Daniel Greenfield November 04, 2020 @ Sultan Knish Blog
Every
Republican running for public office in areas run by Democrat political
machines knows that he has to beat the voter fraud margin.
The voter fraud margin is the amount of votes that Democrats add or can add to the total to rig the election.
One
of the unprecedented things about this election, in the year from hell,
is that the amount of mail-in ballots, of ballot harvesting, made the
voter fraud margin so much bigger. Democrats had set the ground by
seizing control of key states and key positions in them in preparation
for the election. And even where they didn't, their machines got busy.
This was always going to happen. It happens every election, but the scale of it is different. As are the stakes.
I
don't have to state the obvious about all the Biden votes that
"magically" showed up, about why vote counting was suddenly suspended,
or why totals suddenly stopped being updated for no apparent reason.
These are symptoms of voter fraud. It's a "Hacks at Work" sign being hung up outside the door.
America has one of the most unreliable voting systems in the world because everyone, especially Democrats, wants it that way.
The
two questions in every presidential election are whether the race will
be close enough that the voter fraud margin will kick in and can it be
exposed. This is where the post-election street fight comes into the
picture.
If the voter fraud margin is high enough, then it
becomes all but hopeless. And this was a race designed for a high voter
fraud margin.
As I discussed in my article, Americans Won, Pollsters Lost,
the margin needed low turnout. The more people went to the polls, the
harder it was to sustain the scam. That's why Democrats wanted minimal
in-person voting and Republicans wanted maximum in-person voting. It's
much harder to steal an election if people show up.
The
post-election street fight is a test of how big the voter margin fraud
can get, how many more votes can be discovered than there are people,
and how many ballots can magically show up overnight.
And even
if the street fight is lost, it's worth fighting because it exposes the
lie behind the legitimacy of the powers trying to take over the White
House.
They couldn't steal the election in the daylight, so they
had to do it in the dead of night. They couldn't steal it in empty
halls, so they had to do it after everyone went home. And the more their
lie is challenged, the weaker their power becomes, and the more they
have to resort to blatant thuggery to wield it.
That's what happened on Election Day.
The
polite voter fraud margin failed and they had to steal the election
crudely. Now the real test between lies and truth begins.
President Trump went into Election Day with huge financial, structural, messaging, and economic disadvantages.
The
Democrats were far ahead in the money race. Elections had been rigged
in multiple states, often unilaterally by Democrat governors, in
unprecedented ways. The media and Big Tech had colluded to build a
messaging operation for Democrats that actively suppressed Republican
and even President Trump's messaging.
And the pandemic, the lockdowns, and the riots had ravaged the economy.
Trump and Republicans went into this race as underdogs. And that was the right way to tell the story.
The
media created a fake narrative bolstered with fake polls in which the
country had turned against him and a blue wave was coming. Some
conservative media, now increasingly littered with social media
grifters, overpromised the other way.
The media's Democrat
narrative was meant to suppress Republican and Independent voters, and
pave the way for a cover-up of the massive election fraud now underway,
as I discuss in my article, "Americans Won, Pollsters Lost".
But
the stuff percolating in conservative media was social media clickbait.
The only thing it did was lead a lot of conservatives to feel baffled
and crushed.
2020 was an incredible election. Republicans made
gains despite everything being rigged against them. The presidential
election is still being contested. This is an underdog story.
Unfortunately
too many conservatives went into this huffing up stories in which the
black vote would turn to Trump (and in the process missed the much
bigger story of the Latino vote in Texas and what that means) and
California and New York would go red. The grifters got their clicks.
Conservative media passed around its own share of bad polls, and I'm
swamped with messages this morning from people wondering what happened.
What
happened is that President Trump and conservatives beat expectations,
won unexpected victories, despite everything being rigged against them.
Conservatives should be feeling that, instead of wondering where all the fake promises went.
Pros
on both sides understood that this would be a close race that would be
likely settled with a street fight over ballots in key states, Social
media clickbait on both sides encouraged the creation of false
narratives that have left a lot of people unhappy, angry, and confused.
Whatever
happens now, this was not a defeat. It was a very close race in which
conservatives outperformed the structural limits and expectations, and
which may have changed the entire political landscape.
That sets the stage for future battles, one way or another.
If
it ends up being that Republicans didn't beat the voter fraud margin,
this was a hard fight by underdogs against a corrupt system. Remember
that. And forget the clickbait.
Leftists need to believe in lies. Conservatives should uphold the truth.
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