emazur
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- Oct 26, 2008
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An easily overlooked story from 11/7. I don't pin myself in the "voter fraud" camp but I certainly don't pin myself in the "government is honest" camp either. If the below story can prove a relatively non-partisan census count is fraudulent then obviously a vote count, which is far more likely to be compromised by the partisan nature of the the vote counters, should be scrutinized for fraud. And with the headline "Biden's first move as president-elect? Mask mandate for all", I am more than happy to provide information that will help gum up the works of the election
https://www.stltoday.com/news/natio...cle_91c329a6-e6e3-5190-9b77-64c3274f4ff0.html
https://www.stltoday.com/news/natio...cle_91c329a6-e6e3-5190-9b77-64c3274f4ff0.html
Two census takers told The Associated Press that their supervisors pressured them to enter false information into a computer system about homes they had not visited so they could close cases during the waning days of the once-a-decade national headcount.
Maria Arce said her supervisor in Massachusetts offered step-by-step instructions in how to trick the system. She said she felt guilty about lying, but she did not want to disobey her supervisors, who kept repeating that they were under pressure from a regional office in New York to close cases.
“It was all a sham. I felt terrible, terrible. I knew I was lying. I knew I was doing something wrong, but they said, ‘No, no, we are closing. We have to do this,'" Arce said.
At the time, in mid- to late September, census workers were drawing close to a deadline imposed by President Donald Trump's administration to finish the count by the end of the month.
Indiana census taker Pam Roberts' supervisor pressured her to make up answers about households where no one was home.
Roberts agreed to do it for only one day — making up information on about two dozen households — before refusing to continue the next day because she believed it was wrong. She said she entered made-up answers while in her car outside the homes since the mobile device used for data entry could track where a person was when making an entry.