> Cochise County supervisors wanted info about the certification of voting machines. They received that information.
What did the info say? Sorry, following most elections as well as during the holiday season I usually don't follow politics super closely. Self care type beat.
dsoltesz@mastodon.online 2 years ago
@realcaseyrollins @admin
The information from various authorities was that the machines were properly certified. They were advised by many, including their own lawyers, that failing to sign off is not a legal option and such action is a felony. A Cochise supervisor admitted their questioning the voting machine certification is a ruse to delay canvassing the vote, and their real goal is a political protest against another Arizona county that has nothing to do with them or their voters.
dsoltesz@mastodon.online 2 years ago
@realcaseyrollins @admin
If you have limited time for news, I suggest avoiding low substance editorials like the Gateway Pundit link, and focus on objective news articles. WTFJHT and Ground News are both good places to look for multi-source news summaries.
realcaseyrollins@social.freetalklive.com 2 years ago
@dsoltesz @admin
> failing to sign off is not a legal option and such action is a felony.
Why is it a felony? I'm confused; why require the signature if it's just going to be forced anyways?
realcaseyrollins@social.freetalklive.com 2 years ago
@dsoltesz @admin I listen to the radio and online commentators a bit; a mixture of talk radio, #NBCNewsRadio, #TimPool, #Ruslan and #Destiny. I tend to be busy so it's nice to be able to catch up on the news sometimes without having to stop everything else that I'm doing.