Saturday, January 2, 2021

A Good Examination of Voting Issues


For John, BLUFSure, Joe Biden will be finally confirmed as President Elect on 6 January, when the Electoral College vote is counted by Congress, per the Constitution.  The process is an opportunity to review our election rules and perhaps bring attention to needed improvements.  Nothing to see here; just move along.




From American Greatness, by Ms Debra Heine, 29 December 2020.

Here is the lede plus one:

A researcher at the Department of Justice on Tuesday released a 25-page report indicating a high probability of voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election.  World-renown economist John Lott Ph.D., examined election results from Pennsylvania and Georgia, as well as potential election fraud in Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin.

“This paper’s approach allows us to quantify how large a potential problem vote fraud and other abnormalities might be in the 2020 election,” Dr. Lott wrote.

The paper provides us a review of absentee voting in other Democracies.  I found that part very interesting.  Other nations are much more restrictive with absentee voting than the various States of the United Statess.

We are, in this paper, dealing with statistical extractations and suspicions.  In the first example the author is looking at Fulton County, Georgia.  The author compares 2016 and 2020 votes in Fulton and surrounding Counties and finds a 7.19% difference.

The fact that the shift happens only in absentee ballots, and when a country line is crossed, is suspicious.
This is not smoking gun proof, unless one is a statistician.  That said, it raises questions that have not been properly ventilated in the media.  Thus, a challenge in the Joint Session of Congress on 6 January would not be out of order as a way of calling attention to questionable election practices.

Hat tip to the InstaPundit.

Regards  —  Cliff

  The post had a link that one would think went to the report, but SSRN give a 404 Error.  I wonder what that is all about?  I fixed it.

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