Margin Of Fraud

Arizona Sun Times;

“In late June or early July, a candidate for office of Assessor named December Cox met with me, Supervisor Cavanaugh. Cox came to my home because what he had to say couldn’t be said over the telephone. Cox reported to me he had met an employee from inside the Elections Office who said he was being paid ‘hush money’ and ‘knew it wasn’t right.’” Cox lost his race for county assessor by 42 points to incumbent Douglas Wolf.

Cavanaugh and his wife are accountants who worked with two statisticians examining the drops of ballots that were counted. He found that in six local races — sheriff, county attorney, three supervisor races, and assessor — the number of ballots that came in during the election in batches appeared to be artificially manipulated. Instead of each candidate in those races getting varied numbers of ballots each time, their numbers stayed the same, flatlining — meaning the candidate who won generally got the same percentage of ballots in each successive drop, while the candidate who lost also received the same percentage of ballots in each successive drop, but a lower number.

In contrast, the other races in Pinal County showed varying percentages in each ballot dump for all the candidates.[…]

He explained, “The common observation was that each time the vote totals were updated each race demonstrated the exact same percentage splits between the candidates. This is possible, but to have it occur more than a couple races in a county is rare, to have it occur in six races among 13 candidates is statistically ‘impossible.’ The anomalies only occur in county, not state races, yet the same voters filled out the ballots.”

The Pinal County Supervisor added, “Normal distributions show a differentials between around 4 and 10%, the Abnormal distributions have a very low differential, from 0% to 1.6% in the examples shown. No differential means that voters all over the county would be voting in the exact same percentages, it isn’t possible.” Cavanaugh labeled the anomalies the “‘Flying Purple Rhinoceros’ that doesn’t exist in real life.”

Two members of the Conelrad Group, a think tank based in southern Arizona that investigated election anomalies in Pinal County’s 2022 election and concluded there was “deliberate malfeasance,” spoke to The Sun Times after reviewing Cavanaugh’s report.

Non-objective Law

If the ease with which the Covid lockdowns were instituted told us anything, it was that people could be panicked into throwing away basic freedoms with astonishing ease. It seems that this lesson has not been lost on the British government, which is currently busy prosecuting a plethora of victimless crimes with relative impunity.

A judge has jailed a “keyboard warrior” for posting an online message saying “blow the mosque up with the adults in it” during the riots.

When sentencing Sweeney, Judge Steven Everett, the Recorder of Chester, said: “You should have been looking at the news and media with horror like every right-minded person. Instead, you chose to take part in stirring up hatred.

“You were part of a Facebook account which had 5,100 members. You had a big audience.

“You threatened a mosque, wherever it was. It truly was a terrible threat.

“So-called keyboard warriors like you must learn to take responsibility for your disgusting and inflammatory language.”

Two podcasts and a column

Brian Zinchuk on Evan Bray: Drilling activity, critical minerals, lithium, helium and roads

This podcast interviews a Regina-based oilman.

Trevor Rose Podcast: Dean Popil, Lex Capital CEO

And for something completely different:

In the spirit of “Get off my lawn!” I’ve realized that we need an entirely new feature, required by law, built into all new electronic devices of importance.
Call it the “dumb mode.”

Things You’re Gonna See At The CBC

The Canadian Press take the jobs their employees can’t do.

The Canadian Broadcasting Corp. paid out $18.4 million in bonuses this year after hundreds of jobs at the public broadcaster were eliminated.

Documents obtained through access to information laws show CBC/Radio-Canada paid bonuses to 1,194 employees for the 2023-24 fiscal year.

More than $3.3 million of that sum was paid to 45 executives.

That means those executives got an average bonus of over $73,000, which is more than the median family income after taxes in 2022, according to Statistics Canada.

Now Is The Time At SDA When We Juxtapose!

April, 2024: In a Friday press release headlined simply “Canada’s Housing Plan,” the Prime Minister’s Office laid out a plan to “unlock 3.87 million new homes by 2031.” … “Canada can and will solve the housing crisis,” read an attached quote by Housing Minister Sean Fraser.

June, 2024; Canadian building permits dropped again in June by 13.9%, continuing the trend of a softening property market despite the government’s attempts to accelerate housing development. According to Statistics Canada, the decline in June was even greater than the previous month, which saw permits drop 12.2% in May and the data is even worse on a year-over-year basis, where the overall value of permits issued in June has dropped by 21.6%.

Thursday On Turtle Island

Queen Kamala’s America:  Let’s talk about Tim Walz.  The media is trying to start a civil war.  Walz and his imam.

Blackie’s Canada:  A parade in Montreal.  Chickens for KFC in Ottawa.  Today Climate Justin burns jet fuel to Nova Scotia.  The revision of Canadian history continues.

Woke World:  Paul Joseph Watson on free speech.  The craft beer tossers.  The stupidest climate change essay of all time.

Your morning meme.   A cartoon.  Another cartoon.

I, For One, Welcome Our New Self-Driving Overlords

ARS;

On Saturday, NBC Bay Area reported that San Francisco’s South of Market residents are being awakened throughout the night by Waymo self-driving cars honking at each other in a parking lot. No one is inside the cars, and they appear to be automatically reacting to each other’s presence.

Videos provided by residents to NBC show Waymo cars filing into the parking lot and attempting to back into spots, which seems to trigger honking from other Waymo vehicles. The automatic nature of these interactions—which seem to peak around 4 am every night—has left neighbors bewildered and sleep-deprived.[…]

The lack of human operators in the vehicles has complicated efforts to address the issue directly since there is no one they can ask to stop honking. That lack of accountability forced residents to report their concerns to Waymo’s corporate headquarters, which had not responded to the incidents until NBC inquired as part of its report.

Government Motors

Gateway Pundit- Texas Attorney General Sues General Motors for Illegally Harvesting and Selling Drivers’ Private Data to Corporate Giants, Including Insurance Companies

The crux of the lawsuit centers around GM’s use of technology installed in most vehicles manufactured since 2015. This technology allegedly collects, records, analyzes, and transmits detailed driving data every time a driver uses their vehicle, according to the press release.

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