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I'm anxious to read your book. I've read the Hoopes Stenstrom "Parallel election" about Delaware County ("DelCo" mafia). I wish I could do something here in Berks County. I keep asking folks like Leah Hoopes and others if they could put me in contact with someone, but everyone is so busy investigating their own county. Berks had the highest number of "dead voters" in the country in 2020 (sew 2000 mules) yet there is no one here looking that I can team with. I'd be happy to start the work myself but I'm not sure my accounting or legal skills are sufficient. Any suggestions? I can be reached using my sybildefense at protonmail

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Hi Dr. Colgate,

Thanks for writing. I have heard so many disturbing comments about PA that I wonder how Trump managed to win it in 2016. I guess the Dems didn't think he could win, so they didn't do very much ballot harvesting. I have the Parallel Election book, and have to admire the grit and tenacity of the authors. You have one of the smartest election analysts I know in PA: Heather Honey. She runs Verity Vote, which does systems analysis work - mostly for corporations. They are not a members group, but Heather sometimes speaks to gatherings about election issues. If you ever get a chance to hear her, I strongly recommend it.

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Absolutely love your articles on elections & fraud. I have learned so much about how lax the controls are. Question about the AVR process, particularly back end. If the 'voter' is not aware they are being registered, who decides what party affiliation is selected?

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Hi Veva, Sorry to take so long to reply. I missed your comment earlier. They are probably registered without party affiliation, which is the way some states do it. Anyway, you can bet that these people will end up as Democrat votes (whether or not they know it).

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Extremely disturbing news. I'm now reading your book, which I'm really enjoying. Also reading 2 books on the history of elections in the US, to get some historical perspective. Had a question about something you mentioned in your post:

"He can apply for their ballots and vote on their behalf. They won’t even know the difference."

My question is, what are the specifics as to how someone might apply for other people's ballots? Maybe file a fraudulent change of address form?

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"Ellis and bail it applications" is supposed to be "ballots and mail-in applications."

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Hi John, thank you for your comment. Since you have my book, you should look in the Michigan chapter. There you will find an example of one of their ballot application forms for 2020. Since Michigan's Secretary of State told workers to "presume" signatures matched, it was very easy to get a ballot. The Michigan ballot applications have a name and address on top of them. If the application says Mary Smith, just write the name Mary Smith in your normal writing style. It will be presumed to be correct. There is even a box that you can check to redirect mail to an address of your choosing. In Pennsylvania, the supreme Court ruled that all signatures have to be accepted even if they clearly do not match. In Arizona it was obvious that signatures were not being screened, and workers even told the cyber ninja auditors that they stopped checking signatures entirely. In Georgia, the agreement between the Secretary of State and the Democratic party made signature matching a joke. That is how elections are won. Put lots of extra names on the registration list, so that Ellis and bail it applications can be hijacked. Pennsylvania just estimated that the AVR system will add 1.6 million more people to the registration list. What a gold mine for harvesters!

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Really bad. And seems like it's business as usual, based on the election history books I've been reading. Except ramped up to a higher level due to hatred and fear of Trump.

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