Back to... |
Share Our Stories! - Click Here | |
Electronic Ballot Rigging By The China-Democrat | |
By Yoichi Shimatsu | |
The burning of a ballot boxes is the newest stunt from the dirty Democrats’ bag of tricks. A far greater threat to election integrity is electronic tampering with e-ballots at voting stations equipped with Dominion Voting Systems non-paper voting machines. Any e-vote can be rewritten in key places – for instance, with the check-off for Trump rewritten as ‘Biden.’ The rig can be triggered from an electronic control device outside the building or with a micro-device inside…say, with a fraternity or sorority ring. It’s been done before by the same Chinese-controlled Dominion system.
Dominion is home-based in Toronto, Canada, a city crawling with Chinese investors and data personnel inside the Toronto Stock Exchange – the northern nation’s largest shares-trading operation with far more industrial listing than Vancouver’s mining-based small-time stock exchange. The majority shareholder in Dominion – since a month before the Biden vs Trump contest in 2020 – is the UBS Bank of Switzerland with a takeover by shares purchased that put the company’s Greek-Canadian founder John Poulos in the back seat. It just so happened that at the time of takeover three members of the UBS board were Chinese nationals. Since then, they have been whittled down to two: Jeanette Wong, a Singapore-based financial adviser, and Fred Hu – remember him because Hu is a top-ranked professor of Electronic Engineering at the China’s elite Tsinghua University in Beijing. It so happens that I was among the founding faculty at Tsinghua’s school of journalism in 2021-2022. At the time of my appointment to Asia’s second highest-rated university (after the University of Hong Kong), and also later, I witnessed the rise of Tsinghua’s off-campus High-Tech Center adjoining the campus’ east gate. Following his master’s degree in engineering, Hu earned his doctorate at Harvard, shifting to a business-approach to high tech. Since then, he’s headed the board of Yum, the Chinese food chain, and he’s on the board of ICBC Bank, the Commercial Bank of China – deeply connected to the Mainland’s treasury department...the center of financial power. His professorship at Tsinghua provides him with a renewal crop of bright electronic-engineering graduates, some working in secret compact with China’s intelligence bureau. Never mind their language schools – all Tsinghua grads are better at English than most students in the USA, Britain or Australia – as shown by my corps of prospective journalists and public relations candidates in my classes. The Murdoch Mistake Given the Mainland Chinese grip on Dominion’s voting technology – greatly expanded since the Biden-Trump contest – why did the Fox channel assign the onus of ballot rigging on a couple of Venezuelan businessmen in Florida? Everything Murdoch has hinged on his impossible dream of penetrating the Mainland China media market of one billion TV-addicted people. That explains his money-losing operation in Hong Kong (a media pipeline into the industrial hub of Guangzhou), followed by his marriage with Chinese staffer Wendy Deng and, worse of all, avoidance of negative news about the People’s Republic of China. Sorry, Rupert and family, if the truth hurts – as it invariably does to those involved in cover-ups. While not making the harshest judgment against that clan due to the geopolitical location of their homeland Australia, I do believe that Fox should have remained silent rather than pointing away from Chinese interference and indeed conspiracy to throw the U.S. presidential election, if only because Beijing’s motto is 'Try, try again' in the coming week. How It’s Done In two words: Erasure and Rewriting a check-off mark. Dominion vote counters are equipped with a fast-repair system to deal with glitches but rewriting a ballot requires precise placement of the electronic marker over check-mark for the presidential candidate. Since tampering with all the ballots from a booth would be certain evidence of vote-tampering, one of the staff is equipped with an electronic eraser probably positioned on a ring, for instance, a fraternity or sorority ring for up to 20 hours of electric current. The random targeting of ballots for vote-switching is necessary since regular patterns in the vote count is another sure sign of interference. The basic design concept was pioneered by an astute Las Vegas gambler (who remains anonymous) who used an electronic beam on his ring to detect the speed of roulette wheels and slots. From the rate of cycling, his program could estimate the stopping point – and his method succeeded wildly arousing the suspicion of shills and then casino owners. A quiet attempt by a Hollywood producer to make a fiction version of the electronic thief with plans to hire one of the James Bond actors was throttled by the Vegas Mob, sending the e-gambler into hiding, never to be seen in public again. As muttered by Joe Pesci in the movie ‘Casino' – "there’s a lot of space in the desert to dig holes”... So the big question is: Why, given the notoriety of the roulette recorder, why didn’t the Democrats commission a ballot interference device decades ago? Answer: Because they’re airheads…but not entirely stupid since Biden and Company managed to keep Dominion vote-cheating machines in 50 percent of American voting centers. Crooks never change their ways unless the law punishes them. Raising Beijing’s Ire So what could have prompted China – and prestigious Tsinghua U. to vengeance against American voters? Well, that’s due to Google’s foiled attempt to hack the main trunk-line of communications for the top-level leaders of Communist China. The hacker was caught out while trying to connect the intrusive cable in an underground conduit tunnel. The U.S. embassy denied any wrongdoing by CEO Eric Schmidt. So, in a fit of rage, a major hack of diplomatic cables was initiated. With that, Google pulled its office out of the Tsinghua Tech Park. Needless to say, I was appalled by this two-way mud-slinging...aka shyte storm. Suddenly, life became a lot more difficult for Americans in the Chinese capital, including for yours truly who decided spend more time in Hong Kong and Bangkok. As the old saw goes: Two wrongs don’t make a right. All I can do is urge the Chinese not to do the dirty deed again. The message to the Democrats is that if you richly deserve to lose the elections, it’s your own damned fault.
|