TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @CoVet_81

Saved - September 25, 2025 at 6:48 PM

@CoVet_81 - 🇺🇸Lady Vet

The Democrats know their struggling party can only stay competitive by bringing in new voters, so they kept telling us the border was secure while quietly importing new “Democrat” voters. That’s their playbook for winning elections.😎 https://t.co/hQbDtbfUQG

Saved - July 7, 2025 at 5:23 AM

@CoVet_81 - 🇺🇸Lady Vet

Wait, weren’t Democrats supposed to not deny elections? Hypocrisy 101 right here! 🤣 https://t.co/dKH1FkoE2L

Video Transcript AI Summary
Multiple speakers express concerns about the legitimacy of elections, focusing on the 2016, 2000, 2004, and 2018 elections. Several speakers claim that Russian interference affected the outcome of the 2016 election, leading them to view Trump as an illegitimate president. Some believe Trump is aware of this illegitimacy. The 2000 Bush v. Gore election is cited as an example of a court-appointed president, with claims that Al Gore won Florida but the Supreme Court halted the vote count. The 2004 election in Ohio is described as riddled with problems, including malfunctioning machines and allegations of voting rights violations. Some believe John Kerry privately thought the election was stolen. The 2018 Georgia gubernatorial election is also disputed, with accusations that Brian Kemp, then Secretary of State, suppressed votes and disenfranchised voters, leading to Stacey Abrams' loss. Speakers assert the election was not fair and that Abrams likely won. Concerns are raised about the integrity of electronic voting machines and the lack of paper trails.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: You can run the best campaign. You can even become the nominee, and you can have the election stolen from you. Speaker 1: How can you win with Russian interference, though? Speaker 2: That's a real thing. Scared about it Speaker 3: in 2020. But rightly. Speaker 1: Because I think he's an illegitimate president that didn't really win. So how do you, you know, fight against that in 2020? Speaker 3: You are absolutely right. Speaker 0: He's an illegitimate president in my mind. Speaker 4: Would you be my vice presidential candidate? Speaker 5: Folks, look. I absolutely agree. Speaker 6: Trump didn't actually win the election in 02/2016. He lost the election, and he was put in the office because a Russian's in a favor. Speaker 0: Trump knows he's an illegitimate president. Speaker 1: The president of elect, although legally elected, is not legitimate. Speaker 7: I don't see this president-elect as a legitimate president. Speaker 8: You said you believe that Russia's interference altered the outcome of the election. Speaker 3: I do. We have a president who, if in fact, it is proven, has been assisted by the Russians and may, in fact not be a legitimate president. Speaker 0: The one thing that Trump is fearful of, when it comes to his being president is that finally, we will see how illegitimate his victory actually was. Speaker 9: I have an objection. Speaker 10: I object to the 15 votes from the state of North Carolina. I object because people are horrified. Speaker 0: He's an illegitimate president. Speaker 3: Do you believe Trump is illegitimate president? Speaker 2: What I believe is that there's no question that the outcome of this election was affected by the Russian interference. Speaker 9: There absolutely is a cloud of illegitimacy. Speaker 4: So that legitimacy is in question. Yes. Speaker 1: So that was a very tainted election. And and in that sense, it's it's illegitimate. Speaker 3: Why do you think the president is going to such great lengths to essentially prove that he beat you? Speaker 0: Because he knows he didn't. He knows he's an illegitimate president. Speaker 11: Stolen emails, stolen drone, stolen drone, stolen election. Welcome to the world of unprecedented Trump. Speaker 8: So do you believe president Trump is an illegitimate president? Speaker 6: Based on what I just said, which I can't retract. Speaker 1: The Russian attempt to hack the election, and frankly, the FBI's weighing in on the election, I think make the ill make it makes his election illegitimate. Speaker 0: There was a widespread understanding that this election was not on the level. We still don't know what really happened, Isaac. I mean, there's just a lot that I think will be revealed, history will discover, but you don't win by 3,000,000 votes and have all this other shenanigans stuff going on and not come away with an idea like, woah, something's not right here. Speaker 2: The outcome of the election was affected by their interference. And now we need to know, you know, to what degree, if any, the Trump campaign was actually in collusion with the Russia. Speaker 0: He knows he's an illegitimate president. So, of course, he's obsessed with me. And I believe that it's a guilty conscience. Speaker 12: We actually won the last presidential election, folks. They stole the last presidential election. Speaker 4: And Al Gore won that election. I think he won anyway. Speaker 1: Actually, I think I carried Florida. Speaker 0: Bush versus Gore. A court took away presidency. Speaker 4: If all the votes were counted in Florida, then Al Gore would be president today and George Bush would be backing off. Speaker 3: I come from Florida, where you and others participated in what I call the United States coup d'etat. Speaker 6: There's no doubt in my mind that Al Gore was elected president. Speaker 13: I rise to object to the fraudulent 25 Florida electoral votes. Speaker 14: I must object because of the overwhelming evidence of official misconduct, delivery fraud, Speaker 15: and an attempt to resign. Speaker 10: It is signed by myself on behalf of my diverse constituents and the millions of Americans who have been disenfranchised by Florida's inaccurate vote count. The supreme Speaker 3: court, not the people of Speaker 10: The United States, decided this election. Speaker 0: Speaking to a Democratic group in Chicago Tuesday, he made it clear he thinks Al Gore was the winner. Speaker 5: By the time it was over, our candidate had won the popular vote, and the only way they could win the election was to stop the voting in Florida. Speaker 12: Catherine Harris, Jeb Bush, Jim Baker, and the Supreme Court hadn't tampered with the results. Al Gore would be president. Speaker 2: The Supreme Court elected president. 02/2004. Yes. Al Gore won the state of Florida in February, although not the presidency. Speaker 4: But the Supreme Court hampered? That's a large charge. The supreme court stopped the counting of the votes, and if they let the count go on, Hale Gould would have got the necessary votes. Speaker 3: The supreme court selected George w Bush as the president. He was not elected. There is Speaker 10: overwhelming evidence that George w Bush did not win this election. Speaker 16: What I observed, as a voter, as a citizen of Illinois, four years ago were troubling evidence of the fact that not every vote was being counted. Speaker 17: I don't think that George w Bush won the election, in 2000 against Al because I I think that he probably lost Florida and also that nationwide. Speaker 4: If you invite me back on this show in about eight weeks, I think you're gonna learn that Al Gore actually did get all the votes there. Speaker 9: The court has been thwarting formation of the popular will, the most spectacular example being Bush versus Gore, where the majority by a five four vote enjoined the counting of more than a 100,000 ballots in Florida and essentially gave America its first court appointed president. Speaker 3: By the Speaker 12: electoral discipline is taken Speaker 15: and stolen. I think Speaker 12: in February, everybody thought, well, he did win the election. He held court. Speaker 3: After the election, when you stole the election, you came back here and say, get over it. No. We're not gonna get over it. Speaker 12: You know it. I know it. They know it. We won that election. Speaker 18: Constantly shifting vote tallies in Ohio malfunctioning at one electronic machines, which may not have paper receipts, have led to additional loss of confidence by the public. Speaker 19: The right to vote has been stolen from qualified voters. Speaker 10: In 2,004, the democratic process was thwarted. Speaker 9: The two thousand four presidential election in Ohio was riddled with unnecessary problems. Speaker 2: Some machines malfunctioned, causing votes to be counted more than once or not at all. Speaker 7: Based upon an inordinate number of allegations suggesting gross voting rights violations and misconduct, I joined with my colleagues in objecting to counting the state of Ohio's electoral votes. Speaker 15: As in February, the votes of many who wanted to vote were not, in fact, counted. Speaker 20: This last Friday night, I I arranged to meet senator Kerry at a fundraiser to give him a copy of my book. He told me he now thinks the election was stolen. Speaker 21: The wife of John Kerry said she has lingering doubts about the legitimacy legitimacy of the election. Her theory goes like this. Two brothers, she calls hard right Republicans, own 80% of voting machines in The US. Therefore, it would be easy to hack into the mother machines that control the electronic voting. Speaker 3: There were numerous irregularities in Ohio, including large percentages of rejections of provisional balloting, problems with voting machines. Speaker 0: As we look at our election election system, I think it's fair to say that there are many legitimate questions about its accuracy, about its integrity. Speaker 18: There are still legitimate concerns over the integrity of our elections. Speaker 19: Question, obviously, is how many instances were not caught that we don't know about? Number one, we've seen a lot of, what I'll call, honest glitches where it just didn't work right. But also that these machines are hackable. A dishonest employee of the vendor or dishonest employee of the local board of elections or simply someone who knows electronics and has a computer at home, could hack into these machines and then put in a secret instruction to disregard every twentieth democratic vote or add 10% to the carrier to the Bush vote or whatever. He might not ever know it. Speaker 12: I agree with tens of millions of Americans who are very worried that when they cast the ballot on an electronic voting machine, Speaker 7: that there is no paper trail to record that vote. The numerous irregularities that occurred with the electronic voting machines in Ohio on November the second of last year point to an unresolved national crisis. Speaker 10: We cannot declare that the election of 11/02/2004 was free and clear and transparent and real. There must be independent testing of the voting machines used in Ohio. Speaker 22: I'm not confident that the election in Ohio was fairly decided. We know that there was substantial voter suppression, and the machines were not reliable. Speaker 18: The members of congress who have brought this challenge are speaking up for their aggrieved constituents, many of whom may have been disenfranchised in this process. Speaker 15: Treating today's electoral vote count in congress as a meaningless ritual would be an insult to our democracy unless we registered our own protest against the obviously flawed voting process that took place in so many of our states. Speaker 23: Voters who wish to cast a vote for president or vice president can't approach the polls with certainty that their vote will be counted. Speaker 19: One of the Speaker 24: most significant problems in Ohio and in many other states was the lack of measures to ensure the integrity of electronic voting machines. Speaker 25: In 02/2004, they caused Democratic voters in Ohio to wait for eight hours before they could cast their ballot. They turned the Department of Civil Rights of the Justice Department into the voter suppression division with voter ID laws, voter purging, voter caging, voter intimidation. There aren't gonna be any more election stealing. Speaker 3: And despite the final tally and the inauguration and the situation we find ourselves in, I do have one very affirmative statement to make. Speaker 10: We won. Speaker 3: Without voter suppression, Stacey Abrams would be the governor of Georgia. Andrew Gillum is the governor of Florida. I acknowledge that former secretary of state Brian Kemp will be certified as the victor in the twenty eighteen gubernatorial election. This is not a speech of concession. Speaker 0: If she had a fair election, she already would have won. Speaker 3: You refused to concede and say that you lost. Do you stand by that decision today? Absolutely. The election was not fair. The process was not fair. Speaker 9: If Stacey Abrams doesn't win in Georgia, they stole it. It's clear. It's clear. Speaker 16: I think that Stacey Abrams' election is being stolen from her. Speaker 26: You notably did not concede. I did not. Okay. You acknowledged that he won, but you did not concede. Speaker 4: Correct. Speaker 8: Five months later, do you still feel like your opponent won through voter suppression? Speaker 3: Yes. Georgia voters did not have their votes counted. They were not allowed to cast votes. They had their votes discarded. Speaker 12: She would be the governor of Georgia today had the governor of Georgia not disenfranchised 1,400,000 Georgia voters before the election. That's what happened to Stacey Abrams. They took the votes away. Speaker 11: Was the election in Georgia statewide a free and fair election? Speaker 3: It was not a free and fair election. Speaker 11: Reminder, she wrote, Brian Kemp stole the gubernatorial election from Georgians and Stacey Abrams. Speaker 3: And it was not fair to those who filled up absentee ballots. And depending on the county you sent it to, it either was counted or not counted, assuming you received it in time. Brian Kemp oversaw for eight years the systematic and systemic dismantling of our democracy, and that means there could not be free and fair elections in Georgia. Speaker 15: It certainly gave the appearance of unfairness, and I think it was unfair. Stacey ran a great campaign. She probably won. Speaker 3: But will I say that this election was not tainted, was not a disinvestment and a disenfranchisement of thousands of voters? I will not say that. Speaker 0: Candidates both, black and white, lost their races because they have been deprived of the votes they otherwise would have gotten. And the clearest example is from next door in Georgia. Stacey Abrams should be governor leading that state right now. Speaker 3: So you don't feel that you lost Farrand Square. Alright. Speaker 27: I'm not saying it's gonna be legit. It's the increase in the prospect of being illegitimate is a direct proportion of us not being able to get these these reforms passed.

@Ames2420 - ❤🎹 Ames 🎹❤

Y'all. ... Rosie is demanding the impeachment of President Trump and an audit of the election results. 🤣 What do you wanna say to her? https://t.co/iutlpue2Kl

View Full Interactive Feed