
Originally Posted by
dawg80
No, I am not wrong. I assume you have read the rulings. I have not yet read them all....there is so much BS in these documents...but two I have read just reinforces the absolute bullshit this all is. Clearly the courts picked a side and twisted laws, rules, precedent into a pretzel just to get to the predetermined result they wanted. Example: on October 22nd, nearly two weeks before the election, a district court ruled, that is dismissed, a lawsuit and agreed with the Dem state officials that the US Post Office could not possibly deliver all the mail-in ballots by the statuary date, therefore, the court arbitrarily extended the date and eliminated the need for signature verification on said ballots. In other words...tell me Dem operatives, what does the court need to do to accommodate your ballot creation and stealing of the election?
No US Post Office official was consulted...until several days after the damage was done, and that bimbo just spouted some generic statistics about the guessed amount of extra mail that would be in the system. It didn't even support the contention of the postal service being swamped since the same post office infrastructure had easily handled volume of mail in the past that exceeded the projected numbers of the 2020 mail-in ballots. Essentially, and I don't have the exact numbers in front of me, but just to illustrate the point, the USPS said they routinely handle 600,000 pieces of mail at peak times like at Christmas and they were projecting no more than 400,000 pieces during the mail-in ballot period. The judge goes, well, hmmm....400,000 is more than 600,000, I guess, so we better give them more time! Or some such nonsense as that.
In another case it's like "the call on the field is a catch and there's not enough evidence to overturn it, the call stands." The court could have ruled the other way, "no catch" and there wouldn't have been enough evidence to change that call (ruling) either. But, thanks for providing this link. I am copying and pasting from it to share with others.