Quantcast

Pages

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Corrupt SEIU in Charge of Voting Machines in Nevada: Senior Citizens to Blame for Nevada Corruption

In Clark County, Nevada the corrupt Service Employees International Union (SEIU) are in charge of voting machines that have been popping-out ballots with Senator Harry Reid's name already checked. Officials say the computer screen is "sensitive," and senior citizens are at fault. See a video below.


Senior citizens are apparently to blame:
Lomax advised voters to be aware that touch-screens on the screens are sensitive. For that reason, a person may not want to have their fingers linger too long on the screen after they make a selection at any time.
"Especially in a community with elderly citizens (they have) difficulty in (casting their) ballot," Lomax said. "Team leaders said there were complaints (and the) race filled in."
Hillbuzz suggests those using touch screens voting machines take a cell phone and take a photo of your marked ballot. There's something very wrong about not marking a ballot with your own pen-in-hand. Note that the official says the ballots cannot be tampered with, yet just a single "lingering finger" can find the Democrats and vote them in your name.

Gateway Pundit on SEIU corruption at the polls:
Yesterday, the Yuma Sun reported that two organizations Mi Familia Vota and One Vote Arizona submitted more than 3,000 voter registrations in Yuma County right before the deadline for registering voters. The groups submitted over 20,000 registrations statewide.
What the Yuma Sun did not tell you is that over 65% of these last minute registrations were invalid due to the registrant not being a citizen, a wrong/invalid address, or a false signature.
So far, there have been no reports of "fingers lingering" and ballots checked for Republicans spitting out.

Nevada Voter Fraud (video)

Content Scrapers: Until I can figure out what to do about your confiscation of my work for your own website, please be sure to give a link back as shown above.

©2007-2012copyrightMaggie M. Thornton