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CannCon, Ashe in America, and Colonel Towner Watkins continue their breakdown of Stolen Elections, examining a chapter that introduces sweeping claims about foreign influence, voting machines, and election infrastructure. As the hosts walk through the material, they question the logic and sourcing behind allegations involving Venezuela, China, Iran, and Cuba.
The discussion focuses heavily on how the book presents technical claims about poll books, voting machines, and election software. The panel compares those claims with publicly known election equipment and processes, pointing out contradictions and factual errors along the way. From diagrams suggesting global control networks to explanations about flashcards and voting hardware, the hosts repeatedly challenge whether the narrative holds up under scrutiny.
Throughout the episode, the conversation turns into a deeper examination of how complex election systems can be misunderstood or misrepresented, and why careful research is necessary when making claims about election infrastructure.
By Badlands Media4.7
120120 ratings
CannCon, Ashe in America, and Colonel Towner Watkins continue their breakdown of Stolen Elections, examining a chapter that introduces sweeping claims about foreign influence, voting machines, and election infrastructure. As the hosts walk through the material, they question the logic and sourcing behind allegations involving Venezuela, China, Iran, and Cuba.
The discussion focuses heavily on how the book presents technical claims about poll books, voting machines, and election software. The panel compares those claims with publicly known election equipment and processes, pointing out contradictions and factual errors along the way. From diagrams suggesting global control networks to explanations about flashcards and voting hardware, the hosts repeatedly challenge whether the narrative holds up under scrutiny.
Throughout the episode, the conversation turns into a deeper examination of how complex election systems can be misunderstood or misrepresented, and why careful research is necessary when making claims about election infrastructure.

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