So, for the record, Hugo Chavez died in 2013 and won his last election in 2012. So I guess the theory here is that this company stole the 2012 Venezuela election as a test run, then eight years later paid it all off with the U.S. election. This naturally raises the question of why the globalists didn't just use it in 2016, but we're playing with conspiracies, so let's not bring real questions into it. They weren't ready yet. Chavez had just died in 2013. They weren't sure if it was going to work out. Three years prior? So the conspiracy that Owen is spinning is made out of combining details about two different companies and then insisting you've proven something suspicious. The two companies at issue are Dominion and Smartmatic. Part of the way this conspiracy is presented is to claim that these are the same company or that Dominion owns Smartmatic, but that's not the case. They are unrelated. Smartmatic is a company that's provided election technology in Venezuela, but they actually have a history of calling out voting problems like they did in August 2017 when they found that the results of the Constituent Assembly election had been altered, which they knew because their system is tamper-evident and set to, quote, self-report any attempt to interfere with it. Dominion has nothing to do with Venezuela, so the ability to connect Venezuela with Dominion relies on connecting these two companies which are not connected and are actually competitors.