“It used to be so simple.”
I met with a county clerk recently to discuss the elections she’s been managing diligently for decades in her county.
I was showing her how unsecure her elections now are, and how she’d lost control of her voter rolls and the ability to audit her own elections.
She was very unhappy about it and said, “I’m not an IT person. It used to be so simple, before the Secretary of State started micromanaging everything and issuing unfunded mandates. Now, everything is so expensive and it takes forever.”
I explained to her how with $50 in parts from the local hardware store and a few tools, a few tables, and about twenty volunteers they could triple-count her entire county election in just a few hours. And they could record the process for transparency and posterity so that any citizen could audit the entire process.
Instead, we spend weeks and hundreds of thousands of dollars, then argue for years, and the turnouts diminish because no one trusts the elections anymore.
It’s hard to feel patriotic when we are disenfranchised not only from our votes but also the entire process.
Voting should be fun. A celebration of our liberty.
We need to run our own elections locally with our own two hands and our own two feet.
We need to vote Amish.
Maybe throw in a barbecue.
I met with a county clerk recently to discuss the elections she’s been managing diligently for decades in her county.
I was showing her how unsecure her elections now are, and how she’d lost control of her voter rolls and the ability to audit her own elections.
She was very unhappy about it and said, “I’m not an IT person. It used to be so simple, before the Secretary of State started micromanaging everything and issuing unfunded mandates. Now, everything is so expensive and it takes forever.”
I explained to her how with $50 in parts from the local hardware store and a few tools, a few tables, and about twenty volunteers they could triple-count her entire county election in just a few hours. And they could record the process for transparency and posterity so that any citizen could audit the entire process.
Instead, we spend weeks and hundreds of thousands of dollars, then argue for years, and the turnouts diminish because no one trusts the elections anymore.
It’s hard to feel patriotic when we are disenfranchised not only from our votes but also the entire process.
Voting should be fun. A celebration of our liberty.
We need to run our own elections locally with our own two hands and our own two feet.
We need to vote Amish.
Maybe throw in a barbecue.
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"Colorado"
Just finished four very productive days in NE Colorado, meeting with grassroots teams, county officials, and sheriffs in about a dozen counties.
A symposium was held the first day, with several nationally notable speakers including Tina Peters, Data Jeff, Jeff O’Donnel, and myself.
I am very optimistic about what is happening there already... and what is *going to happen.*
We the People are waking up.
Just finished four very productive days in NE Colorado, meeting with grassroots teams, county officials, and sheriffs in about a dozen counties.
A symposium was held the first day, with several nationally notable speakers including Tina Peters, Data Jeff, Jeff O’Donnel, and myself.
I am very optimistic about what is happening there already... and what is *going to happen.*
We the People are waking up.
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"Single Day Elections"
During my latest work in about a dozen NE Colorado counties, my hosts made a brilliant observation.
They noted that the county populations and voter participation had not changed much for several decades. In fact, some of the counties we visited have been getting *smaller.*
And in all of those counties... they used to hold single day elections, where every voter turned out in person and showed their photo ID's, signed the paper poll-book, and voted on paper. Then, people tallied the votes by hand and reported the tallies that evening.
Way cheaper, way faster, results in one day, and the clerks could get on with their other important duties.
And everyone trusted the results, because the process was transparent and they trusted the clerk. She was their neighbor.
Now, nobody trusts the machines, and the county clerks are in cahoots with the corrupt Secretary of State. So now, nobody trusts the elections.
Folks, the people foisting electronic voting systems on us are the same people trying to undermine our elections.
We need to Vote Amish; all paper, no machines.
During my latest work in about a dozen NE Colorado counties, my hosts made a brilliant observation.
They noted that the county populations and voter participation had not changed much for several decades. In fact, some of the counties we visited have been getting *smaller.*
And in all of those counties... they used to hold single day elections, where every voter turned out in person and showed their photo ID's, signed the paper poll-book, and voted on paper. Then, people tallied the votes by hand and reported the tallies that evening.
Way cheaper, way faster, results in one day, and the clerks could get on with their other important duties.
And everyone trusted the results, because the process was transparent and they trusted the clerk. She was their neighbor.
Now, nobody trusts the machines, and the county clerks are in cahoots with the corrupt Secretary of State. So now, nobody trusts the elections.
Folks, the people foisting electronic voting systems on us are the same people trying to undermine our elections.
We need to Vote Amish; all paper, no machines.
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"The New Atheists"
I'm sitting in my hotel room eating dinner, listening to the "The All Time best arguments against religion/faith" series on YouTube.
What is surprising to me is how easily these philosophically and logically flawed "best arguments" can be refuted.
How can people swallow this drivel?
If this is the best they've got, then atheism certainly is dead, as Eric Metaxas has so eloquently and recently described.
The greatest minds that have ever lived, the ones we all extol in the arts and sciences, indeed the founding fathers of the most successful country in the history of the world, were overwhelmingly devout people of faith.
And not so trivially because Judeo-Christian values were the dominant paradigm of their day either. We owe our modern way of lives to the life-work of these great minds. Modern medicine, science, and education were conceived in the church for good *reasons.*
The only way I can come to grips with this situation is that decades of comfortable living combined with mind-numbing indoctrination has produced an entire world full of sheople. People who don't know how to think critically, and prefer comfort rather than engaging the thrilling adventure of liberty that God has designed us to embrace.
Wake up, my friends.
I'm sitting in my hotel room eating dinner, listening to the "The All Time best arguments against religion/faith" series on YouTube.
What is surprising to me is how easily these philosophically and logically flawed "best arguments" can be refuted.
How can people swallow this drivel?
If this is the best they've got, then atheism certainly is dead, as Eric Metaxas has so eloquently and recently described.
The greatest minds that have ever lived, the ones we all extol in the arts and sciences, indeed the founding fathers of the most successful country in the history of the world, were overwhelmingly devout people of faith.
And not so trivially because Judeo-Christian values were the dominant paradigm of their day either. We owe our modern way of lives to the life-work of these great minds. Modern medicine, science, and education were conceived in the church for good *reasons.*
The only way I can come to grips with this situation is that decades of comfortable living combined with mind-numbing indoctrination has produced an entire world full of sheople. People who don't know how to think critically, and prefer comfort rather than engaging the thrilling adventure of liberty that God has designed us to embrace.
Wake up, my friends.
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Fabulous turnout for my talk today in Dallas! Standing room only, with people sitting in the aisles.
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"America Can We Talk"
I'm the guest on Debbie Georgatos' show today at 3pm central.
Tune in to hear the latest on what's happening in Texas!
AmericaCanWeTalk.org
I'm the guest on Debbie Georgatos' show today at 3pm central.
Tune in to hear the latest on what's happening in Texas!
AmericaCanWeTalk.org
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"America, Can We Talk?"
What a great interview today on Debbie's program, "America, Can We Talk." I always learn from Debbie and Eric Georgatos, and appreciate my time with them.
They both have legal backgrounds, and understand the power of language. Today, I learned three new phrases to include in my vocabulary:
Socialists are "grown-up hippies."
In 2020-2021 we experienced the "Covid Episode."
Q: How to know who is lying to you?
A: Who is censoring you?
What a great interview today on Debbie's program, "America, Can We Talk." I always learn from Debbie and Eric Georgatos, and appreciate my time with them.
They both have legal backgrounds, and understand the power of language. Today, I learned three new phrases to include in my vocabulary:
Socialists are "grown-up hippies."
In 2020-2021 we experienced the "Covid Episode."
Q: How to know who is lying to you?
A: Who is censoring you?
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"Thanksgiving"
I'm especially looking forward to Thanksgiving this year with my family. I'm headed to Sacramento first, then home. I can "smell the barn," and I am feeling especially grateful for God's provision.
First, I've been on the road for quite some time, and I miss my family. I am grateful that God has blessed me with such a loving family, and I'm looking forward to relishing it.
Second, it will be the first Thanksgiving with my new daughter-in-law, and I am looking forward to spending time with this new family within our family. I am grateful that God brought such a lovely new person into our family.
Third, I am thankful that God has given me life and liberty during this critical time in world history. It is an honor to serve my God and my country.
Fourth, I am grateful that God has brought so many amazing patriots into my path. God is not idle; indeed, we are in the midst of a great awakening.
I pray that each of us will be full of the Holy Spirit, make wise choices, and be empowered to walk the steps and faithfully do the work that God has planned for each us and for which He has equipped each one of us.
And we'll give Him the glory.
Happy Thanksgiving!
I'm especially looking forward to Thanksgiving this year with my family. I'm headed to Sacramento first, then home. I can "smell the barn," and I am feeling especially grateful for God's provision.
First, I've been on the road for quite some time, and I miss my family. I am grateful that God has blessed me with such a loving family, and I'm looking forward to relishing it.
Second, it will be the first Thanksgiving with my new daughter-in-law, and I am looking forward to spending time with this new family within our family. I am grateful that God brought such a lovely new person into our family.
Third, I am thankful that God has given me life and liberty during this critical time in world history. It is an honor to serve my God and my country.
Fourth, I am grateful that God has brought so many amazing patriots into my path. God is not idle; indeed, we are in the midst of a great awakening.
I pray that each of us will be full of the Holy Spirit, make wise choices, and be empowered to walk the steps and faithfully do the work that God has planned for each us and for which He has equipped each one of us.
And we'll give Him the glory.
Happy Thanksgiving!
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