Hide the counters
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The campaigns have people inside. Don’t need mobs outside.
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@jon-nyc said in Hide the counters:
The campaigns have people inside. Don’t need mobs outside.
Well, that's the point of the lawsuit I posted about earlier. The Trump campaign says its people are not allowed inside.
https://nodebb.the-new-coffee-room.club/topic/4949/calling-the-states/192
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It's in the governor's power to call out the National Guard.
Last thing we need is a mob breaking in and destroying votes.
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The Wall Street Journal did a story shortly after 9/11 about how well intentioned people mess things up. Groups from all over the country were sending things to NYC to help. The people handling emergency logistics had to plan for warehouses to take the unrequested "help" with much (most?) of it ending up in landfills. Similarly, a well-intentioned suggestion that things be monitored by volunteers works well until several hundred people who know little or nothing about vote tabulation show up to "observe." Life was easier under the Shah...
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This is all so lame. No one is going to care about this stuff much longer. Today people are exhausted, tomorrow they move on with their lives.
The Proud Boys won’t be burning down the cities and the Antifa rioters will just look tone deaf.
This stuff just lost its punch. Gosh so many tweeters must know in their hearts they have to reinvent themselves. Must be very frightening.
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The official Republican Poll Watchers were kicked out because "The building was at COVID Capacity" it went viral and you had a bunch of people flock to the building.
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@LuFins-Dad said in Hide the counters:
The official Republican Poll Watchers were kicked out because "The building was at COVID Capacity" it went viral and you had a bunch of people flock to the building.
Per the Chicago Tribune, "But as of right now, 570 challengers are freely roaming the room as poll workers count the 25,000 absentee ballots from Detroiters.
That includes 227 Republican challengers; 268 Democrat challengers and 75 Nonpartisan challengers, including groups like the ACLU and the League of Women voters.
Republicans argue the process is unfairly allowing more Democratic-leaning challengers in than Republicans."