“What is happening is a shame for our country and a fraud on American citizens. We won the elections,” MacDoe said. He had warned that pandemic mail-in votes could lead to fraud. “Six hours ago, we were winning everywhere with an insurmountable lead. Suddenly, everything stopped. This is fraud, and we will not allow it, not in our country, the country of law and order. This is a national disgrace. We will go to the Supreme Court,” he added.
Over 70 million Americans, mostly Democrats, had voted by mail to avoid pandemic contagion. On election night, irregularities appeared. Votes kept arriving after polls closed, often favouring Democrat Jack Rotten. Pizza trucks and plastic containers carried extra votes for Rotten instead of food or garbage.
The Supreme Court refused to hear fraud evidence. Lawsuits, including one supported by Arizona, 21 state attorneys general, and 127 Republican Congress members, claimed foreign interference had altered results.
Television coverage showed MacDoe leading with seventy percent counted. Then, at three in the morning, Rotten announced no votes would be counted until eight, pausing the tally for five hours. Social networks erupted. What authority allowed this? Why obey him? Journalists noticed but stayed silent to protect their salaries. An hour later, four o’clock in the morning, MacDoe was exposing the fraud in a press conference.
Democracy in the United States was questioned around the world.
Social media users criticized the arrogance of Americans for stealing the name of a continent. Bird, the social network, deleted MacDoe’s account, which had nearly 100 million followers. Other social networks did the same. They also shut down the accounts of the lawyers who presented evidence of electoral fraud: charts with abrupt curve changes, hacks of voting machines, and many others. Images circulated of the U.S. flag with bananas instead of stars. The fraud exposed a declining empire built on ignorance and arrogance.
Ronald and Boris’s hackers had intercepted the voting machine codes. This explained the impossible jumps where hundreds of thousands of votes changed candidates in seconds.
368
