A 2023 poll found that almost 70 percent of Republicans/Republican leaners believed that Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory was illegitimate. Given this cynicism about the process, many Americans expected a replay of the fraud in 2024. Yet that didn’t materialize because, it’s often said, President Donald Trump’s November support made the election “too big to rig.” There is, however, no such thing, says one observer. Moreover, asserts this man, who has spent years studying electoral fraud, there’s a simple reason the Democrats didn’t rig the election:
They didn’t want to.
In fact, says Jerome R. Corsi, the upper-echelon Democrats had a very good reason to want to lose. And what he propounds is a striking theory, one that may or may not be valid. Regardless, Corsi makes a good case.
Less Broad Fraud?
Writing at American Thinker, Corsi begins by pointing out that vote fraud was not absent last year. Rather, it appears Democrats stole many down-ballot races. (E.g., California House seats where, after weeks of “counting,” the Democrat in each case pulled ahead by a nose at the last minute. Coincidences never cease.) Corsi adds that, interestingly, Biden’s 2020 popular vote total (81,283,501) was almost four million higher than Trump’s 2024 figure. “Biden’s 2020 popular vote was ‘too big because it was rigged,’” he asserts.
But then, post-election, Corsi states, they made a discovery about how the seat-stealing sausage is made. He writes:
What we learned after 2020 was that cryptographic algorithms embedded in State Board of Elections (SBOE) voter registration databases existed in databases, as Andrew Paquette and I demonstrated on our 501(c)3 website, GodsFiveStones.com. The algorithms permit bad actors to create false voter records that are still given legitimate state voter ID numbers. […]
— Read More: thenewamerican.com