The overall game playing by Democrats causes one to lose faith in free and fair elections. For example, when windows to a room are covered with paper so monitors can't monitor. Or monitors being blocked or tricked. Or the ID game.
Yes, but you can't prove anything. Sigh.
This is all good when the game is against Trump, but what about when it is against others, like other Democrats in the primaries? Bernie Sanders in 2016?
Warren agrees DNC was rigged against Sanders [in 2016] - YouTube
"During the 2016 electoral-college process, third-party Green candidate Jill Stein, de facto acting as a DNC surrogate, claimed the 2016 ballot count was illegitimate. She thus sued in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin claiming the voting machines were rigged. (To my knowledge the companies involved like ExpressVote XL did not sue Stein, Dominion-Voting-Systems-style for $1 billion). "
"Stein’s denialism arose mostly in reaction to the Clinton campaign that had loudly claimed “experts” found that Clinton tallies in those states did not meet her campaign’s pre-election expectations."
Victor Davis Hanson on X: "Who Are the Real Insurrectionaries? Part Two Hillary Clinton was joined in her later efforts to deny the legitimacy of the 2016 election by a large chorus of elected House members, and ex-president Jimmy Carter. Carter in 2019 echoed her charges: “And there's no doubt that the…" / X
https://twitter .com/VDHanson/status/1741992858171965630?s=03
I still remember the race below as it played out in real time. A close election with many recounts. Every time there was a recount, new ballots were discovered in Seattle. Naturally, the newly discovered ballots heavily favored the Democrat. And they needed to be counted too. So a recount wasn't actually a recount. Anyway, the judge was fine with all of this. The recounts and new ballot discoveries kept happening until the Democrat had enough to win. Then it was over.
Can you prove anything illegal happened?
Memories still raw for candidates from 2004 race for Washington governor - MyNorthwest.com
The 2004 race for Washington's governor was one that many remember as bitterly hard-fought, something neither candidate has forgotten.
mynorthwest.com