Why does The Elections Assistance Commission behaves like they are run by former Dominion employees? Because they are?
Let's tackle a few possibilities to why the government's elections agency would inexplicably drop language that would forbid connecting to the internet with voting machines. As reported in previous articles, Dominion voting machines has two former high-ranking employees, one is the CIO working for the EAC. And the EAC tends to rubber stamp voting certification of machines.
Maybe The August Symposium has them scared?
Cybersecurity experts from at least 6 other countries will be in attendance at the Cyber Symposium. Their role to both observe the evidence and offer their opinions. Lindell recapped his announcement by saying,
"It’s going to change the world. It’s going to change it, you know, it’s going to show everything and this election was taken. And where we are, we are in this battle with communism and the CCP \[Chinese Communist Party\] and big government and everything.”
Matt DePerno found remote access logs
Maybe it's Dr. Frank, Bobby Piton, Edward Solomon, or Dr. Shiva and others proving an algorithm was used to steal the election scared the election commission into change.
A group of computer scientists led by Dr. Shiva Ayyadurai, an MIT-educated Fulbright Scholar, presented what appeared to be a cut-and-dry case of systemic fraud that stemmed from the voting software used in several Michigan counties.
Mathematicians Dr Frank and Bobby Piton have proven an algorithm was used to manipulate the election.
January 2020 Kevin Skoglund, senior technical advisor at the National Election Defense Coalition
“We kept hearing from election officials that voting machines were never on the internet. And we knew that wasn't true. And so we set out to try and find the voting machines to see if we could find them on the internet, and especially the back-end systems that voting machines in the precinct were connecting to to report their results.
Once you add that modem, you are de-certifying it, it is no longer federally certified. And I don't know that all these jurisdictions are aware of that because ES&S is advertising otherwise."
ES&S and Dominion Voting Machines represent 90% of voting machines in America.
While the company’s website states that “zero” of its voting tabulators are connected to the internet, ES&S told NBC News 14,000 of their DS200 tabulators with online modems are currently in use around the country.
Dominion made similar claims that their machines were not connected to the internet. Cyber “Expert” Chris Krebs admitted in a Senate Hearing that Dominion Voting Machines Linked to the Internet.
Government Elections Agency (EAC) Quietly Drops Language Banning Voting Equipment from Connecting to Internet
So why would this organization meet secretly and drop the language that's once was used to ensure election security? Given the highly controversial election in which hacking into the voting equipment is a central concern, the move to remove this from the languages highly suspicious.
Let's just say this is the same organization that retroactively certified voting equipment after the Gateway Pundit exposed the voting equipment in Maricopa County as not certified.
Comments
Post a Comment