2020 Trump Election Revisited

Segment #761

Look to the states opposing voter identification and that’s where the feds should concentrate their investigation into voter fraud. States with no ID required (most voters vote without showing any ID): California, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Vermont. (This aligns with 14 states; D.C. also has no ID

States with no ID required (most voters vote without showing any ID): California, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Vermont. (This aligns with 14 states; D.C. also has no ID requirement.)requirement.)

The 2020 U.S. presidential election involved significant ballot fraud or irregularities in multiple states, particularly swing states like Pennsylvania, Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, and others. These claims often focus on issues like mail-in ballot harvesting, duplicate scans, counterfeit ballots, dead voters, noncitizen voting, improper rule changes, and anomalies in vote counting.Key conservative-leaning sources include:

  • The Heritage Foundation: Maintains a database of proven election fraud cases across U.S. history (not exclusively 2020), highlighting instances of voter fraud like ineligible voting or ballot tampering. Their Election Fraud Map samples cases nationwide, arguing fraud occurs and can affect outcomes, though it doesn't claim widespread 2020-specific reversal-level fraud. They emphasize the need for stronger safeguards.

  • The Gateway Pundit: Frequently publishes articles alleging fraud, such as forensic reports claiming duplicate ballot scans and non-unique tabulator numbers in Allegheny County, PA, or other irregularities. They've promoted claims in states like Georgia and Arizona.

  • Rasmussen Reports (via X posts and polling commentary): Shared summaries of alleged discoveries, e.g., counterfeit ballots in Arizona (200K+), hidden mail ballots in Georgia, barred observers in Wisconsin and Michigan, and blocked investigations in Pennsylvania.

    Personal Identification Required in the U.S. for the Following

    Here are the most common activities/situations in the US where some form of personal identification (usually government-issued photo ID like a driver's license, state ID, passport, etc.) is required or routinely demanded:

    • Driving a vehicle (must carry and show driver's license if stopped by police).

    • Flying domestically (TSA requires ID for passengers 18+ at airport security; REAL ID-compliant or other accepted forms needed).

    • Buying alcohol (age 21+ verification; bars, stores, restaurants).

    • Purchasing tobacco/vapes or lottery tickets (age-restricted).

    • Entering certain age-restricted venues (bars, clubs, casinos, some concerts/events with 21+ restrictions).

    • Opening a bank account or applying for many financial services/credit cards.

    • Picking up prescriptions (especially controlled substances).

    • Applying for government benefits (e.g., SNAP/food stamps, Medicaid, unemployment in many cases).

    • Voting in person (required in some states; photo ID in others, or non-photo alternatives).

    • Entering secure federal facilities (military bases, certain government buildings).

    • Renting a car or checking into many hotels.

    • Employment (Form I-9 verification for work eligibility/identity).

    • Purchasing firearms or ammunition (federal background check requires ID).

    • Notarizing documents or certain legal transactions.

Sworn testimony from USPS employee exposes voter fraud in Wisconsin's 2020 election process — 100,000 ballots MISSING in a state where President Trump only "lost" by 20,682 votes — with 10 critical electoral votes going to Biden.

USPS Employee Ethan Pease:

"I'm not a Trump supporter. I'm not a Biden supporter either, but something profoundly wrong occurred in Wisconsin during the Presidential election and the American people have a right to know about it!"

USPS subcontractor Ethan Pease, who transported ballots for United Mailing Services testified that on Election Day (Nov. 3), he delivered zero ballots to USPS, and the day before, only ONE ballot.

The next morning (Nov. 4), senior USPS employee asked if he had forgotten any ballots, explaining that an order from the Wisconsin-Illinois USPS chapter reported 100,000 ballots MISSING with employees dispatched at 4 a.m. to search, finding only 7 or 8 ballots!

Ethan also overheard USPS employees "joking" about discarding all of Trump's mail-in ballots!


If you ask questions about voter fraud you are labeled a white supremacist, a racist, conspiracy theorist etc etc. Why are people upset about asking questions? Something to ponder now in a number of blue states. Prove me wrong.

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Fraud With Documented Video