Lauren Boebert Explains ONE Method Used to Cheat in the 2020 Election

I've bet you dream about that schlong on Mtg.

I bet you dream about getting down on THIS schlong!


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Plenty of proof except for anything specific or verifiable. Grow up
Yeah, except there is. This from LBJ's stolen senate victory in 1948.

With his political life on the line, Johnson runs 70,000 votes behind Coke Stevenson, a popular former Texas governor, in the 1948 Democratic primary, but forces Stevenson into a runoff. On the morning after the runoff, the Texas election bureau shows Stevenson leading Johnson by 854 votes.

There follow several days of recounts, corrections and phony vote-shifting, but by mid-day on the Friday after the runoff, Stevenson still leads by more than 150 votes. Then miraculously comes the report that in Box 13 in Alice, in the heart of the machine of boss George Parr, an additional 200 Johnson votes have been discovered. He is the winner by 87 votes out of nearly 1 million cast.

Stevenson, understanding the ways of the Rio Grande Valley in south Texas, goes to investigate, taking with him Frank Hamer, a legendary Texas Ranger who led the posse that captured and killed Bonnie and Clyde. In Alice they discover signs of fraud: The last 202 names on the rolls in Box 13 were written in a different color ink; the new names were listed in alphabetical order; the handwriting was identical; some of the new voters claim they never voted.

But Johnson, having lost the 1941 Senate race by being outstolen, is determined to preserve his victory. His lawyers find a friendly judge in Austin to issue an injunction preventing the Jim Wells County (Alice) Democratic organization from scratching out those 202 new votes and putting Stevenson back on top. The legal ploy designed as a means of delay gives Johnson the time he needs to win certification as the winner by the state Democratic executive committee (on a one-vote margin).

Stevenson counters by finding a friendly federal judge, who issues an injunction preventing Johnson's name from going on the ballot and orders an investigation into vote fraud in south Texas.

Time -- and the explosive investigations -- become Johnson's new obstacles. The candidate calls in his old friend Abe Fortas, who sizes up the situation and lays out a bold and risky legal strategy, designed to move the case through the appeals court and quickly to the Supreme Court.

As Johnson's lawyers scramble through their appeals, investigators in south Texas are closing in on the truth of what happened. Finally Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black rules that the federal government has no right to interfere in a state election, stopping the vote-fraud investigation dead and assuring Johnson's election.
 
Yeah, except there is. This from LBJ's stolen senate victory in 1948.

With his political life on the line, Johnson runs 70,000 votes behind Coke Stevenson, a popular former Texas governor, in the 1948 Democratic primary, but forces Stevenson into a runoff. On the morning after the runoff, the Texas election bureau shows Stevenson leading Johnson by 854 votes.

There follow several days of recounts, corrections and phony vote-shifting, but by mid-day on the Friday after the runoff, Stevenson still leads by more than 150 votes. Then miraculously comes the report that in Box 13 in Alice, in the heart of the machine of boss George Parr, an additional 200 Johnson votes have been discovered. He is the winner by 87 votes out of nearly 1 million cast.

Stevenson, understanding the ways of the Rio Grande Valley in south Texas, goes to investigate, taking with him Frank Hamer, a legendary Texas Ranger who led the posse that captured and killed Bonnie and Clyde. In Alice they discover signs of fraud: The last 202 names on the rolls in Box 13 were written in a different color ink; the new names were listed in alphabetical order; the handwriting was identical; some of the new voters claim they never voted.

But Johnson, having lost the 1941 Senate race by being outstolen, is determined to preserve his victory. His lawyers find a friendly judge in Austin to issue an injunction preventing the Jim Wells County (Alice) Democratic organization from scratching out those 202 new votes and putting Stevenson back on top. The legal ploy designed as a means of delay gives Johnson the time he needs to win certification as the winner by the state Democratic executive committee (on a one-vote margin).

Stevenson counters by finding a friendly federal judge, who issues an injunction preventing Johnson's name from going on the ballot and orders an investigation into vote fraud in south Texas.

Time -- and the explosive investigations -- become Johnson's new obstacles. The candidate calls in his old friend Abe Fortas, who sizes up the situation and lays out a bold and risky legal strategy, designed to move the case through the appeals court and quickly to the Supreme Court.

As Johnson's lawyers scramble through their appeals, investigators in south Texas are closing in on the truth of what happened. Finally Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black rules that the federal government has no right to interfere in a state election, stopping the vote-fraud investigation dead and assuring Johnson's election.
Why in the world are you talking about LBJ?! Come back to real life and try something this decade
 

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