Maricopa County's failed 2020 election is back in the news. First, an independent canvassing of Maricopa County voters revealed a possible 173,000 "lost" ballots and 96,000 "ghost" votes. Add this to the soon-to-be-released Maricopa audit, and — hopefully — the people responsible can be held accountable.
Maricopa's guilty parties are not going down without a fight. We need to be ready for what comes next. Lucky for us, we already know what the adversary's next few moves will be; it's not the first time the Democrats have been caught rigging elections. The Democrats' standard response is denial and misdirection. Denial needs no explanation. As for misdirection, here are an explanation, a demonstration, and a practical exercise in how the game is played.
The explanation: The Democrat party, like every leftist organization, is divided into two groups — a small inner cadre of senior party members called the Nomenklatura and all the others. All others are apparatchiks. Apparatchiks are expendable items. When fraud and other crimes can no longer be denied, the Nomenklatura toss an apparatchik or two under the bus. The public, seeing this, thinks things have changed. The public is wrong. The Nomenklatura remains in control, and the corruption continues.
Broward County, Florida is the best demonstration of this misdirection. Swapping out just two people enabled eighteen years of corruption. After joining neighboring Palm Beach County's last-minute attempt to steal the 2000 presidential election, Broward County Democrats needed a scapegoat. They settled on the Republican supervisor of elections, the 70-year-old Jane Carrol.
Carol promptly resigned, allowing the Nomenklatura to swap in Miriam Oliphant as supervisor of elections. A career bureaucrat in the local school district, Miriam didn't know squat about elections and had never managed anything of comparable size and complexity. But none of that mattered.
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