An election will be decided in the court, if we count the citizen's votes they made via absentee ballots?So you want the election to be decided in court?Because it is an unusual year, due to COVID, and there are going to be an extraordinary amount of absentee ballots.... the in person voting, will not be enough to determine the end result....how can you be sure???there won't be enough votes counted on election night, to determine a winner if the estimate of 80 million absentee ballot votes is even remotely close....you didnt do it last time,,,better to just accept the outcome of the vote and stop acting like spoiled children,,,no one is begging for any of this.... it stems from a University simulation.... and this group is trying to figure out how they can accomplish their goals, if the simulation of violence study, turns out to be true....oh, we will accept the outcome of the vote, once all the votes are counted, not a minute sooner!better to just accept the outcome of the vote and stop acting like spoiled children,,,no one is begging for any of this.... it stems from a University simulation.... and this group is trying to figure out how they can accomplish their goals, if the simulation of violence study, turns out to be true....
Don't expect a winner on election night, it's going to take a while....to count all the absentee votes....
and each state has their own cutoffs, and when their state can count them, under their own election laws.....
some states can't even begin counting their absentee ballots until the polls close, at 7 pm on election night..... while some states can begin counting them the minute they get them and clear signatures.... 50 different election laws for the 50 different states, are out there, governing all of this....
It's definitely going to take some time....
and no need to wait if there are enough votes counted on election night to establish a majority,,,
you try to call a winner on election night, YOU are the one, asking for trouble!
There are some states who have it in their election law that as long as the ballot is post marked on election day, they can receive them, up to 10 days past election day, from the post office....and be counted....
but there are other states that have it that absentee ballots have to be post marked 5 days before election day....
It's just a mish mosh....
Because that's what will happen.
Is that what you are saying?