“A group of thieves ransacked an Amazon delivery van as the helpless driver looked on stunned during the brazen daylight robbery in Atlanta.” Maybe Fani Willis should worry about these real crimes instead of attacking President Trump? nypost.com/2023/11/16/news/a…

Nov 16, 2023 · 10:19 PM UTC

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Replying to @Jim_Jordan
Do we need to give Amazon drivers this cool tool?
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Replying to @Jim_Jordan
Maybe the Senate and Congress can find strategies for dealing with these real crimes instead of spending so much time and resources on Hunter Biden. You do realize, Mr. Jordan, that every shortcoming that you point out, you and your colleagues are directly responsible and accountable for them. That's why you've been elected, Mr. Stormcrow. And by the way, Trump is not president and by stating as much you are discounting the voice and vote of every citizen in this country who voted from someone else in '20. Not every vote for someone other than Trump was corrupt. Somewhere along the line, become a real man and accept that responsibility and accountability of your seat.
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It’s not the criminals fault, it’s Trump’s fault. theguardian.com/us-news/2023…
Replying to @Jim_Jordan
I’m thinking the driver should have locked up.
Replying to @Jim_Jordan
J6 tapes Jim
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When you are named after a caboose expectations are low.
Replying to @Jim_Jordan
They also did Fedex
Replying to @Jim_Jordan
A lot going on in Georgia:
This Federal District Court ruling is HUGE NEWS on electronic voting machines in Georgia: ATLANTA (11 Alive)— A federal judge has ordered the Georgia secretary of state into court to defend the state’s use of computerized voting, due to take place in a presidential primary four months from now. Judge Amy Totenberg has ordered a non-jury trial to decide whether Georgia’s computerized voting system is safe enough from potential hackers to keep using next year.Critics of Georgia’s computerized election system point to a security breach in south Georgia’s Coffee County – documented on surveillance video – where unauthorized people spent hours with computer systems, scanning and copying secure software, then posting some of the material on the internet. Totenberg writes in the trial order that the “2021 Coffee County election equipment breach … presents a substantial risk that … votes will not be counted as cast.” Breaches like that, critics say, can lead to Georgia ballot marking devices going haywire – as happened earlier this month in a local election in Pennsylvania, where voters using Dominion ballot marking devices printed paper ballots with QR codes that didn’t match the candidates’ names chosen by voters. Numerous cybersecurity experts have contended in and out of court that hackers can undermine or alter the outcomes of elections dependent on computers and that election officials may not be able to identify when such hacking takes place. In her order putting Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office in a civil trial in January, Totenberg writes the “defendants fail to identify a single cybersecurity expert who endorses the current configuration of Georgia’s (ballot marking device) system.” "There is this very long, extensive and frankly alarming record of him not addressing election security, and not understanding it, and not wanting to understand it," said Susan Greenhalgh, a consultant for plaintiffs whose suit has been in court since 2018.