Democrat Party

1781354438655.png
 
Question We’d All Like Answered: If it’s illegal for non-citizens to vote, why does the West Los Angeles Library have a display for non-citizens on how to pre-register to vote, including a special section on how to register anonymously if you don’t feel “safe” revealing your address? This would allow non-citizens to obtain ballots without anyone knowing it.

“Most secure election system in America!”

PS – Note that this came from a citizen reporter on X, not a major media outlet like “60 Minutes,” whose hosts are too busy whining about the “death of journalism” because they’re getting fired for being useless and biased to actually do their job of investigating things.
 
Democrats have feuds over the dumbest things. Today's ridiculous spat is between woke author Stephen King and Communist Senator Bernie Sanders after Sanders used King as an example of someone who doesn't "pay their fair share."
"Even our own favorite author on the left, Mr. Stephen King, uses tax shelters and unrealized capital gains to avoid paying his fair share," Sanders said at a recent "No Oligarchs" event, "which makes it more difficult to ask others to do the same."
King responded that he pays enough taxes to cover 198 people and that he's not a huge corporation. "I'm pretty sure Bernie has a retirement account socked away somewhere like I do."
Watching them fight each other over their own failed policies is a hoot.
 
LA Times unwittingly uncovers voter fraud
Two writers for the Los Angeles Times set out to prove former mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt was wrong when he suggested that residents of Skid Row were being paid to vote for socialist Nithya Raman, and they succeeded by proving that residents of Skid Row were being paid to vote for Karen Bass. The Times writers explain how “unfounded” claims of ballot farming among the homeless in LA were spreading on social media, so they spoke to 20 Skid Row residents themselves and found one woman who said no payment for ballot petition signatures was offered to her, and a “handful” of residents who saw workers offering cash for signatures. Three people confirmed that they had accepted cash to sign, with one claiming to have signed under multiple names for a total of $10. According to the LA Times, this means voter fraud did not meaningfully occur.
 
Back
Top