[1 of 7] DOMINION voting software. This was postulated by @CodeMonkeyZ. It seems plausible enough to either validate or debunk. See this 7/7 thread. If you read anything that I've ever posted, please read/RT this: @SidneyPowell1 @Phaethon314 @VincentCrypt46 @GenFlynn
[2 of 7] In some states you can cast a straight-party vote or straight-ticket vote (SPV or STV) ...all votes go to one party. This is allowed in Alabama, Indiana, Michigan, Kentucky, Oklahoma, and South Carolina. Michigan should be the focus here.
[3 of 7] The Dominion software supports this feature but requires that each candidate is individually set-up by party affiliation via a configuration or set-up file.
[4 of 7] If Trump was entered as “Republican -> TRUMP” and you cast a straight-party vote everything is ok and Trump is credited with a vote. In this example, Republican is properly spelled with all the correct characters.
[5 of 7] If Trump was entered as “RepubIican -> TRUMP” and you cast a straight-party vote, then Trump does not get the vote. You cannot tell the difference between a lowercase "L" and a capital "i" with most sans serif fonts.
[6 of 7] The difference is in the party name; in the second example “the “L” in Republican is actually a capital “i" ...so in the second version, the party is the "repubiican" party ....which is not the party of a straight-ticket republican cast ballot. DO YOU SEE THE PROBLEM?
[7 of 7] This could apply to MI house or senate races. The vote trends do not match. Please either validate or debunk. Thanks for reading.
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