Biden Administration

Biden Administration Caught Red Handed, Asking For This Report Not to be Released

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The Biden Administration is curtailing the public from knowing what happened in the 2020 election. In this instance, the administration’s officials at the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA) are using their power to silence a judge from releasing a report on the Dominion Voting Machines.

The Dominion Machines have been in question long before the 2020 election. Many Democratic politicians and activists protested their use in local and federal races in 2016. However, their objections were far less vocal in the 2020 election when it was reported the Dominion voting system could be easily hacked. Voters themselves reported seeing their vote change from Trump to Biden before their very eyes.

Even those there to ensure election integrity reported that numbers fluctuated on the machines, either changing trump votes to Biden or adding numbers for the Biden race.

The Biden Administration Once Dominion Silenced

After the vote was in and the election results were contested. Dominion offices disappeared overnight. Bulldog attorney Sidney Powell was on their trail but due to court rulings giving Dominion time to cover their tracks much of the evidence was wiped clean from the memory chips of the machines.

With most of the evidence gone Dominion now has returned to beat the drum for justice. “Dominion supports all efforts to bring real facts and evidence forward to defend the integrity of our machines and the credibility of Georgia’s elections,” the Dominion official stated.

The Biden Administration, through CISA, argues that releasing the report by the University of Michigan Center for Computer Security and Society Director J. Alex Halderman would “threaten election security.”

Both Dominion and Georgia Secretary State Brad Raffensperger(R) have criticized Halderman’s report. Raffensperger called Halderman “an individual who is paid to espouse opinions supporting the elimination of electronic voting systems to help a lawsuit brought by liberal activist.”

Attorney General Brian Boyton and Department of Justice attorney Bringham Bowen argued that the report should be released in their February 10th filing.

The Attorney’s stated in their writing that “CISA’s goal is to disclose any confirmed vulnerabilities and associated mitigations to the public in a coordinated way, so the entire cyber ecosystem can benefit while minimizing the risk of harm to election security.”

 

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