me, "Dr Frank, we went into law, because we can't do math. You have to explain it with crayons. Talk to us like we are ten years old."
He is wise. In order to effect change, the people have to understand what has happened, and they need simple ways to understand and explain it to each other in order for the grassroots movement to flourish.
Pictures of people stuffing dozens of ballots into drop-boxes is about as simple as it gets.
A picture is worth a thousand words.
Because I grew up with them, I understand modern computers intimately. I've built them at the transistor level, programmed the earliest chips in machine and assembly code, and learned dozens of computer languages and programs over the years.
So when I was asked to investigate the massive election fraud that took place during the 2020 General Election, it should come as no surprise that I recognized several computer algorithms at work. And because I am a physicist and enjoy 'swimming' in massive sets of data, it is also not surprising that I was able to recognize several patterns that enabled me to work backwards, figuring out several of the computer algorithms that were manipulating our elections.
But early on, I learned that most people could not understand my methodology and mathematics, and so I migrated toward the simpler equations and explanations.
One of my favorite legislators in Pennsylvania taught me, "Dr Frank, we went into law, because we can't do math. You have to explain it with crayons. Talk to us like we are ten years old."
He is wise. In order to effect change, the people have to understand what has happened, and they need simple ways to understand and explain it to each other in order for the grassroots movement to flourish.
Pictures of people stuffing dozens of ballots into drop-boxes is about as simple as it gets.
A picture is worth a thousand words.
👍134❤26🔥14👏8
"Arizona"
Last night was my first visit to Arizona to speak regarding elections. I was the closing speaker, but arrived there early enough to hear several patriots and politicians before me.
My preference is to meet and work during the daytime with grassroots teams, commissioners, and legislators, and then have "recess" with folks at night during the events.
So throughout the day in Arizona I was also stepping out and interacting with the locals.
I've now been in forty or so states, so I've seen many faces of our movement; what works, and what doesn't.
There are some common themes, sadly including far too much drama and politics. People are flawed and there is widespread infiltration, so the movement is also flawed.
Because Arizona is where an "audit" took place, there is widespread division there which plays out at every level. Far more than I've seen in most places.
I think things are only going to worse before they get better. The Left and the establishment are not going to relinquish their hold on our elections without a fight.
I think it's going to get ugly.
Last night was my first visit to Arizona to speak regarding elections. I was the closing speaker, but arrived there early enough to hear several patriots and politicians before me.
My preference is to meet and work during the daytime with grassroots teams, commissioners, and legislators, and then have "recess" with folks at night during the events.
So throughout the day in Arizona I was also stepping out and interacting with the locals.
I've now been in forty or so states, so I've seen many faces of our movement; what works, and what doesn't.
There are some common themes, sadly including far too much drama and politics. People are flawed and there is widespread infiltration, so the movement is also flawed.
Because Arizona is where an "audit" took place, there is widespread division there which plays out at every level. Far more than I've seen in most places.
I think things are only going to worse before they get better. The Left and the establishment are not going to relinquish their hold on our elections without a fight.
I think it's going to get ugly.
👍109🔥37😢10🤔3