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Author Topic: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2  (Read 468710 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5120 on: May 13, 2022, 04:11:21 PM »
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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5120 on: May 13, 2022, 04:11:21 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5121 on: May 13, 2022, 11:42:38 PM »
Georgia election official allowed conspiracist to breach voting system in search of 'fraud'



A former Georgia county elections supervisor opened her offices to an election-denying businessman shortly after the 2020 presidential election, granting access to voting equipment that election-deniers claim was vital to rigging the election, according to a Washington Post report.

Misty Hampton told the Post that she cannot remember when the walkthrough took place or what was done during the visit but recalled giving access to Scott Hall, the owner of a Georgia bail bond business.

"I'm not a babysitter," she reportedly said of her past role in the Coffee County office.

In an interview with Post, Hampton said that she was unaware that the visit might contravene the state's guidance barring voting equipment from being released to the public.

"I don't see why anything that is dealing with elections is not open to the public," Hampton said. "Why would you want to hide anything?"

Even though Donald Trump had won the county by a 40-point margin, many election officials "voiced suspicions of fraud" after the 2020 election, according to the Post. Hampton reportedly spread the baseless notion that "rogue" administrators might have tampered with the ballots in order to give then-President-elect Biden a bigger edge.

Hall's visit first came under federal scrutiny as part of a months-old lawsuit filed by the Coalition for Good Governance, which calls into question the integrity of Georgia's election system. Court documents related to the suit reportedly reveal a March 2021 call between Hall and Marilyn Marks, the executive director of the Coalition for Good Governance, during which Hall told Marks that he chartered a plane to transport people to Coffee County in order to copy voting data.

The group reportedly "went in there and imaged every hard drive of every piece of equipment," Hall said in the phone conversation. "We basically had the entire elections committee there," he added. "And they said: 'We give you permission. Go for it.'"

According to the Post, Hall and Hampton were accompanied by one county elections board member, Eric Chaney, during their visit.

On January 6, 2021, during the Capitol insurrection, Hampton reportedly texted Chaney that Hall was considering analyzing "our ballots from the general election like we talked about the other day."

Chaney's lawyers told the Post that the elections officer does not know Hall and did not take part in any visit where people "illegally accessed the server or the room in which it is contained."

By May of that year, after Hampton had been fired over a separate offense, her replacement, James Barnes, found a business card belonging to Cyber Ninjas, the Florida-based firm that led a carnivalesque "forensic audit" of the election in Arizona's Maricopa County. After Barnes sent an email regarding the business card to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, state officials replaced the elections server in Coffee County with a new one. Last month, attorneys for Raffensperger claimed that a former elections official reportedly changed the password for the old server, rendering it impossible for other officials to gain access.

Hampton's office tour is just the latest in a pattern of improprieties by GOP election officials at the state and local level. As the Washington Post notes, suspected and attempted breaches in election security have prompted multiple investigations in states like Ohio, Colorado, and Michigan.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/2022/05/13/coffee-county-misty-hampton-election/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5122 on: May 14, 2022, 12:40:37 AM »
Arizona election security chief quits — and issues urgent warning about MAGA radicals trying to take over



On Friday, VICE released an interview with Ken Matta, Arizona's longtime head of election security, who is now leaving office for the private sector — and warning that the efforts by pro-Trump conspiracy theorists to hijack and intimidate election offices is becoming a dire problem for both the election process and for the well-being of the officials running it.

"Right now with the threats, the hostility, the public bashing of election workers and election officers based on misinformation, disinformation, and mal-information, it’s tough to stay," Matta told Todd Zwillich. "The job is fairly thankless anyway; we only get bad press."

Arizona, which voted for President Joe Biden by barely 10,000 votes, has been a hotbed of election conspiracy theories, and state-sponsored attempts to gather evidence for them — most infamously, a months-long partisan "audit" of Maricopa County done by a private security firm at the request of the GOP-controlled state Senate. That investigation, which explored bizarre ideas like hunting for bamboo fibers in ballots to look for Asian forgeries, ended with Biden netting slightly more votes — but then the state launched another "investigation," this time of the voting machines, headed up by a man who attended a pro-Trump "Stop the Steal" rally.

According to Matta, he feared for his own safety through all of this — and even felt the need to walk around armed.

"Working out of the Arizona secretary of state’s office, you can imagine we got hit pretty hard. Just mean abuse, horrible and harassing language. Just hundreds of them. For a while there, a good part of my day was just listening to these horrible messages," said Matta. "I started carrying a gun. When they started sending me to the partisan review in Maricopa County, what some people call an 'audit,' as I’m driving through, there’s people out front with full autos and assault rifles. They’re looking in our cars, they’re seeing who’s going in and who’s going out. I decided I was going to start carrying. I have a concealed-carry permit in Arizona."

Matta's biggest fear, he warned, was these same people taking jobs like the one he is now leaving.

"A lot of the people coming in to take those empty spots are going to be election deniers or conspiracy theorists," said Matta. "We have a lot of concerns about their entry into the process. This is really important: In the elections community, I can still say everybody is on board with the rules-based integrity of their jobs and the importance of elections. I can say I’d still trust my vote to any of these people. That will not continue to be true, starting in 2022 and definitely in 2024. It’s just impossible for that to remain true nationally."

https://www.vice.com/en/article/pkpjy9/arizona-election-security

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5122 on: May 14, 2022, 12:40:37 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5123 on: May 14, 2022, 11:44:01 AM »
Other Republicans feel the same way, but are afraid to say it publicly because their rabid base would turn against them, so they say it privately and get caught on tape.

Lindsey Graham said Joe Biden is ‘best person’ to lead US, tapes reveal

Republican senator and Trump loyalist made comments in wake of January 6 US Capitol attack to authors of new book



Democrat Joe Biden is “the best person” to lead the US, the Republican senator and fervent Donald Trump supporter Lindsey Graham said in tapes released on Monday by the authors of a bestselling political book.

The South Carolina senator was speaking on and shortly after 6 January 2021 to Jonathan Martin and Alex Burns, now authors of This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden and the Battle for America’s Future.

On 6 January 2021, shortly before the US Capitol was attacked, Trump told supporters to “fight like hell” in service of his lie that his defeat by Biden in the 2020 election was caused by voter fraud.

A bipartisan Senate committee has linked seven deaths to the riot that followed, an unsuccessful attempt to stop certification of electoral college results.

“Moments like this reset,” Graham said that day, in a tape played on CNN on Tuesday.

"People will calm down. People will say, ‘I don’t want to be associated with that.’ This is a group within a group. What this does, there will be a rallying effect for a while, [then] the country says ‘We’re better than this.’”

Asked if Biden could help the country come together again, Graham said: “Totally.”

“He’ll maybe be the best person to have. I mean, how mad can you get at Joe Biden?”

In the year and a half since the Capitol riot, much of the country, and most Republicans, have stayed mad at Biden. The president’s approval numbers continue to plumb depths similar to those charted by Trump while he was in office.

Biden is reportedly mad at Graham, a longtime associate in the Senate who despite saying he was “out” of Trump’s camp immediately after the January 6 riot, soon returned to the fold.

In other taped remarks played by Martin and Burns, Graham said Trump “misjudged the passion” of his supporters.

"He plays the TV game and he went too far here,” the senator was heard to say. “That rally didn’t help, talking about primarying” the Wyoming representative Liz Cheney, a member of the House January 6 committee.

“He created a sense of revenge.”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/may/11/lindsey-graham-joe-biden-donald-trump

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5124 on: May 15, 2022, 07:42:04 AM »
Trump Calls Rioters At Insurrection 'Great People'

Watch:


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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5124 on: May 15, 2022, 07:42:04 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5125 on: May 15, 2022, 07:50:28 AM »
Watch Jim Acosta grill Deborah Birx over why she put up with Trump's 'bonkers' pandemic disinformation



Former Trump administration coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx was the subject of an intense interview by CNN's Jim Acosta on SaPersonay about her new book Silent Invasion: The Untold Story of the Trump Administration, Covid-19, and Preventing the Next Pandemic Before It's Too Late.

Acosta played a clip of Trump's infamous statement suggesting injecting disinfectants into humans to kill the virus.

"I have to ask, what was going through your head there when you were listening to this?" Acosta asked. "And I know you're saying I got out on the road and talked to people and I was trying to do as much I could with all of these other experts, but at the end of the day you hear something that bonkers coming from the president of the United States, how could you have any faith in him whatsoever?"

"I talked to Trump advisers, people close to the then president at the time who thought it was bananas for him to talk about injecting yourself with disinfectant, and didn't you think what's wrong with this guy?"

Birx noted Trump's comments originated with a DHS study on sunlight as a disinfectant on surfaces to re-open playgrounds.

"Frankly, I was so taken aback in that moment," Birx said. "Obviously at the end of that, I said, not a treatment, contacted the CDC, FDA and got them to post that and within seconds of leaving the press briefing, made sure the senior advisers knew they needed to get to the president and tell him that this, as you said, was bonkers."

Acosta followed-up.

"But I have to come back to this question because to me, it puzzles me to this day. How could anybody in their right mind working with the president that the time think he was dealing with reality? If you were to go up to any person on the street and somebody was rambling about injecting themselves with disinfectant, you would question what is going on in their heads and here he's going to be the president for months and months and months dealing with pandemic," Acosta said.

"That's why I come back to this question and i don't mean to go off on you, I don't understand why you or some of the others in the administration didn't get out in front of the camera and say he's not dealing with reality anymore. He's lost it. This is bonkers," Acosta said.

Watch:


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5126 on: May 16, 2022, 12:25:27 AM »
Trump has converted Mar-a-Lago into a social 'hot spot' for conspiracy theorists

According to a report from Politico's Meredith McGraw, Donald Trump's permanent move from Manhattan to his Florida Mar-a-Lago resort has allowed him to use the facilities there to host nightly parties for conspiracy movie premieres, book signings and gatherings of followers who come to worship him.

Case in point, she wrote, was the recent premier of conservative gadfly Dinesh D’Souza's new movie "2000 Mules" in one of the luxury resort's ballrooms, with the documentary laying out the filmmaker's cas that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from his Mar-a-Lago host.

According to the report, the recent event is nothing new and is a part of making the resort a social scene "hot spot" for conservatives.

"Trump’s private club has become the Grauman’s Chinese Theater for the Hollywood-hating crowd," McGraw wrote. "Just weeks before D’Souza’s debut, a slew of Trump allies, friends, and conservative figures flew down to Palm Beach estate for the showing of a documentary, 'Rigged,' on the 2020 election. The film starred Trump himself, and was produced by David Bossie, the president of the conservative group Citizens United. Shortly after, Matt Schlapp, chair of the American Conservative Union, debuted his own documentary, 'Culture Killers: the Woke Wars' on cancel culture poolside at Trump’s club."

premieres are putting money in Trump's pockets as he cashes in on room rentals and catering, with the added benefit that they allow him to descend down "...a stairwell, or through grand double doors, to be met with cheers."

As for who has been showing up, for the D’Souza documentary the crowd was made of old-time Trump associates and new members just appearing on the MAGA scene.

"For the '2000 Mules' premiere, there was a sea of famous faces: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) chatted with former Trump lawyer Jenna Ellis, holding an American flag-bedazzled clutch. Conservative commentator Dan Bongino huddled with Devin Nunes, the CEO of Truth Social," McGraw reported. "A few yards away Kyle Rittenhouse, the teen-turned-conservative icon who was acquitted for killing two men during 2020 protests, was circled by excited guests, among them former 60 Minutes correspondent turned ousted Fox News contributor Lara Logan."

She continued, "On a larger level, it also underscores how Trumpism itself is the fusion of politics and culture. Whereas Trump once promoted steaks and wines and neck ties as symbols of business status, he now touts social media platforms, picture books, documentary films and streaming services as demonstrations of one’s — for lack of a better term — MAGA-ness. And nothing demonstrates that quite like being there, in the flesh, at Mar-a-Lago."

According to one attendee, there is nothing like being around people whon all believe the same things with Black conservative "influencer" Rob Smith telling the Politico journalist, "When you’ve been to Mar-a-Lago more than once, you know it kind of feels like home. It’s a place where people that are in this movement feel comfortable to be themselves. And I think that’s the most special thing about it … being around a lot of like-minded people, it’s electric.”

https://www.politico.com/news/2022/05/15/mar-a-lago-2020-election-movies-00032530

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5127 on: May 16, 2022, 01:32:04 AM »
Trump's racist violent rhetoric has been embraced by the right wing media and GOP. Republicans and the right wing media continue to parrot racist lies like "The Great Replacement Theory". Those continuous lies made it possible for a white supremacist to murder 10 people of color in a mass shooting at Buffalo grocery store yesterday. 

Trump's violent political rhetoric is metastasizing in the Republican Party
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/03/19/trumps-violent-political-rhetoric-is-metastasizing-republican-party/

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5127 on: May 16, 2022, 01:32:04 AM »