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October 31, 2024 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Did you guys see Trump riding around on the trash
truck yesterday with his little orange safety vest on. Man,
that was some of the funniest political stuff I've ever
seen in my life. That was classic.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
What are you talking about, Dragon, I haven't heard anything
about I haven't heard thing about that Trump driving around
in attracted Trump would never be a tracked, no, no billionaire.
He would never put on an orange vest and climb
up into a dump truck.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
We'll get to that in a minute. Because that it
was brilliant. It was utter brilliant.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Yesterday I talked about Bucks County, Pennsylvania and how Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Gosh,
his name slips my mind right now, but there's a
young man that is doing yeoman's work in Pennsylvania in
terms of registering new Republican voters and doing a really

(00:57):
good ground game on getting people out to vote vote early.
And there was a story floating around yesterday about people
were being turned away from voting early. There there is
a a law, a rule in Pennsylvania that you can

(01:20):
go register, you know, like same day registration. You can
go register and you can cast a ballot, an early ballot,
and you can do all of that in one you know,
one fell swoop. It's a somewhat time consuming process. And
when I heard the story, I said, well, I don't
believe it because I've not seen any video. The only

(01:43):
the only video that I had seen yesterday was a
video of somebody wearing a as I said, a cop
blue shirt, but it said emergency services on the shoulder,
didn't say anything about cops or anything else, and people
just standing. It didn't appear that people were trying to

(02:03):
get beyond that person and that person was blocking them.
And from the angle that I was looking at, and
I'm trying to make excuses here because I'm going to
tell you to minut I was completely wrong. But the
angle that showed the individual in the blue shirt standing
outside this registration and polling place did not have a firearm,

(02:28):
at least on his left side.

Speaker 3 (02:29):
So I didn't see any movement. I didn't see anything.

Speaker 2 (02:34):
So there was nothing in that video that indicated to
me that people were being prevented from doing their job,
even doing their job, doing their registration and doing their
voting as they were allowed to do under Pennsylvania law. Well,
last night I found two videos, and the reason I

(02:55):
went digging trying to find the videos. Was because a
judge in Pennsylvania rule that you can't keep people from
doing this. The first video is only nineteen seconds long.

Speaker 4 (03:10):
It's two one and they are ending the line.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
Now I know there's you just hear people kind of
mumbling and some people walking. But and again it says,
see if I can blow this up big enough to see.
The guy's wearing a vest that says emergency services. Of
that it's it's like a bulletproof vest. But here's the

(03:48):
difference in what I see with this guy. He's got cuffs,
pepper spray, he has a he has a service weapon
on his right side. He's got a radio on his
left side. He's got a bunch of other stuff, and
he's carrying a kind of a a frame, little folding

(04:08):
sign this says line ends here. And he's walking up
behind a group of people that are standing in line,
and the last person that's standing there, he's putting that
sign up that line ends here. Then I found this
second video. It's got more of a conversation.

Speaker 5 (04:32):
And I have to bring someone here about four o'clock
to vote. Are they going to ask you to talk
to that they're going to turn everyone down. I'm going
to ask you to talk to this gentleman because the
voting is closer. Now it's close.

Speaker 3 (04:43):
I just want you to talk to this gentleman.

Speaker 6 (04:45):
We have the right to vote until four point thirty.

Speaker 5 (04:48):
Why is it close?

Speaker 3 (04:51):
Now? This guy's going to try.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
I love this explanation because it tells you so much
about people at I know I'm making a blanket statement. Here,
call somebody that cares, because I think it's applicable. This
guy's about to explain why this woman wants to bring

(05:13):
somebody at four o'clock so that she can register that
person and then they can cast their their early ballot
and and do that before everything closes at four thirty.
Listen to the explanation. Please, Okay, this process is very

(05:34):
slow ruling that doesn't matter if we're online.

Speaker 3 (05:37):
Very sling. I love it. The process is slow and
it's grueling.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
Now I don't necessarily think of the word grueling when
when I think about a bureaucrat that is, you know,
having to take you know, check someone's id uh, fill
out you know, a form on a computer and then
get them a ballot and then let them fill out

(06:05):
the ballot and then put it back into a box somewhere.
Is that grueling, grueling an agity, extremely tiring and demanding
a grueling schedule. Yeah, I don't think so. I don't
think so.

Speaker 5 (06:25):
About four o'clock to vote, are they going to ask
you to talk to that They're going to turn everyone down.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
I'm going to ask you to talk to this gentleman
because the voting is closer.

Speaker 5 (06:33):
Now, it's close.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
I just want you to talk to this gentleman.

Speaker 5 (06:35):
We have the right to vote until four thirty. Why
is it close? Explain to please?

Speaker 1 (06:43):
Okay, this process very slow.

Speaker 4 (06:47):
That doesn't matter if we're online.

Speaker 5 (06:50):
It doesn't matter if we're online. By four thirty, we
have them.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Because a high violume of people want to do this. Well,
then they have to be cut the line.

Speaker 5 (07:02):
They cut the line.

Speaker 6 (07:04):
You heard that, number one, They cut the line at
This is a voter fraud, by the way, who knows it.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
I want to just correct it. It's not voter fraud.
It's not voter fraud. It's voter suppression. And I think
that's a key difference that we need to understand. Voter
fraud is cheating where you don't allow someone within the
time frame that you've established and you say.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
You can't, well, you know, we're gonta cut the.

Speaker 2 (07:38):
Line because it's it's grueling for the bureaucrats. It's such
a grueling process and it's so time consuming that you know,
if we allowed everybody that's in line to come in
and do this, they might have to work past five o'clock.
Now that I understand inhumanity of this having to work

(08:00):
past five o'clock, Well, now I understand.

Speaker 5 (08:03):
Oh yes it is Oh vote to protection. I heard
about that on X. Yeah, there's a lot going on.

Speaker 3 (08:11):
I love the fact that she says I heard about
it on X.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
If you don't think that X, if you're not following
me on X right now, you're missing a whole bunch
of stuff. X has become thanks to Elon Musk, X
has really become a free speech platform, and it has
become if you it can be overwhelming at first, but
if you learn how to manage X, it can be

(08:38):
an incredible source of news. Because two things are happening.
Freelance journalists are using X to get their stories out,
and the cabal is using X to get their news
stories out. And because of community notes, it's kind of
like a commenting ability.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Not everybody gets to do it.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
I've reached that, whatever algorithm they have, I've reached the
ability now that I cannot just rank community notes, but
I can write community notes.

Speaker 3 (09:13):
So if I.

Speaker 2 (09:14):
See something on X that I think is out of
context or needs more context, or is absolutely incorrect, then
I can write a community note, and then people can
read my community note and they can say, yeah, this
is a good note. This is a bad note, or
it needs more context or need or this, or maybe
you know, I think something needs a note, and other

(09:35):
people think, hey, it speaks for itself, it doesn't need
a note.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Anyway. It's become a true.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
Free speech platform, which means there are some things on
there that you might find offensive. Well you know what, Buttercup,
suck it up, Come on.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
Suck it up.

Speaker 5 (09:50):
I'm tacked voter protection. Let's see what I'm talking the
county commissioners to this point. This is so you don't
think this is a voter sad, this is voter fraud.
See that, everyone, They cut the line.

Speaker 6 (10:06):
Even though we have to four point thirty election fraud
here in Bucks County and you haven't owned I mean,
don't you care I mean, like, really, this is ridiculous.

Speaker 5 (10:29):
They're not accepting anyone else did they cut off for today.
They cut it off because of election fraud.

Speaker 6 (10:35):
That's why they cut it off.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
There may be some voter suppression going on, but let
me tell you the real reason why they cut this off,
because they don't want to work. Now, the rule in
most states, it's certainly true in Colorado that if you
are in line to vote when the precinct closes, as

(11:01):
long as you stay in the line, they have to
stay and allow you to vote.

Speaker 5 (11:08):
Well.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
Trump's campaign and the Republican National Committee, let me just
say this real quickly about the RNC. When the RNC
is run by two people who actually support the nominee
and actually support voter registration and are willing to expand

(11:31):
funds to fight voter suppression, unlike Rona Romney McDaniel, who
was running the RNC before you get stories like this.
Because the Trump campaign and the RNC have won a
significant victory in Bucks County, Pennsylvania to keep early voting

(11:53):
open until Friday at five pm, they were joined by
the RNC campaign sued after these local election officials that
you just heard ordered the cops to cut off early
vote lines well ahead of closure times because of the
volume of voters, many of whom are believed to be

(12:16):
Trump's sports. In fact, I would say that probably ninety
percent of them are Trump supporters. Because remember I told
you about Bucks County where they were beginning to flip
the total registration from Democrats to Republicans. Well, if that's happening,
uh oh, better shut off these registrations. Better shut off
this early campaign. Michael Watley said in a post again

(12:38):
on x quote, we just won the Trump campaign RNC
lawsuit against Bucks County, Pennsylvania. We will now have extended
early in person mail voting through November one, three extra
days because the court issued its ruling mandating that. He added,
we will keep fighting, go vote, stay in law.

Speaker 3 (13:01):
Now.

Speaker 2 (13:01):
This is a major victory for voters, winning that lawsuit
in Bucks County for extended early voting through Friday at
five pm. Thank you to the court for making the
right decision and for finding that Bucks County violated the
Pennsylvania Election Code and provided the requested relief. Now, earlier

(13:28):
this week what was it yesterday? Day before, I forget
what day it was, There was that footage that showed
what I did not think was a cop, but it
certainly showed Democratic Party volunteers telling voters they had to
turn back from the vote centers because the lines were
too long and they would not be able to receive

(13:49):
their ballot before the locations were slated to close.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
Now what bugs me about this.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
There's blaming part of voters too, because some voters appeared confused,
especially when they were confronted by Democratic Party activists who
they initially believe were government election workers. Now, in that
one clip that you heard that there wasn't much sound,
a cop can be heard telling a woman that while
the voting center did not close until four thirty, the

(14:23):
slow line and the number of voters resulted in him
cutting the line off or entirely off at one in
the afternoon. This is a country that does not take
election seriously. This is a country that allows bureaucrats. Now,

(14:44):
remember there are also volunteers in there, because you have
to have volunteers to do a lot of the well
the gopher work. While the bureaucrats themselves are responsible for,
you know, checking the ID, making sure it's entered, it
properly entered. The computer data is properly entered into the system,

(15:05):
blah blah blah. While they're required to be doing all
of that, they want to stop at five o'clock. Oh
we're done, bull crap. If you're done, there are people
standing in line.

Speaker 3 (15:21):
Now.

Speaker 2 (15:21):
Imagine you know, Mike, I don't know this for a fact,
but I'm just I'm making a wild ass guess here.
If if I go to the DMV, If I go
to the Douglas County DMV and I get my little ticket,
chose my number, and I'm there before closing time and
they're still processing people. As long as I've got my

(15:43):
fat ass in that chair, I can sit in that chair.

Speaker 3 (15:47):
Until six or seven o'clock. I don't care.

Speaker 2 (15:50):
Because I need to register my vehicle. And I showed
up before closing time. And now the bureaucrats of the
DMV are going to and I assume the Douglas County
commissioners would support this. Yeah, you showed up before closing time,
you got your number. It's taking longer than expected to
process people, so we're gonna keep processing until we clear

(16:13):
out that day's list of people that are sitting in
the chairs waiting to do their work. Now, if I
show at five or five pm and the door's locked. Well,
sucks to be me. I showed up too late. Why
don't we have the same rules for elections.

Speaker 7 (16:28):
Everywhere, Michael, This elections guy in Bucks County sounds like
a freaking worse than a eunuch. Somebody needs to get
him a pair and a cup of coffee and a
pot of coffee so you can stay late and do
his freaking job.

Speaker 3 (16:44):
This is important. Voting is important.

Speaker 7 (16:46):
We are closing ninety eight because it's grueling and arduous,
O grueling.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
Shut up, do your job. No, let's just he's just
the cop. This just.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
Telling the people they can't vote. He's just relaying what
he's been told. So let let's let's make sure we
focus on who's really.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
Facing the grueling schedule.

Speaker 4 (17:13):
I just.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Do you know that most of the federal workforce has
not gone back to work. They're still working from home,
while the private sector, including right here in this building,
have pretty much forced every I mean thing. COVID seems
like so yesterday, it seems like so long ago. But

(17:41):
even iHeart, who is pretty flexible and stuff like this,
has said like, Okay, yeah, you got to be back
in the office. Now they got some flexibility, but generally,
and Dragon and I don't like this because we kind
of like being left alone. We don't like we don't
like people. So correct, huh, true, you really like each other.
I mean, the fact, the fact that we're separated by

(18:03):
glass is what keeps us.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
From just killing each other.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
So the fact that we have to walk out there,
Like I went out, stepped outside to get some fresh
air during the last break and it's nice cold and crisp,
and it's dark in there and there's nobody around. And
I walked I walked that out during the last break,
and yeah, they're showing up.

Speaker 3 (18:22):
It's like, go away.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
Yeah, but but we're not being paid by the taxpayers. No,
And do you know how many times that Look, I'm
not patting myself on the back. I'm just calling out
the difference between the public sector and the private sector.
How many times, for example, when all those hurricanes were

(18:45):
going on, that I get a call from our national
news director down in Phoenix, plus our our muckety muck
that's over you know all this part of the United States. Hey,
we need you to go on air and field North Carolina.
We need to go on We need you need to
talk to the station in Atlanta, you know. Okay, Okay,

(19:06):
So you know I'm doing all of this all the time.
You know why, because that's part of my job. Can
you imagine if I'd ever told Bush you know, listen,
I've already put in forty hours this week. I know,
I know we got stuff going on in ground zero,
but you know what, I'm tired. I'm tired. That's what
these people are doing. And the cops just out there

(19:32):
passing on the word that you know, whoever the county
commissioners are that they you know, well, you know these workers,
they get a grueling job. Yeah, they got to work,
you know they Now I understand the cutoff at four thirty. Now,
the judge said, because of the past mistakes, I'm going
to extend it to five o'clock. So now they have

(19:55):
to they might have to work past five pm. Honey,
can you could you stop at Chick fil A and
grab something because or maybe KFC? Because I'm gonna be
late because that damn judge made me work late tonight.
Why are you gonna get overtime? No, no, no overtime, No,
not gonna get that. Do you get some flex time?

(20:16):
You are you gonna get some personal time off later?
I don't know, but I got to register these damn voters.
These people want to vote. Can you believe it? They're
showing up in Bucks County, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 3 (20:27):
Losers.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
No, they are a bunch of losers. Oh my gosh,
it just it drives me crazy.

Speaker 3 (20:34):
Excuse me. Garbage, that's right, they're garbage.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
By the way, Dragon, if you have time, I don't
know whether we can play it or not, but I
saw I just glanced up and saw that Howard Stern
says that he hates all Trump supporters.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
Huh, all right, I'll search that out.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
Yeah, see if you can find it, because my guess
is that may not be suitable for you know, FCC.

Speaker 3 (20:57):
Regulated their waves.

Speaker 2 (20:58):
But if it is, I just like for all of
you Howard Stern fans to hear that he hates all
of us.

Speaker 3 (21:04):
Apparently.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Now let's swerve into something that I the Michigan Secretary
of State is a woman by the name of Jocelyn Benson,
a Democrat. Okay, I just want to emphasize that the
Michigan Secretary of State is a Democrat. She is warning

(21:30):
voters that a.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
The reason I'm.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Laughing is because I'm just I'm just relaying a news story, right.
It happens to do with dominion voting machines. And the
reason I laugh is because, well, let's see, Dominion sued
Fox News and one what like a seven hundred and
fifty million dollar judgment or something. Dominion I think sued

(21:59):
Rudy Giuliani. They're suing all of these people for things
that they said that Dominion claims is defamatory. Well, I'm
not saying this. See I know how to be a lawyer.
I'm not saying this. The Democrat Secretary of State for
the state of Michigan is saying this. She's warning voters

(22:23):
that a dominion voting machine model that's in use in
many of Michigan's counties is erroneously preventing voters from casting
split ticket ballots. Huh, a dominion voting machine is doing
something wrong, and a Democrat's pointing it out. We must

(22:49):
be near the end of civilization. These must be the
end times. In fact, today may be the last day
for all I know. Today's the day that Jesus comes
back and says, you know, I had to come back
today because a Democrat was pointing out that a dominion
voting machine wasn't allowing people to split a ticket. Now,

(23:09):
in case you don't know what a split ticket is.
I'm not trying to be condescending here, I just want
to make sure everbody understands what a split ticket is.
A split ticket might be where you vote for Donald Trump,
a Republican, but when you get to the next line,
you're voting for the US Senate race in Michigan, you
might want to vote for the Democrat or vice versa.
You might think that Kamala Harris is the greatest thing

(23:31):
since sliced bread, but you want to vote for the
Republican nominee for the US Senate in Michigan, or a
congressman or whatever. That's a split ticket, according to According
to I gotta keep doing this so I don't get
suit for defamation. According to Benson, the error is impacting

(23:52):
specifically the dominion ICX Voter Assist Terminal system. This refer
to is the VAT system. You know, not a value
added tax, but that the voter assists terminal that's offered
to individuals with disabilities and assists with marking their ballots.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
What could possibly go wrong?

Speaker 2 (24:16):
So You've got a machine that's supposed to to help
people with disabilities fill out their ballots. Why I could
I can't sit here an imagine that anything would go
wrong with that now. According to the Democrat Secretary of
State Jocelyn Benson, the Dominum machine has an issue processing
certain types of ballots, namely those where a voter whishes

(24:40):
to vote for a mix of Republican Democratic Party candidates
instead of a straight party line. She claims the problem
with the VAT machines the Dominion vat machines, is not
unique to Michigan, and that ballot marking errors have been
reported by election officials nationwide.

Speaker 3 (25:01):
Uh. Just in case you think that I'm just making
this up.

Speaker 5 (25:05):
She's just the programming of Fast Living.

Speaker 4 (25:09):
Yes, Dominion.

Speaker 5 (25:10):
Why was that only caught in the past few days?

Speaker 7 (25:13):
Why can't they be fixed?

Speaker 4 (25:14):
Because I saw?

Speaker 3 (25:15):
Why was this on?

Speaker 2 (25:17):
You know you've talked about these. Why was it only
cotton in the last couple of Why was this call
when early voting started?

Speaker 8 (25:23):
Yeah, this is a nationwide issue with Dominion voter access terminals. Uh,
in the counties that use them, and the voter access terminals,
of course, not all all the machines, just the ones
that are accessible, have an issue with the straight party
voting and a programming issue that's again affected the machines nationwide.

Speaker 5 (25:41):
And I think all of.

Speaker 8 (25:42):
Us that used Dominion machines we were were unhappy to
learn about this during the testing period and as early
voting began. So we're working with Dominion to seek accountability
on that front and also have our work.

Speaker 3 (25:58):
Wait what.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
You're working with Dominion because you want accountability. Ah, she's
a Democrat. I think she knows that they got a
big problem. Now when I say big problem, I'm not
saying that it's going to affect, you know, all of
the results in Michigan.

Speaker 3 (26:20):
But here's the problem.

Speaker 2 (26:22):
If you have a Dominion voting machine, which is already controversial,
and in Michigan you're having problems with disabled voters, that's
even more beautiful.

Speaker 3 (26:36):
It's a it's.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
A disabled person working extra hard to try to go
cast a vote and they love Orange Man. Now it's
Orange vest Man, Orange vest Man bad. They want to
vote for him, but they love their Democrat congressman and
the machine just won't let them do it.

Speaker 8 (26:59):
That CE voters are aware of this programming issue that
will will require them.

Speaker 3 (27:07):
A programming issue. This is the problem.

Speaker 2 (27:11):
When you got a lawyer brain, I'd love to have
this woman on the witness stand. Oh, let me interrupt
you just a moment. So you say this is a
programming issue, Yes, sir, I do. Mister Brown, Well, then
would you explain to the jury who programs the machines,
and would you explain to the jury just exactly how

(27:35):
that programming, when that programming, and how you test that
programming occurs? Because what's today's date, Madam's secretary of State. Well,
mister Brown, it's Thursday, October thirty first, Well, Madam's secretary
of State. How long has this voting issue, this early

(27:56):
voting been going on in Michigan. Well, ten days since
you know, October twenty first, or just whatever the date is. Oh,
so you've known about this issue for ten days and
you're telling the jury today that you have a programming issue.
When did you When did you start programming the machines?

Speaker 4 (28:18):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (28:19):
We did that back in Oh, you know, we did
we did that back in the summertime, you know, back
back back when you know, the summer and we were
kind of you know, we're wearing shorts and having met
Julips and just enjoying the summertime in Michigan, you know,
fighting off the mosquitos.

Speaker 8 (28:36):
To ensure they are voting every section on the ballots
a bigger issue in this year because we do a
lot of voters across the oover and waste on a
lot of other stas jobs, because we have straight part
It's not it's it's not struck me. As I've talked
to my other colleagues out of shades, they're just as
upset about it as we are.

Speaker 5 (28:55):
So yeah, of course surprised.

Speaker 2 (28:57):
Yeah, oh my, you'll hear that again after this horn and.

Speaker 7 (29:03):
Fair face horn and dragon Laga ding Dong, Howard Stern,
who gives it?

Speaker 2 (29:12):
Well, I don't, but I just want you to know
that it's it's not just uh, you know, it's not
just Joe Biden. It's not just Kamala Harris. It's it's
Julia Roberts, it's all of these muckety monks. It's Beyonce.
And I'm crushed. I'm crushed that Beyonce doesn't like us.

(29:34):
I don't whether I can go on or not listen again,
I'm not trying to. I mean, it's very sincerely I'm
not trying to at all get you to think that
all of these voting systems are corrupt or it's done

(29:56):
on purpose or anything else. But for me, this is
the empirical evidence that our current voting system is flawed,
and so it erodes our confidence in our voting system.
So if we want to have confidence again, then let's,

(30:17):
you know, let's go back to I.

Speaker 3 (30:19):
Mean, I'm sure you know people.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
I can name you several people that don't use email,
and they don't have smartphones, they've got flip phones, they
don't want GPS tracking them everywhere, they're not on social media.
They just want to live a ludite life of just
you know, off the grid.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
So to speak. Well, why can't we just go back
to paper ballots?

Speaker 4 (30:46):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (30:47):
I know, because it's grueling.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
To have to count paper ballots when we can just
connect this machine to the local area network and don't
worry about it.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
Nobody don't ever be able to hack.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
Into it, because why do we have and not naming
any names, but you know all of the national companies,
you know, you go on experience or any of the
the national credit unions of credit companies that they all
try to sell you what I D protection, ID theft protection,
all of it, because everybody gets hacked at one point

(31:23):
or another, Office of Personnel Management. Every federal ID in
probably in the history of the federal government has been stolen.
But no, don't don't worry about a voting machine because
it's just on the local area network. It's just plugged
into the wall.

Speaker 5 (31:39):
The issues are the programming.

Speaker 8 (31:44):
I saw the release voter access terminals in the counties
that use them, and the voter access terminals. Of course
not all all the machines, just the ones that are
accessible have an issue with the straight party voting and
a programming issue that's again affected the machines nationwide, and I.

Speaker 2 (32:01):
M that is effected the machines nationwide. Does Colorado use Dominion?
Do they use the vat the voter access terminals? Or
disabled voters? All you disabled voters out there, you might
want to ask when you go cast your ballot, or

(32:21):
you might want to call your county election official and say, hey,
how did they get counted?

Speaker 3 (32:26):
Did it get counted
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