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2020 Election


2020 Election  

63 members have voted

  1. 1. Which do you value more?

    • The U.S. Constitution and the will of the voters
      3290
    • #Overturn!
      8


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24 minutes ago, Jason said:

I think he wants to ensure some oversight before proceeding with the remainder of the count. Not just stop counting all together. Surely many of those votes are for him and he needs every last one of them 

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8 hours ago, Don said:

Guys, I’m just now drunk enough to argue over stupid stuff with all of you. Yet it seems that you’ve all signed off for the night. Oh well. Peace be with you.

okay, let's get after it . . . 

 

a hot dog is sandwich.

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10 minutes ago, Tank said:

fight you chuck norris GIF by GritTV

Is a hot dog a sandwich? Council rules once and for all

 

Yes, the classic American meal-on-the-go is wrapped in bread, smeared with condiments and eaten as a patriotic alternative to, say, a hamburger.

But a hot dog is not a sandwich, according to an official press release from the National Hot Dog and Sausage Council.

According to the council, "Our verdict is…a hot dog is an exclamation of joy, a food, a verb describing one 'showing off' and even an emoji. It is truly a category unto its own."

Well, hot dog!

"Limiting the hot dog's significance by saying it's 'just a sandwich' is like calling the Dalai Lama 'just a guy.' Perhaps at one time its importance could be limited by forcing it into a larger sandwich category (no disrespect to Reubens and others), but that time has passed," NHDSC president and 'Queen of Wien' Janet Riley says in the release.

 

 

Yes, the Queen of Wien. 

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https://siepr.stanford.edu/news/dead-people-don-t-vote-study-points-extremely-rare-fraud

In a working paper posted this week, a team of Stanford political scientists analyze roughly 4.5 million voter records from the state of Washington for evidence of ballot fraud involving deceased individuals. They find 14 cases where a ballot may have been stolen and submitted on behalf of someone who had died, and even these cases may not have been fraud-related.
 
“We’re talking about 0.0003 percent of all voters over an 8-year period,” says Andrew Hall, a senior fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR) who conducted the study.
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