Posted on 07/30/2021 11:27:28 PM PDT by weston
Well that’s good to know that they pollinate themselves.
We do get high temps but very low humidity. Our temps are starting to go down. It was 84* today. My husband always said we will have a break in the weather about the time the kids go back to school.
Off to watch some TV now. Goodnight.
Good night, hope you sleep well.
Jenna Ellis
@JennaEllisEsq
·
13m
The left is absolutely melting down over
@dbongino, @marklevinshow, and me all agreeing and openly saying Biden should be impeached because… he’s actually committed impeachable offenses and should be held accountable.
That’s what impeachment is for.
They know we’re right. 🤷🏼♀️
Listen to Dr. Dan Stock talk to the Mt. Vernon school board meeting about COVID.
They took it down.
My prayers are with you and your family.
(((hugs)))
We went to the garage sale, but nothing caught our eye.
I am not surprised they took down the good doctor’s TRUTH.
THEY CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH!!!!
Thanks for the late night post, helped me remember to PING you this morning.
Good morning, sweetie!
Oh man, that looks so good.
Just yesterday I was looking at a breakfast pizza recipe and saying that would be delicious for breakfast.
You reading my mind, lady?
And a good morning to you!
Georgia ballots rejected by machines were later altered by election workers to count
Records obtained by Just the News provide unprecedented glimpse into human adjudication of thousands of ballots, where marks for candidates like Trump were sometimes removed so ballots could count for Biden.
By John Solomon, Daniel Payne and Natalia Mittelstadt Updated: August 8, 2021 - 11:21pm
FTA
A day after the November election, as Donald Trump and other Republican candidates clung to evaporating leads in Georgia, vote counters in Atlanta were confronted by a paper ballot known only by its anonymizing number 5150-232-18.
A Dominion Voting machine had rejected the ballot on election night because the voter had filled in boxes for both Trump and his Democratic opponent Joe Biden, an error known as an “overvote.” The machine determined neither candidate should get a tally, and the ballot was referred for human review.
The image of the ballot, obtained by Just the News, shows the voter messily scribbled a large blob in the box to select Trump as president while also putting a thinner check mark next to Biden’s name.
At 6:10 p.m. ET on Nov. 4, 24 hours after the ballot was first scanned and rejected by Machine 5150, a panel of humans decided the vote should be awarded to Biden, with the notation “mark removed for Donald J. Trump.” You can see that ballot here:
Scores of additional ballots that same day had checks manually removed next to Trump’s name as well as many other candidates up and down the ticket — Libertarians, Democrats and write-ins alike — and the votes awarded instead to other candidates.
Welcome to the arcane process known as adjudication, where human judgment is substituted for machine scanning in cases where voters incorrectly filled out a paper ballot. Election officials and official observers have dealt with it for years, with everyday citizens mostly oblivious to the process.
But in 2020, adjudication played a much larger role in states like Georgia, which allowed hundreds of thousands of additional citizens to vote absentee for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In all, more than 5,000 of the 148,000 absentee ballots cast — or about 3% — in Georgia’s largest county required some form of human intervention, according to logs obtained from Fulton County by Just the News under an open records act request.
The adjudication ballots alone are not enough to change a Georgia election in which Biden and Trump were separated by less than 13,000 votes. However, they reveal an imperfect system vulnerable to chaos, subjectivity, or political dirty tricks, especially in a county like Fulton where state officials documented widespread irregularities and misconduct and now want to take over election counting.
Just the News reviewed 1,604 pages of adjudication logs from Fulton County and reviewed 4820 of the 5064 ballot images where human vote counters reviewed or overrode the Dominion Voting machines. The JTN review provided an unprecedented window into the extraordinary discretion accorded adjudication judges to interpret a voter’s intent on a flawed ballot.
https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/elections/georgia-ballot-adjudication-spoiled
What an abject mess of an election.
How can we EVER trust our elections again?
I don't think so. And if an R wins, you can bet the Dims will go full audit/dispute for years too.
Disclose.tv
@disclosetv
JUST IN - Envelope with three bullets addressed to Pope Francis was intercepted in Milan. It was mailed in France.
1:46 AM · Aug 9, 2021
https://twitter.com/disclosetv/status/1424653391565889536
JUST IN - Catholic priest killed in Vendée, France: the alleged murderer, a Rwandan refugee, was involved in the fire at Nantes cathedral a little over a year ago (La Libre)
4:01 AM · Aug 9, 2021
The man had been placed under judicial supervision as part of the investigation into the July 2020 fire at Nantes Cathedral and surrendered to police this morning after killing the priest.
https://twitter.com/disclosetv/status/1424687277222113282
Since I didn’t see the original link, is this the same? It’s an hour long live stream of a school board meeting, but the COVID info is at the very beginning.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUjkSaedN4g
Police Officer Feels Uneasy Seeing 2 Boys Beside a Pond, Is Shocked to Find Them ‘Picking Up Trash’
By Epoch Inspired Staff August 9, 2021 Updated: August 9, 2021
FTA
It was a perfect summer evening in Indiana.
Fishers police sergeant Rodriguez was in the neighborhood of The Bristols on July 29, when he spotted a couple of kids who seemed like they might be in trouble.
Two boys were on the edge of a pond, and as an on-duty officer, Rodriguez’s concern was that they would probably fall in. From the road, it was difficult to make out what they were up to.
The pair weren’t acting recklessly but seemed to be reaching into the pond.
Rodriguez stopped his vehicle, stepped out, and walked over to make contact. He noticed they had a large white bag, which had some weight to it, dragging on the ground.
“I asked, ‘Hey guys, what are you guys doing?’” Rodriguez told The Epoch Times.
What they told him left him in amazement.
“And they’re like, ‘Oh, we’re cleaning the pond,’ And I had to take a step back almost, like, ‘What?’” the officer said.
“‘We’re cleaning the pond; we don’t want the fish to die, cause we like fishing here and we’re trying to get all the trash and debris, because it’ll kill the fish.’”
The encounter made the officer’s day.
He added, “And one of the boys kind of lifts the bag and they had huge smiles on their faces; and this is a summer evening in Indiana, very nice weather, and all around you, you see kids on bikes, playing at the park. These two boys were out there literally picking up trash.”
He was overcome with sheer admiration for the two boys, aged 6 and 7, acting so grown up tending their own neighborhood.
“I have little kids myself, and the more I talked to them I was just very impressed with these young men,” Rodriguez said. “They were doing something I wish all parents would instill in their kids.”
They lived nearby, he learned, and their parents eventually came over and said that they were “very good swimmers,” that there was no need to worry.
The officer was so impressed that he took a selfie with the two young men whose smiles brightened his day, trash bags in hand, standing in front of the pond.
The officer offered a few words for the boys’ parents: “I just want you guys to know how proud I am of what they’re doing.
“I’ve been in law enforcement for almost 12 years, and very few instances have I seen that behavior from little kids, this one was very special.”
Rodriguez added, “You got to give credit where credit’s due.”
Yes, that’s it.
Dr. Stock talks about COVID, starts at 15:15.
Watch before YouTube takes it down.
Rain today!
There are a lot of really good children out there, we just don’t here about the good ones very much.
There was a young boy on TV this morning who has a lemonade stand that he doesn’t charge a price but asks for donations, he then donates the money to a charity.
Of course, these children have been taught well at home.
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