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Aug. 26, 2023 - Stew Peters Show
01:11:33
JESUS. GUNS. AND BABIES. w/ Dr. Kandiss Taylor ft. David Cross | ELECTION ERRORS EXPOSED
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Hey everybody, welcome to Jesus, Guns, and Babies.
I'm your host, Dr.
Candice Taylor, and tonight we have a wonderful guest.
He is a dear friend of mine.
He is very intelligent, and you know, I don't think everybody is intelligent, so you are in for a huge treat.
We're going to read Daniel 2, 21 and 22 to start off.
And He changes the times and the seasons.
He removes kings and raises up kings.
He gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to those who have understanding.
He reveals deep and secret things.
He knows what is in the darkness and light dwells with Him.
We need some kings removed.
And some people that are public servants put in.
So I really thought that was appropriate for tonight and what we're going to be discussing.
And so welcome to the show, my friend, second chair of the Georgia GOP, David Cross.
So let's talk about why you're conservative because my viewers really like that.
They want to get to know you.
So I know you have a lot of things to show us and I'm so excited and my people want to see it.
But I want them to get to know you because when they know who you are and they know you, you're my friend.
I trust you and I don't trust everyone.
And so I want them to know who you are so they will believe what you say.
So tell them why you're a patriot, David.
How did you grow up?
Were your parents or your upbringing or what got you involved in that?
Wow.
So, I mean, it's kind of a long story, but I'll give you the hello in it.
It's okay.
We have time.
So I was born in 1969.
So I'm 54 years old.
I'm a child of the 80s.
And of course, during the 80s, Ronald Reagan was really my first president, even though I remember terrible times under Jimmy Carter and my dad being a home builder and having the ups and downs of that business cycle and being in line for gas and all that kind of thing and all the terrible inflation.
And I still remember being in high school and thinking, I didn't really know what to think or expect from Ronald Reagan, but as it turns out, he was the greatest president of my life up until Trump.
I've been a conservative my whole life.
I'm financially conservative.
Just by virtue of what I do for a living, I help people make conservative choices with their finances.
I've always been a conservative.
I've always been a patriot as well, too.
Some of the things that I do, you might never find out about them.
In Gwinnett County, this was, I don't remember, maybe like 10 years ago, there was a charity in Gwinnett that was trying to help get Advice and support and technical support to veterans so they could get jobs.
One of the things they didn't have is they didn't have computers.
Everybody was wondering, where are we going to get the money for computers?
I said, you know, we don't necessarily have to get money for the computers.
Let's call on the people that we know.
Well, I had a friend named Sean Murphy, still a friend today, and I called on him and I said, hey, can you help out with this?
And he said, absolutely.
And so he donated some things, some computers, and we got them all put in.
And after it was all done, one of the veterans that was there wanted to do a presentation.
With the Community Foundation for Northeast Georgia, and when he went to give the presentation, I knew that he was trying to find a job.
I knew that he was on the verge of losing his home, and he got up to give a presentation, and I happened to see that he was wearing a tattered suit that was literally torn on the backside, and he was really trying to make it not noticeable.
I paid to get him a custom suit made just for him, several shirts, a belt, some shoes, and all that kind of thing.
I don't know what's happened to him since then, but I feel like I did my part to help him and help his family get off the ground.
I do know that he got a job and things did turn out well, but I haven't kept up with him because I think you do your part.
And you move on because there's always somebody out there, you know, that needs help.
But I've been a conservative my whole life, you know, politically and financially, as long as I can remember.
So that was a beautiful story.
Thank you for sharing it.
And I'm thinking about you at 2020.
I was running for U.S. Senate and I watched my numbers go up and down and I wasn't concerned about my race.
What I was so upset about was Doug Collins, who I campaigned beside and seeing it being stolen from him with Kelly Leffler.
Then I saw the president when I woke up, not the president anymore, and was like, what is going on?
Because I had been campaigning all year and I knew, like, I knew how many signs there were.
I knew what the people were saying.
I knew.
And so I was just devastated.
And you sit on your couch and you watching and you seeing, it's just interesting when you hear people and where they were.
And it's like a defining moment, it's trauma.
Because we were just so like, this is not, something is bad, wronged.
And so because you knew something was really bad wrong, David, you didn't sit on the sideline.
You got involved just like I got involved and in different ways.
And thank the Lord you did because what you're really good at, I'm not really good at.
And maybe what I'm really good at, you're not as good at.
And so it's all of us together.
And I think that's the beautiful thing about this show is we're going to show you Everybody has a place and a role in this because it's we the people.
It's our government.
It's a bottom-up government.
And so you decided to get involved and thought, this cannot stand.
And I heard about you because of the work you were doing.
So I want you to kind of walk us through your thought process and why you started doing the things you were doing and what you've learned.
OK. So let me pull up one of my presentations here.
Let's see.
And I just want to say, David's highly sought after.
To speak and to give information because he's a wealth of knowledge.
And so I just, instead of him coming all over Southeast Georgia trying to waste a lot of time, not that it's a waste of time to get in front of people because it's definitely not, but he just can't talk to everybody and try to do what he's doing in the GOP and trying to get rid of these machines.
And so I thought, let's come on Jesus Guns and Babies.
Millions of people will see this episode and he can walk it out right here and only take an hour.
All right.
So when I was diving into all of this, I thought for sure when we started this that we were going to find the one smoking gun where we were going to be able to say what the Democrats did and we were going to put them in jail.
And as time went on, what we found out was that there wasn't one smoking gun.
There was about 13 different smoking guns.
There's a lot of different ways to cheat an election.
And so we just started putting together information and we went down a lot of different rabbit holes.
And some of it didn't actually make sense until we kind of backed up from it, you know, earlier this year and got to see all the different parts that are out there and what they all mean.
So what I'm going to show you is I'm going to go through some slides here pretty quickly.
The slide presentation I think I've got up right now is maybe, I think it's like a hundred something slides, you know, slides long.
We're not going to go through them all.
We're going to hit the highlights.
But what I can tell you is that As I said, we found a lot of different ways that things can be manipulated.
We're going to dive into some of those right now.
Let's see.
All right.
The 2020 initial count problems and errors that initially happened.
Everybody heard that Raffensperger did this thing called the full 100% hand count risk limiting audit.
Well, there's no such thing.
Raffensperger made that up.
We call it the Franken-count, and that's what some of the data scientists call it also.
One of the things that we found during this is that out of all 159 counties, each one of those counties is required by law to maintain their election records for everything.
They have to keep the ballots.
They even have to keep the digital ballots.
And the big red number that's on your screen right now says 1.7 million.
That's how many ballot images are missing from the entire state.
That's how many were just absolutely deleted and don't exist.
Now, most people don't know it, but there's a thousand dollar fine per occurrence.
So you add three zeros onto that and you come up with 1.7 billion dollars is what the total potential liability is to the state of Georgia.
But of course, Mr.
Raffensperger has not done anything from a law enforcement standpoint, even though it is codified in Georgia law that he can.
Instead, he goes after some of these counties and says, if you do something wrong and we don't like it, we're going to charge you $5,000 a day, even though he has no authority to charge counties anything.
So all he can really do is wag his finger.
So let me ask you something, David.
That $1.7 billion, who would that come from?
Would that come from county by county back to the SOS? And who would hold them accountable to pay it?
It would probably come county by county.
And it would probably be paid from the insurance policies that the counties have got.
And if there was some type of default that happened in there, we've got proof from the Secretary of State's office that his office actually told the counties, you can overwrite the data cards.
You don't have to keep this stuff.
So ultimately, the buck stops with Raffensperger's office.
But who actually pays?
You know, it's almost a pipe dream because I don't think anybody's going to pay.
And I wonder if he tried to make them pay if they could file a lawsuit on him for making them do what they did because they just did what he told them to do.
I would hope so.
I would hope so.
But the thing is that there's a lot of counties that are out there that have got 1,000, 2,000, 5,000, 10,000 voters.
They're small counties.
And their election personnel might be one person, maybe two.
And I don't think it's really fair to throw everything onto those people because they've got other responsibilities in county government.
Whereas in Gwinnett County, for example, I think we've got like 800-something thousand people that live here.
We not only have one election director, we have two assistants that are there to help too.
So every county's got different resources, but I don't think it'd be fair to go after the small counties and say, y'all have to pay.
I think it rests with Raffensperger.
Me too.
All right, here's the next thing I'll show you.
Raffensperger, we think, counted 300,000 too many votes in the 2020 election.
And some folks will say, well, that just doesn't sound right.
And here's what I'm going to show you.
Let's see.
Hopefully this will run.
Yes.
your home for pennies.
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This simple trick could save you thousands in electric.
So I get back to our election coverage and another check of the electoral match.
Check those nine states out in grace.
Still at this hour, undecided.
The presidential race hanging in the balance.
This is only about one minute.
We want to know, when are we going to get your votes?
When are we going to find out who's won your state?
We have about 2% left to go.
We had great success yesterday.
We had 4.7 million voters voted, a record breaker for us, beats the 4.1 in 2016.
We also have an average wait time of only two minutes, statewide average.
We have about 2% left to go.
You can see where we are right now.
I don't think we'll change any outcomes, but that's what the people that make those predictions do.
What we'll do, Okay, so I didn't cut the video.
Somebody else cut the video.
So we're back.
Can you see the Raffensperger screen again?
Yeah.
Okay, so Raffensperger said that there were 4.7 million votes that were counted.
And in the final analysis, the state certified nearly 5 million votes, 4,998,000 to be exact.
So there's roughly 300,000 votes, so we don't know where they came from.
And he has not answered repeated requests to ask, where did those 300,000 votes come from?
So on the morning that he went in to the Today Show, you can see this little circle that's down here.
It says 4,719,743 votes.
And on the right-hand side with the green donut, it says 158 out of 159 counties, 2,643 precincts out of 2656.
There's 13 precincts that were left outstanding.
The maximum number of votes that those precincts had was right at a maximum of 50,000 votes.
So on the morning that he went on TV, he knew how many people voted early, and that number would not change.
He knew how many people voted on Election Day.
That number would not change.
He knew how many absentee-by-mail ballots that were.
That number wouldn't change.
And provisional ballots, he knew that number, and that number might change maybe by 10, 20, 30, 50, something like that, not by 300,000.
Mm-mm.
So there's your total.
The total that was actually certified was 4,998,000, as I said before.
So we still don't have an answer.
His office won't answer either.
This is the 13 precincts that were still, you know, the 13, I can't say these are the 13 precincts that were left outstanding.
These are the 13 largest precincts that were outstanding at that time.
And on the Wayback Machine, that's a cool tool you can use to go back and see what a webpage looked like in the past.
It'll tell you that those 13 precincts were still not counted, or that there were 13 that were not counted, and that the total number of absentee by mail ballots had not been counted either.
But when we did the Wayback Machine also, we went back and I've got a 100-page slide or 100-slide presentation that pulls every snapshot whenever anybody went to go see what the score was in the election.
We can see that Trump was winning on Tuesday night, Wednesday night.
On Thursday night, he was still winning.
And about 2 o'clock in the morning, I believe, on Friday morning, It flipped over to Biden.
And so the whole point was that they were just supposed to keep counting ballots.
This is one of my favorite scenes.
Months already won by 3,000 war folks, and they're our bonus.
23 make it plenty.
30.
We don't need a victory.
We need a Roman tribe.
We don't have any more than First rule of politics.
The ballots don't make the results.
The counters make the results.
The counters keep counting.
So, you know, I'm a visual kind of person.
I love movie scenes.
So, you know, that's, you know, my wife says that's one of my annoying habits.
So you might you might see me do a little bit more.
I love it, especially Braveheart.
I love those things.
All right, let's see.
Fulton County is missing 374,000 ballot images from the original November 3rd, 2020 count.
So every single ballot image.
So when you go vote, you know, you put your ballot into the machine or if you mail it in, it gets scanned into a machine.
Every single ballot image from early voting, gone.
It's like a genie just, you know, you know, Waved his hand and said, those are gone.
Out of here.
And let's remember, President Trump lost, I'm saying that because I don't believe it, by a little over 11,000.
That's exactly right.
That's exactly right.
Some of our critics out there will say, well, how do you know there was nefarious activity?
How can you prove it?
Some of it, I think we can.
Some of it is up for questions.
Some of it is just plain stupidity.
But let's take a look at what happens when a ballot is scanned.
So obviously, this is a voter who's putting their ballot into a machine to be scanned.
When you put it in there, three things happen.
Something called a.TIF image file is created.
And that's a digital rendering of what your ballot looks like on a computer monitor.
It's just a file.
If you're familiar with PDF files, a TIFF image can look like that.
The second thing that happens is that a results page is attached to that ballot, so it's appended to the digital image, and it just tells what the score was for that particular ballot.
It says who you voted for.
The third thing that happens that most people don't know about, it's kind of invisible, is something called the.SHA authentication file.
And the SHA hash algorithm was created by the National Security Agency as a way to authenticate digital images and authenticate files.
So you would know that if the SHA hash had been changed, then something had been changed with that image.
And so this is what it looks like.
Number one is the TIFF image.
Number two is the appended score page.
And number three kind of shows you what a SHA file looks like.
And we're going to zoom in right here, and you can see, like in the blue bar, we have...
Let's see if I can move...
All right.
So on the far right-hand side, you'll see something that says.sha, and the next one says.tif.
And both of those, you know, both of those...
The blue bar right now is highlighting tabulator 5150 batch 29 from the images of tabulator 5150 batch 29 image 000008.shah.
So that's the shah file and then obviously the tiff file is the next thing.
And you should always have a matching shah file for every image.
And what we know is that in Fulton County, Not only is Fulton County missing 274,000 ballot images, they're also missing all the ballot images from Election Day.
But with regard to those Shaw files, let's see, they're missing the Shaw files, too.
They've only got about 18,000 Shaw files.
You're kidding me.
Yeah, that's it, only 18,000.
And what's funny is that when we put an open records request...
For the whole county?
Yeah, for the whole county, for the initial count.
I have never heard this before.
That is insane.
So Fulton County, based on that alone, Fulton County has uncertifiable results.
And Raffensperger will say, oh, no, no, no, no.
We did a hand count and you can use those numbers and we know that that was totally botched.
Or we did another electronic recount and you can use those numbers.
And we know that those numbers don't match the hand count and neither one of those two numbers match the original count.
So nothing Nothing matches anything.
But to me, that's evidence, David.
Because I've seen these same ORRs and these tabulators.
I had a whole group working on these, engineers working on this.
So I know the Shaw Files go with that.
I did not know that they only had 10,000 or so of these versus all of their votes.
This is insane to me.
That's evidence, is it not?
Well, yeah, if we can get it in court, you know, but so far, you know, the work that I'm doing is helping support Garland Fabrito's, you know, lawsuit and Caroline Jeffords, you know, with hers.
And as it stands right now, it's, you know, that their case is stalled right now, even though the Supreme Court said that they have standing for whatever reason.
Favarito's case has been moved forward, but it's in limbo because it's waiting on a ruling for Caroline Jefford's case, which is the same thing, and it should have standing based on the same rules.
But it's just, everything's like moving at a snail's pace in the judicial system.
They're not going to let us in court because they know we have evidence.
The New York Times interviewed me last week at a Mike Lindell's event, and they asked me, they said, what evidence do y'all have that y'all haven't shown?
I said, a lot.
A lot.
And they said, well, what would y'all help President Trump with?
I said, do you think we're going to cast our pearls before swine?
Get us in a courtroom and we'll show you what we have.
So people don't even know what all y'all have.
I don't even know what all y'all have.
I know things that I myself with my affidavits have not presented yet, but people don't know because we can't get a courtroom.
Right.
Well, so one of the things that's happened is even with some of the things that I'm showing you today, we've tried to push them out.
We've tried to give them to the Atlanta Journal.
We tried to give them to the Washington Post, the New York Times.
We give it to them, and they literally turn their nose up like it smells bad.
They just don't want to see it, and they don't want to report on it.
No, they want to report on me, Greg.
Greg Blustein.
I'm worried about his wife.
He's obsessed.
Greg Blustein reached out to me a little while back and he said, hey, we might want to interview you.
And I was like, I'm not interested.
Not anymore.
You guys blew your chance.
And I know that if I do an interview with them, it's just like when Josh McCune did his interview with Channel 11.
And he was talking.
The interview was 15 minutes long.
They only showed maybe like two or three minutes of it.
Which is more than normal.
But Josh actually talked about the fact that the Hawaii precedent makes it so that the electors, what they were doing was lawful and followed the Electoral College Act.
But Channel 11 is just like, nope, we're editing that out.
We don't want to hear it.
Josh is an attorney and Josh is the state Georgia Republican Party chair.
And they don't want to hear it.
They don't want to hear anything.
Josh has a very good historical narrative on that that everybody should hear.
It's great.
All right, so the slide you're looking at right now is the authorization that came from the Secretary of State's office to overwrite the memory cards.
You can see right in the center from Chris Harvey, it says, yes, go ahead and reuse the memory cards.
And the question was, we really need to know if it's okay to clean the memory cards we used in the scanners in the general election, or do they need to stay loaded for some legal reason?
It's time for It's time to start.
Logic and accuracy, that's what L&A stands for.
And Dominion sent no extra cards of the equipment.
All right, so these memory cards that go on these machines, they're these little square things that you used to put inside a camera, like the old cameras from like 15 years ago.
I think they're like $4 a piece, you know, and we can't come up with like these $4 cards to go inside these things.
But Chris Harvey actually sent that from his personal email account.
I think he's actually gone on to get a promotion after all this came out.
It's really strange what's going on.
Every time I tell you or tell any of the viewers that are out there that are watching, if I give you a fact and I tell you Fulton County is missing 374,000 valid images, The naysayers out there will say, oh, cross his line.
He doesn't know what he's talking about.
He's no election expert.
You know what?
I don't know that many people that are election experts, so I'll grant you that.
What I will do is I will always come with the receipts.
Here's an email that Garland Faberito got from Steve Rosenberg, who was the deputy county attorney, and he's admitting on this email, I can confirm the county maintains no records which are responsive to your request.
And in here, and he specifically said electronic copy of the approximately 315,000 original in-person advance voting ballot images for the November 3rd, 2020 election.
We wanted him to make sure that he put that, you know, in that particular paragraph.
So it's just stunning that, you know, that it's missing.
But as I said, I come with receipts and there's a lot more that's going on here.
Let's see, here's the Shaw authentication files.
When we asked about these, when did we ask about these?
The date on there says January 10th, 2022.
The request for why they only have, I had asked, why do you only have 16,000 Shaw files out of 148,318 ballot images that were given to us?
And Richard Barron forwarded that over to Dominic Alomo, who said, I need to know what SHA files he is referring and from who did he receive these files and when.
It sounds to me a little bit like this guy, Alomo, is concerned that we even know about this information.
So it seems to me like there's a little bit of trigger that's going on there.
But, you know, Going back to, we had three counts, and they were all really close.
I mean, that's the narrative that we got.
We also had Gabriel Sterling saying, no, ballots were counted twice.
It's not possible.
And I'll get to that in a little bit.
But out of the three counts, we had the original count on November 3rd.
We had the hand recount that came next.
And then there was another machine count that happened after that.
Well, from the machine count, from the third count for the machine count, Even after they refed everything into these machines, Fulton County is still missing 18,000 ballot images, which means that there are 18,000 more votes that were cast and counted for the official record, but there's no ballot, there's no digital ballot that says that that vote exists.
Maybe that was all the votes that tipped Joe over because we only lost by a little over 11,000.
Maybe?
I think it's way more than that.
I think it was like 200,000 off in one of these counts.
So, you know, but I'm just saying that there's so many discrepancies in every single county.
If you went to all 159 and people watching this aren't from Georgia, they may not understand.
We have 159 counties in Georgia.
It's a pile of counties.
Every one of them had issues like this.
They all did.
Exactly.
And so the fact that there's 18,000 ballot images missing from the second count that occurred, And that's on top of the additional, you know, roughly 5,000 additional votes that we know that were duplicate counted.
Double scanned, duplicate counted.
We know what happened.
This is just one county.
So my...
To my mind, I think that Biden was way, way, way behind on Election Day.
And that's the whole reason why things were stopped at roughly 10.30 p.m.
on November 3rd.
And then we had just that ridiculous, let's keep counting these pieces of paper until our guy wins.
So I think he was way behind.
And I think it's going to come out in court.
We'll soon see.
Here's another mind blower.
I showed you what that scanner looked like and I was a poll manager in Gwinnett County last December.
And at the end of the day, the poll manager and his two assistant managers, or the assistant manager and one of the other clerks, is supposed to go over and press a button on the top of the scanner that prints out the poll tape.
And you print out three of them.
And it says, you know, The scanner counted this number of votes.
It started with this many.
It ended with this many.
Here's the serial number.
Here's what the results are.
You print that out and each individual that sees that printed out has to sign it.
Each person has to sign each one of those pieces of paper one time.
It's basically a triplicate form is what it works out to.
Now, that's a long-winded story to tell you that in Fulton County, for the original vote that happened on November 3rd, there were 315,000 votes that were certified on scanners where there are unsigned tabulator tapes.
So votes were taken in, you know, in early voting, and rather than Printing out the tapes right there at the precinct, they took the cards out, they took them down to English Street where somebody else printed them out, and so we have these unsigned tabulator tapes that you're looking at on the screen right now.
There should be signatures on there, and it's a violation of Georgia Code not to provide that.
We're going to zoom in on the next one, and I'll show you that here are 12 Yeah, here are 12 different tapes where each one has got the same serial number on it.
No problem there.
No problem.
No signature.
No following the law.
Same serial number.
Keep scanning, keep scanning, keep scanning, keep scanning.
No problem.
Yeah, and in some of these cases, there were hundreds of ballots that were counted, and you can see the protective counter says that there were 148 votes that were on there when it all started, and each one of these has got a different start time and end time.
This should make everybody angry.
It's not a Republican issue.
This is a nonpartisan issue.
Bipartisan, nonpartisan, whatever.
Doesn't matter what political crap you want to believe.
This is an American issue.
If we don't secure this, we have no country.
This makes me so mad.
I'm ready for like everybody to be taken out.
I want everybody to go back and work and be removed from their seats and normal people go up there and run things because they are so crooked.
This is ridiculous.
Well, and what's happening is I think this is going to go down in history as the greatest civil rights violation of our time.
Absolutely.
And I tell people, I don't care if you vote Republican, Democrat, Independent, Green Party.
I don't care if you vote for somebody from Mars.
I want your vote to count.
And I want it to be counted accurately.
Here are the rules for tabulator tapes.
Let's see, here's one that's showing a duplicate serial number, and duplicate serial numbers are just not supposed to happen.
It's down here at the bottom next to this red piece right here.
Here's a poll that was open 14 days late, a duplicate serial number, no explanation.
And I've put an official complaint with the Secretary of State's office along with my friend Kevin Moncla and Joe Rossi, and we've heard nothing back.
And then I sent another one that said, hey, we didn't hear about the first one.
This is a follow-up.
Never heard anything on that.
And finally, Judge Duffy got back to me about two weeks ago and said, you know what?
The investigator that was assigned to this case left and went, you know, left Secretary of State's office and they forgot to reassign your case to somebody else.
Oh, I bet they did.
I bet they did.
I bet they just forgot.
Shoot, we just forgot.
We forgot to do that one.
All other cases we assigned, but this one that's the highest constitutional right of our whole entire country, this is the one that we conveniently forgot.
Exactly, exactly.
So I could go through a lot more of these, but here's the thing.
Here's the next thing I want to focus on.
Which is, what are we going to do about it?
All right, so I'll start back up here.
The New York Times, if you're watching because they watch me constantly, you're getting a taste of the evidence, right?
David has volumes of evidence.
I have evidence and many others do.
This is a taste.
Do we have evidence?
You're daggum right we do.
And when we get in the courtroom, we're going to show you.
Yeah, and so here's the thing.
So the New York Times, the Washington Post, whoever you are that's watching this, A lot of those folks will look at the things that I just showed you and they'll say, oh, that was just, you know what, that was just maladministration.
There was nothing, there was no harm meant by it or anything like that.
It was just, it's big misunderstanding, right?
All right, what if it was?
What if it was a misunderstanding?
What I'm going to show you next are things that you cannot say is a misunderstanding, that you cannot say are untrue.
For anybody who's out there, you probably know that Candace is involved in Paper Balance Please or Unplug Georgia.
We basically want to get rid of the machines.
I would rather have a bunch of 10th graders and 11th graders counting these things.
And we did a demonstration in Cherokee County last Monday night.
We had a bunch of volunteers that did it.
We had one, two, three.
We had four different tables that were counting.
I think they were counting...
I think they were counting 415 ballots or so, and every table turned out, got the number exactly right.
Holy cow, who would know that you could actually use a process and count ballots by hand and get it correct?
So let's dive into this.
So for the longest time, Americans used hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots for 200-something years.
Then we turned to machines because we wanted instant results.
Everybody wanted to know right away.
Most of us think that these things are benign.
They're just benign computers.
They're just designed to just give us an honest result.
It's supposed to be accurate and safe like a Scantron is at school, but that's not the case.
These things are way more complex and they've got way more opportunities for bad actors to get in.
I'm not saying that they were designed that way to allow anybody in, but the reality is you're talking about government technology, you're talking about technology.
Those machines like in the pictures, these are the actual machines that we use in Georgia.
The operating system is a Linux system from 2007 I mean, I think that's before, like, your first iPhone.
So these things are just not secure.
So the mountains of evidence suggest that the American people have been duped.
In 2020, there were election inaccuracies that occurred in Coffey County.
So there's a friend of mine, you know, Kathy Latham is being vilified right now.
And she's one of the people that's facing, you know, Fonnie Willis.
And it's for what she did in Coffey County.
And people say, oh, she gave away the system and she made it so anybody could get into it.
And the reality is she was trying to do her job.
She saw that there were inaccuracies that happened in the 2020 election, and she was trying to preserve information and preserve data.
So what I'm going to show you here is the actual document that was turned in to the state of Georgia.
And the part that's in yellow that might be hard for your folks to read is also in red on the right.
And it says, investigation revealed that we neglected to run 185 ballots, or at least they thought they neglected to run them.
When we ran these ballots, we received the results, but there was no change in the vote count despite 185 ballots that were added.
You know, the big question that we're getting from everybody is, what can I do?
Candice, you're involved in the paper ballots please movement and we're both involved with this and some folks are saying, hey, we need to unplug Georgia.
I don't care what it is.
We need to get rid of the machines and I want to trust human beings.
Amen.
In taking a look at what's going on here, I remember what I was saying before.
I was talking to the Washington Post, the New York Times, the AJC, the people that are watching this and saying, you can't prove anything.
You know what?
I'm going to show you some things that you can prove.
But before we get to that, what I want to share with your viewers is what they can do about what's going on here.
So step number one.
Find out who your representatives are.
We're going to send them some information that's going to prove to them that they need to take action here.
So the first thing you do is you go to this pluralpolicy.com, you put in your address, and it's going to come back up and it's going to say, here's your state rep, here's your state senator.
So, you know, you jot their information down.
And there you go.
So this is my guy, David Clark.
It tells me his address at the Capitol.
It tells me what his local address is.
And it even gives me his phone number so I can reach out to him and his email address.
Step number two, print the letter.
So I've got this letter on my website, www.gaballots.com.
And we'll provide it as a link for your viewers as well, too.
But there's this very simple letter that says, we know that these things are not accurate, we know that they're violated in the law, and we want to have the opportunity to have paper ballots.
So you're going to print this letter out, and right now it just says, Dear Rep, if you've got one of those little stickers that has what your address is or something like that, just smack it across the top above those words that say, Save Georgia's 2024 Election.
Fill in your rep names right there with the senator's name and sign it at the bottom.
The next thing you're going to do is you're going to print these slides that I'm going to go through here.
You're going to send these.
I don't want you to email them.
I want you to do step number four is deliver the message.
Either mail these things to these folks or go down and meet them at their office and hand deliver it.
When you send something by email, it is so much easier for them to go, delete, delete, delete.
And they do it because they get a ton of email.
But if you go down and meet them face-to-face, press the flash, and show them that this is important to you, I think they'll get it.
Step number five, call them and follow up.
A lot of people will send letters and then not call and follow up because sometimes what will happen is they'll say, oh, no, we didn't get anything.
What are you talking about?
So you at least need to call and follow up and see what happens.
So these are the steps we have to go through.
And then don't forget, please, please, please be sweet with these people.
You know, our representatives are some people that are a lot of people that are out there.
They'll say, oh, they're criminals.
They're terrible people, that kind of thing.
And you know what?
Some of them very well may be.
But the ones that you want to help you, you got to be sweet to them.
You have to.
You can't put them on the defensive because the second you put them on, put someone in the defensive, they are going to They're going to automatically defend whatever it is that you're against.
They're automatically going to do that.
So don't do that.
And while we're talking about honey, go get some Make Honey Great Again.
You can see I've already used up like half my model.
I just got it last week.
Money that comes from this goes to help.
You can put in a promo code electors and that money that you go, when you buy one of these bottles, $5 will go.
To helping the legal fund for the electors that we're trying to help out.
And if you want to give something else, you can put in on the promo code VOTERGA and $5 will end up going to VOTERGA who goes to Garland Fabrito and he'll help reimburse me for some of my expenses having done these open records requests and all these things.
So what we're going to dive into right now is what's going to be in these slides.
So Georgia law is actually in support of Georgia counties and their authority to use hand-marked, hand-counted paper ballots, you know, counted at the precinct.
Most of the lawyers that are out there will cite Georgia law 212-300, which basically says, Georgia has to have a uniform system.
Get out of here with your paper ballots.
And that's where they stop reading.
And unfortunately, Most attorneys that I'm coming across that are dealing with this, they're lazy and they just regurgitate back what the Secretary of State gives.
They don't dig deeper.
If you dig deeper into Georgia Code, 212334 version from 2022, You know, the highlighted red, not highlighted, but the underlying red parts are the most important.
But, you know, I'll just read it off for you.
If a method of nomination or election for a candidate or office or voting on any questions prescribed by law in which the use of voting machines is not possible or practicable, or in case at any primary election, the number of candidates seeking nomination or nominated for any office renders the use of voting machines for such office at such primary or election impractical,
So basically says, if your ballot's too big and you can't use machines or there's some problem with the machines that you can't use it, then you can use paper ballots.
But then we get to the next most important line that's, you know, that's in red underlined.
If for any other reason, it seems kind of obvious.
At any primary election, the use of voting machines wholly or in part is not practicable.
The superintendent may arrange to have the voting of such candidates or offices of such questions conducted by paper ballots.
The end.
I mean, that authorizes these counties to be able to use paper ballots.
So, what does the law say about the accuracy of these machines?
So, I just showed you a few minutes ago about what happened, you know, in Coffey County where they had 185 ballots that weren't counted.
Well, this is from 21 to 365.
It says, the machines shall, when properly operated, correctly record and accurately every vote cast.
Not some votes, not most votes.
Every vote cast.
It shall also be construed that an elector may readily learn the method of operating it.
And I got to tell you, I have a four-hour training course on these things.
These are not the simplest things.
I mean, the machines themselves are not terribly complex, but the way that they operate is and setting them up and taking them down is way more complex than most people know.
So here's what's even more juicy.
21-2-379.2 It sounds exciting, doesn't it?
It says that the approval of the machines shall be revoked for any problem concerning the voting machine's ability to accurately record or tabulate votes.
So this says that the Secretary of State will eliminate these machines.
The approval of the machines shall be revoked if there's any problems with accuracy.
I already showed you Coffey County.
Coffey County had, you know, had 185 votes where it failed to count those ballots twice.
What a lot of people forget is if we fast forward to last year in the second district for DeKalb County, pretty big county, Democrat Michelle Long Spears was running for District 2 commissioner.
And she went and she voted for herself.
And her husband voted for her and she was the odds-on favorite, you know, in a field of three.
They had one person that dropped out.
So there were three candidates that were up there and she lost and she was the favorite.
And so she started digging in to see what happened with the numbers.
And what she found out was that she didn't get any votes in her own precinct where she voted for herself.
What are the chances of that happening?
And so Michelle Long Spears went to the DeKalb election board and said, I think there's something wrong, and I think y'all need to hand count the ballots.
And DeKalb County contacted the Secretary of State's office and said, hey, we got a problem.
Things aren't adding up right.
She wants us to hand count the ballots.
And the Secretary of State's office said, don't you dare hand count those ballots.
You turn in whatever it is that's on those machines.
That's right.
And DeKalb County, to their credit, said, I think we're going to hand count the ballots.
And so they did.
And what they found was that there was a computer error.
There were two things that happened.
The first one was that there were originally four candidates.
One of the people dropped out.
And when people were going in and they were voting for her, the computer thought that when somebody touched the screen for her, it was accruing that vote to the guy who dropped out.
So all of her votes went to a candidate that wasn't even up for consideration.
But what the news didn't tell you and the AJC didn't tell you and the New York Times didn't tell you and the Wall Street Journal didn't tell you and the Washington Post didn't tell you is that those scanners had 1,805 additional ballots that were inside them that never got counted.
Never got counted.
And that's because of something called the Williamson, Tennessee error that the Secretary of State says is not in Georgia, but we know that it's in 97% of Georgia counties.
But that proves right there, this is not accurate.
Another friend of mine- Spend that error one more time.
Which one?
The William, the one you just said.
The Williamson, Tennessee, it's a little bit technical, but basically what happens is in Williamson, Tennessee, there was a municipal election.
They were using these machines, and at the end of the night, the folks were packed up the machines, and one election worker said, well, that's kind of funny.
It doesn't look like it counted all the ballots.
Well, there happened to be a poll observer that was there watching things.
He recorded all these notes.
And what they found out was that the machines they ran the ballots through again didn't count them all.
And so they called in the Secretary of State.
The Secretary of State did his testing and he found out, you know, yeah, it did not count the ballots.
Even though we run them through, it's not counting them all.
So they contacted the Election Assistance Commission.
So the United States government was called in.
And the government contacted ProVNB and Dominion and had them all come out.
And I think another company called LSI, if I'm not mistaken, but they had them all come out and said, are y'all going to figure out what happened here?
And they tested it and they tested it and they couldn't figure out what was going on.
And finally, Finally, Dominion said, well, we don't know what's causing it, but we can write some programming code that will fix this.
And what was happening was a ballot would be fed into a machine.
The machine would say, that is a provisional vote, and provisional votes don't get counted right now, so we're going to put that in the not counted folder.
And then every ballot that came in after it also went into the not counted folder.
So that's what happened.
They have no idea what caused it, how it happened, but they eventually came back and said that when they were looking at the system log files, they found this thing that said QR code signature mismatch.
Oh, QR code that we can't read.
Wow.
So those who have nothing to hide hide nothing.
And when men win, they want to show their rack.
They want to show the keel.
They want to show the paper.
They want you to count the paper.
So what I did after I lost the primary is I did affidavits all over the state.
And I have more affidavits in precincts than I have votes on the Secretary of State's books.
An affidavit is a legal document and it's swearing to God that they voted for me.
And it's all over the state, every county.
I have it all over, dispersed.
And so We know the same kind of thing happened to me that happened in DeKalb County.
I was already collecting affidavits.
I was already seeing those discrepancies before she even finished what she was doing because I was doing it because the Holy Spirit told me to.
So we know, and they won't let us count the paper.
Why not?
If you won, then you'd be proud and you'd be willing to show it.
Exactly.
And the thing is, is the CEO of Dominion, a guy named John Pullis, he actually says on camera back in September of last year at the state election board meeting, he said, the paper ballots can't be hacked.
The paper ballots are the true record.
And anybody can go back and look at those things.
Well, he didn't know that anybody meant anybody not in Georgia.
Because in Georgia right now, if you touch one of those paper ballots, you can go to jail.
So it's kind of stupid, but that's the law that we've got right now.
But the bottom line is that in DeKalb County, we know for a fact that 1,800 ballots were not counted.
And the only reason why we know 1,800 ballots weren't counted in DeKalb County is because somebody who was on the ballot came in and said, this is wrong.
I voted for myself and I didn't get votes over here.
So I was saying before that one of my friends, a lady named Jill Trammell, she was running for a commission office in North Fulton County.
A similar kind of thing happened to her.
And when she went to the election board, they said, hey, tough luck, better luck next time.
She wasn't allowed to count anything.
And I think we're going to find the exact same thing.
And more of these things are going on than people know.
And election directors have no idea that it's happening because the election director is not in every precinct.
They don't know how many people are coming in to vote.
They don't know what it looks like inside the machine.
And they don't know what can happen when you can overwrite code with code on a 2007 software.
Exactly.
And there's a multitude of ways that things can be hacked and that kind of thing.
But what I want to focus on for this particular presentation that your viewers are going to print out and send in is I want to focus on just the cold, hard evidence that says this is what has happened and this is how these things are not accurate.
So the Coffey County thing and DeKalb County.
These are lock, stock, and barrel, irrefutable facts.
Now, in addition to that, there's a guy named Dr.
Alex Halderman, who is a professor of computer science at the University of Michigan.
He was asked by the Council for Good Governance to write up a report on whether or not the machines in Georgia are secure.
So he made this 96-page document that basically says, no, these things are not secure at all.
I mean, he's...
The guy is king of the computer science people that are out there.
Last time I checked, Raffensperger does not have a degree in computer science.
He will say, this guy's not an expert.
Right.
But Halderman is definitely an expert.
But Raffy Taffy thinks he's the expert.
That makes sense.
Yes, that's exactly right.
And so Halderman says right here, he said, I showed that the ICX, and I have touchscreen written above that because I hate acronyms, just give me real words.
So I showed that the touchscreen suffers from critical vulnerabilities that can be exploited to subvert all of its security mechanisms.
Not a few, again, not some, not many, all.
You know, all security can be subverted.
He goes on to say that Georgia voters should have no confidence that their votes are counted correctly.
And what you're looking at from this document, these are excerpts from this document that is in this Curling v.
Raffensperger case.
Raffensperger saw this report in 2021 and the judge said, oh my gosh, this could destroy our elections.
We need to seal this so nobody can see it.
So Raffensperger has seen all of this.
He knows what's in here, and he continued to hold elections afterwards.
But this document, what you're looking on the screen right now, was just unsealed about a month and a half ago.
So this stuff is just now starting to see the light of day.
Because obviously Brad Raffensperger cared more about himself and his seat than he cared about the people.
And really, it's not his seat.
It's our seat.
And that's their problem.
They get in there and they think that the seat belongs to them and it belongs to the people.
And that, my friend, is going to be the downfall of many politicians in Georgia.
He works for us, but here's the thing.
He's a man that has a lot of pride, and nobody wants to hear that they have an ugly baby, and this system is his ugly baby.
He's got a really ugly baby.
So one of the next slides says that a single poll worker card can be used to compromise an entire county.
So when I was poll manager, one of the things I was told is that once we got these machines set up, somebody came in and we gave them their card for voting.
They walked over, put it inside the machine.
I could not walk behind them.
So if there happened to be a bad actor that came in with a card that was pre-programmed with a virus on it, They could go up and slide it in and make it look like they're voting, you know, and pretend like they're voting and, you know, slide that card in there.
And you can load a virus on the machine at about three to five seconds.
So it takes like no time.
And you pull that thing out and you go back over.
You go, I don't know what happened, man.
My machine's not working.
But what people don't understand is that once you infect that one machine, it will infect all the other machines next to it.
It will infect all the machines in the rest of the county.
And even though Raffensperger says, I swear, you know, these things are not connected to the Internet, they're connected to the Internet.
We had a MiFi device, you know, at my location.
And across all the locations in Georgia, you have these devices that are set up.
So that Haldeman report that was 96 pages, there was another report that came out from this group called MITRE that said, we think that Haldeman's report is a bunch of bunk.
And it was not signed off on by anybody.
It was paid for by Dominion.
It's very, very suspect.
And then afterwards, there were 29 leading computer scientists that came back and said, you know what, MITRE? We think you're wrong.
We think that it was wrong for you to issue this report that said that Halderman's report was incorrect.
You guys didn't even sign your document, and you didn't disclose in really, really tiny, fine print.
That Dominion paid for it, and Dominion paid for it so they could have it for marketing material.
But you know, these computer scientists from MIT, Princeton, Yale, University of California, Berkeley, and Harvard and Purdue all said the MITRE report is junk, and it doesn't mean anything, and they should retract it.
Okay, David, didn't the Haldeman report, wasn't it paid for by a Democrat?
Right here on the screen.
The Coalition for Good Governance, they are the ones that actually paid for it, you know, to get the Halderman report done because the Coalition for Good Governance wants to get rid of the touchscreens.
And what most people don't know is that the touchscreens are used in Georgia.
We think that it's just part of the voting system, right?
Georgia is the only state that uses touchscreens everywhere, and the touchscreens were originally designed as a handicap assist device.
I've got a friend that lives up in Vermont.
They use the same machines, except they don't have touchscreens.
He goes in, he's handed a paper ballot, he scribbles on there what he wants, and then he feeds it into a scanner.
But the most recent election, last year when he went to go vote, the scanners weren't working and they had to put the ballots into little secure bags.
And then they had it counted by hand.
So let's look at Arizona for a second.
We look at Kerry's race and it's like they were neck and neck, Kerry was.
And he's saying, oh, well, we used Dominion, they used Dominion.
OK, but we use BDMs, which are ballot marking devices.
We use touchscreens.
They don't.
They go in and they actually have a ballot that they mark.
In Georgia, we do not have ballots.
Ever.
Right.
We touch a screen and we print a receipt that has a QR code.
And you heard issues with QR code a while ago.
So we don't have a ballot ever.
You can't see voter intent.
You talk about looking at adjudicate.
You can't tell voter intent because there is nothing marked.
It's whatever they tap on that screen.
And 90% of people who mark their ballot and print it, Do not look at the paper receipt before they scan it in.
And so, do you know how many people I had in the governor's race and in the U.S. Senate race in 2020 that voted for me?
It printed Kelly Loeffler, printed Kelly Loeffler.
I voted for Candace Taylor.
They let them re-vote.
Don't know what happened to the first vote.
Same thing in the governor race.
It printed Brian Kemp, printed Brian Kemp.
I voted for Candace Taylor.
They would come back.
I have affidavits for most people That went in, voted for me, and it printed somebody else.
It's funny that it was Kelly Leffler in the Senate race, never Doug Collins.
It's funny it was Brian Kemp and the governor race, never David Perdue.
Funny.
Right.
And again, this just goes back to, you know, in the precinct where I was manager, you know, I had to go out the night before, Monday night, had to set up the church that we were in to be able to handle everything.
We had to put up all the posters and signs, and that's all fine, all that kind of thing.
And then the next morning, I had to get up at 4.30 so I could be there by 5.30 so that we could unstrap all these machines, make sure that they had the correct codes on them, you know, on the little security tabs and all that kind of thing.
It took two hours to set everything up.
And then people were voting during the day.
We had to set up this Verizon MiFi device that was connected to a laptop, and the laptop was so that we could call in at 10 o'clock, 2 o'clock, and 5 p.m., How many people had voted and how many people were in line?
And we could have very easily have just texted in or called in and said, hey, we've had 35 people that have voted and there's nobody in line.
Or, hey, we've had 110 people vote and there's nobody in line.
But we have an unnecessarily complex system and unnecessarily complex systems are there for a reason.
It's there to keep the people who are in power, in power.
Getting back to what I was saying, at the end of the day in my precinct, we had 350 people that voted, 350.
I could have counted those ballots myself.
My two assistant managers could have counted them and we wouldn't have had these stupid machines.
It took us two hours to put these machines back together, lock them all up, secure everything, fill out all our reports and all this paperwork, all these things we had to fill in.
I even had a lady who was there to help me because she knew that it was my first time being a poll manager.
She said, oh, no, no, you've got this document you put in the wrong place and this document you put in the wrong place.
When I took all my documents up to turn them into Gwinnett County, Gwinnett County looked at me like I was from Mars and said, why on earth do you have this here and this other document here?
I said, That's what the trainer told me to do.
She actually came by and you're looking at her work, not mine.
It's unnecessarily complex.
We're almost at the end here because I know you've got to go.
This is what Dominion says about Dominion.
It's got some foul language in it, so if it hurts your feelings, turn away.
You're just reading it.
You didn't write it, David.
You're just reading it.
Okay, so Dominion's Director of Product Strategy and Security, Eric Coomer, acknowledged in private that our shit is just riddled with bugs.
Indeed, Coomer had been castigating Dominion's failures for years, and in 2019, Coomer said that our products suck.
Quote, right?
He lamented that almost all of Dominion's technological failings were due to our complete f-ups in installation.
I mean, This is what Dominion is saying about Dominion.
I mean, I can't imagine what is actually really being delivered out there as a final product.
So this slide is in the deck that I want you to deliver to the House reps and the Senate reps so they can see They can see the facts.
I mean, Dominion has received complaints from jurisdictions in Georgia noting irregularities of machine counts that required Dominion employees to reprogram machines.
That's not even supposed to happen.
So this is going on everywhere.
It makes me just absolutely sick.
I've got a slide that's in here for the folks.
We looked at that video about the 4.7 million ballots versus the 5 million that were actually counted.
But getting back to the paper ballots here, in Pearson v.
Kemp, the Secretary of State's office, when it was under Kemp, argued that the Secretary of State has no lawful authority over county election officials.
So when you go talk to your county election officials and say, please, please, please, you can use paper ballots if you want to.
And you have to, you know, people just need to be educated so that if they do move forward and want to use paper ballots, they need to know that the worst thing that's going to happen is the Secretary of State is going to yell at them and fuss at them and say, I'm going to fine you $5,000 a day.
And those people at this county should say, okay, go ahead.
Because he can't.
He has no authority.
And there's a lot of election groups that are out there or there's a lot of counties that are out there that say that we don't want to be like Athens-Clarke County and pay these big fines.
But you know what?
Put an open records request in with Athens-Clarke County and ask them how much money they had to pay to the Secretary of State's office.
They're going to come back and say zero.
Exactly zero.
So he's got no authority.
They can do this.
And again, Raffensperger is not a computer scientist.
He has, you know, he doesn't have, you know, computer programmers on staff.
He's got consultants that work with him, but he is no expert, you know, and I've got to paste it on his face right there, too.
I mean, he's a civil engineer that was educated at the University of Western Ontario.
I think there's maybe like hundreds of people in class.
I mean, he's, you know, Getting back to the argument that she'll be making, if you're for paper ballots and you want to go advocate for this with your county election board or with your commissioners or with your probate judge, most lawyers that are out there are going to say, Our job is to have the county not take any additional risk, and they're being told that if you're counting ballots by hand, you're taking additional risk.
And what I'll tell you is that Georgia's system is not accurate.
We've already proven it.
Georgia's system is hackable, and Halderman proved that.
And I believe that counties can take less risk by switching to paper ballots, having more transparency.
We've got You know, we've got cameras on our phones.
You can count these ballots, you know, with a camera light watching whoever is counting them, and you can have total transparency.
And this is where we need to go.
So I say, unplug Georgia.
You know, let's move to paper ballots, and here is one potential way to go about doing that.
Amen.
I love it.
We have to.
We don't have a choice.
There's no other option.
If we don't, we're going to lose our country.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And we have to do this.
We've got to take back our country.
We all fell asleep during the 80s and 90s.
I mean, we all grew up at the time where we saw, you know, I'm just a bill up on Capitol Hill and Schoolhouse Rock and all that kind of thing.
And we thought the government wasn't out there screwing us.
And as it turns out, they were screwing us.
And it's time for us to take it back.
That's right.
Well, David, I thank you so much for your work.
You have not been paid.
You've spent thousands of dollars.
I would hate to know how much money you've spent out of your pocket for open records requests and don't tell your wife and how much money you have given out of your heart.
And I just pray that the Lord replaces it a hundred times and that you're just so blessed.
And you know why?
In fact, because all of my viewers that said, well, if you were Jewish and I have some agnostics, but most of them are Christians, but still doesn't matter.
Give a miracle story because you have so many.
Will you just give a miracle story of how somebody stopped using you as a business?
Thank you for reminding me.
I've been really blessed.
On this entire journey, I've had I felt like I was being punished along the way for doing this and for standing up and saying what I felt was in my heart.
And so in August of last year, I had a client that came to me and, you know, 2022 was a pretty hard year in the stock market.
So if you had investments, you know, 2022 was not a lot of fun.
So in August of last year, one of my clients came to me and he said, I love you.
I've known you for a long time.
He said, but I keep seeing all your posts on, you know, online and, you know, you going down to the state election board and all this kind of stuff.
And he's like, it's, you know, some of my friends are teasing me and it's embarrassing.
And I just, I need to, I need to move my mind.
I want you to know that that client at the time, his account was down 1.9% through the end of August, which most people would have been like, that's a miracle!
Thank you!
It wasn't because he was unhappy with how we were doing.
Anyway, he moved his account out.
It was significant.
It was $4.6 million, so nearly $5 million.
I went home salty that night.
And Shawn had made, you know, made dinner for us.
And, you know, over our prayer, you know, when she was almost done, she said, Lord, it's always been said that you don't take something away without providing something else a little bit of benefit.
And she said, and we need that right about now.
And so the very next day, I got a telephone call from a lady who said, I'm getting divorced.
I saw you on a podcast or something like that, or a video, and I've got $700,000 and I need your help.
Can you help me?
And I was like, absolutely.
And so we struck up a great relationship.
She's a Republican.
I'm Republican.
We're both on the same page.
She said, one of my friends is going to call you tomorrow and she's got $300,000.
She needs help.
In my business, when somebody says my friend is going to call you tomorrow, it never happens.
She called the very next day and she said, I've got $300,000.
I need your help.
That's a million dollars right there and that's wonderful.
Well, the day after that, a gentleman from Swanee called me and he said, I saw you on a video talking about the selection integrity stuff.
And he said, I saw that you live in Swanee.
I live in Swanee.
I need your help.
My dad needs your help.
My deceased brother's estate needs your help.
I was like, that's fantastic.
And as it turns out, he transferred into us $4.6 million.
So we got back more than we lost and we've been really blessed.
And I'm a big proponent of look at where you spend your money.
If you're buying honey or something like that, buy some of this MakeHoneyGreatAgain.com.
Go there.
A portion of your money is going to go to that.
Support small businesses that support your values.
If you've got money that's at one of the biggest- Put in voter GA or put in electors, guys.
MakeHoneyGreatAgain, voter GA or electors, either one.
If you've got investments that are being managed by one of the big firms out there, you need to know that they're using that money against you.
They are feeding companies money that literally hate your values and hate your way of life.
There are small independent advisors that are just like me that have the same kind of values.
Seek us out.
Make sure that the money that you're spending is going to support the very people who are doing things to help you and to help our country.
Amen.
So if y'all do go to David, any of you, because I've got some wealthy people watch this, my doctors and all my friends that y'all know, anybody who goes, make sure you tell David that you saw him on this show because I want him to see the fruit of his investment in us.
So thank you, David Cross, for coming.
You're a blessing.
And I look forward to working with you for the next two years saving Georgia.
You too, Candice.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Thank y'all for coming on Jesus, Guns, and Babies.
I will see you next week on the Sue Peters Network at 8 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time.
I love you.
God loves you.
you.
God bless America.
Hey, I know what you need to do right now today, and that is invest in gold and silver.
I have a great friend.
His name's Terry Sacka, and he owns CornerstoneAssetMetals.com.
You can go there.
There's a phone number.
You can call.
They will walk you through.
Your budget.
What you have for investments.
And they will help you diversify.
It is so important.
Our dollar has become diluted.
Inflation is on the rise.
And we have to diversify.
We can't keep everything in the bank.
We can't keep everything in the stock market.
And we surely can't keep everything in cash.
We have to take our money and invest in gold and silver.
That's what's going to stand the test of time.
That is what is going to be there when nothing else is.
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