Reagan Posted November 21, 2020 Report Posted November 21, 2020 Personally, I'm a firm believer that there are no coincidences. With that being said, let's take a look: In 5 states, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina and Georgia, when the polls closed the night of the election, President Trump was winning all 5 states. In Pennsylvania, he was up 700,000-800,000 with close to 70% votes cast. The state should have been called for Trump. BTW, they calling states for biden with far less of a lead. In Michigan, Trump was a head by 300,000 votes. In Wisconsin, Trump was a head by 8 to 10 points. They were also about 70% of the vote cast. In Georgia and North Carolina, Trump was a head by 2 1/2 points. These two states were in the 85-90% votes cast. None of these 2 states were called for President Trump. Now, later on -- what are the odds that President Trump fell behind in everyone of those states? Not just 2 of 5, not just 3 of 5 -- but in every single one of these states!! Maybe strain credulity a little bit? Doesn't this seem a little funny, a little strange? Thoughts?! Quote
Reagan Posted November 21, 2020 Author Report Posted November 21, 2020 15 hours ago, Reagan said: Personally, I'm a firm believer that there are no coincidences. With that being said, let's take a look: In 5 states, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina and Georgia, when the polls closed the night of the election, President Trump was winning all 5 states. In Pennsylvania, he was up 700,000-800,000 with close to 70% votes cast. The state should have been called for Trump. BTW, they calling states for biden with far less of a lead. In Michigan, Trump was a head by 300,000 votes. In Wisconsin, Trump was a head by 8 to 10 points. They were also about 70% of the vote cast. In Georgia and North Carolina, Trump was a head by 2 1/2 points. These two states were in the 85-90% votes cast. None of these 2 states were called for President Trump. Now, later on -- what are the odds that President Trump fell behind in everyone of those states? Not just 2 of 5, not just 3 of 5 -- but in every single one of these states!! Maybe strain credulity a little bit? Doesn't this seem a little funny, a little strange? Thoughts?! UT Alum, PamFam -- would like your opinion on this! Quote
UT alum Posted November 24, 2020 Report Posted November 24, 2020 On 11/20/2020 at 6:33 PM, Reagan said: Personally, I'm a firm believer that there are no coincidences. With that being said, let's take a look: In 5 states, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan, North Carolina and Georgia, when the polls closed the night of the election, President Trump was winning all 5 states. In Pennsylvania, he was up 700,000-800,000 with close to 70% votes cast. The state should have been called for Trump. BTW, they calling states for biden with far less of a lead. In Michigan, Trump was a head by 300,000 votes. In Wisconsin, Trump was a head by 8 to 10 points. They were also about 70% of the vote cast. In Georgia and North Carolina, Trump was a head by 2 1/2 points. These two states were in the 85-90% votes cast. None of these 2 states were called for President Trump. Now, later on -- what are the odds that President Trump fell behind in everyone of those states? Not just 2 of 5, not just 3 of 5 -- but in every single one of these states!! Maybe strain credulity a little bit? Doesn't this seem a little funny, a little strange? Thoughts?! We were told for a good while before the election that would happen. Those states all had provisions that limited processing of mail in votes. In PA, for instance, they couldn’t even open the envelopes until Election Day. When 2/3 of the votes are early, it’s not surprising. Quote
5GallonBucket Posted November 24, 2020 Report Posted November 24, 2020 We all know how low some people will go. NO DENYING THAT!!! Quote
stevenash Posted November 24, 2020 Report Posted November 24, 2020 9 minutes ago, 5GallonBucket said: We all know how low some people will go. NO DENYING THAT!!! the Brett Kavanaugh circumstance is proof positive of the above. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.