@Flynn2022 - 2024 John Flynn US Senate Candidate For CT
Media Storm?
Digital Warfare by the hacker of America?
Vaccines? 5g, and elections.
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Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speaker discusses contracts related to media marketing and public relations in Connecticut. They mention various contract values and highlight the lack of response from certain individuals. The speaker also suggests that these contracts may be related to hacking elections in other states. They go through the contract details, including confidentiality clauses and potential violations. The speaker criticizes the sharing of data and accuses the Attorney General of defending those involved in election fraud. They mention legal actions and the failure to clean up voter data. Overall, the speaker raises concerns about the contracts and their implications.
Speaker 0: Connecticut. When you go back to 2020 and you look at the media marketing and public relations for the year that they hacked America, you'll find this contract, $37,000,000 in state, $29,000,000 business contract value an out of state 5,000,000 for a total of 72,000,000. And here's Marisol Rivera, who's never returned our call, and Josh Geball, who's never returned our emails or our call. So media marketing and public relations. Okay?
This is when they hacked 20 other states. So when you look at what their coverage is, like, for example, they spent 500 thousand here. Here's 1, 500,000, 500,000. That's nothing, folks. So, 500, 500, 500, 1.5.
Well, there's a $20,000,000 one right here, 20,000,000 Adams Knight. Go see what it's about. Health care, financial services, advertising branding, my digital marketing, marketing technology, media, podcasts, everything else. Adams night. Okay?
And they're in Connecticut. But what do you need to know? Let me show you. As you go down, these are all the contracts. If you get down to page seven.
You know, fast forward. Right? 30,500,000 media storm in Norwalk, South Norwalk, an empty building, folks. There's nobody there. I've never seen anybody there, and I've gone there.
Now what do they do? We are different. Finding hand razors and converting them into business results. So here's lightning striking in Norwalk, and here's the, the coast line. You can see what their services are, data science and optimization, insights, cite strategy, analytic reporting, media planning and buying, media agency see for the media, digital media planning and buying.
Well, what the Connecticut did to hack elections is digitally related. So when you look at what they possibly did. Let's get back down to the contract itself. Here it is. The disclaimers, confidentiality.
Here we go. Media marketing and public relation services. Well, what do you do when you're hacking other states. Is it covering the contract? Gee, das, das, asked us.
I don't know. Here we go. But you can see they're acting in good faith. Confidentiality. Really.
Contracts are subject to freedom of information. No, they aren't. No. They are not. The contracts that they used for media are not subject to FOIA.
Campaign contribution restrictions, they violated this clause. Okay? You can go through the whole thing. Antitrust contract department have to Andrew Associates. Okay?
Confidentiality, goods and services, says payment terms. This is for digital media, okay, using the DAS contract, I guess through Yukon, falsifying the audit, destroying the cash vote record, destroying the memory cards for digital downloads using media. And the contractor is required to do are to do certain things. There are questions and answers, emergency standby, force majeure. Yeah.
This is force majeure. All when you read the rest of the contract, you can see disclosure of contractor party litigation. Contractor party disclosed to the contractor their knowledge of litigation. Okay. There's litigation, hoax.
It's been for one and a half years. Educate, for example, Trinity College hacked Georgia, what does the Commission of Human Rights say about people hacking other states. And here, contractor shall comply with 12/411. Department of Revenue, tax due under provision, tangible items, you know, like bribes from with from Mark Zuckerberg. Read this paragraph, thirty five.
Whistleblowing. This is a this contract may be subject to provisions under 4.61 DD, which they are being sued for. That is a claim in the Connecticut, contract. So let me print page 96 of 10 79 pages. Ready?
Let's see. Print, Page 96, print. See digital contracts and the immunity clauses of the digital contracts. So there's page 20. Let's go back down to 96.
It skipped when I used the printer, uh-oh, it's starting over from the beginning. Hold on. Should I get up and get the printed hyper? Confidentiality confidential information. Okay.
So they shared every single do regard for contractors' request for protection of proprietary or confidential show information which the state receives. Well, this is a big no no, folks. This is had big no, no. I don't know where they get off sharing everyone's data. But the tax, notwithstanding have legal jargon, that is basically double speak.
And when you go through the document maybe I should get up and get it off the printer. That would probably save me some time. Let's keep continue down. Contract after tracked and we go to the whistle blowing section, And I can put this on the document reader, which I might want to do. And this is Page 21 of the first hold on.
There's 30, okay, 30, 21. Let's go back up. So there's lots of here we are. We're in the whistle blowing section of the contract number 1. Officers, employees, if the contractor takes or threatens to take personal action, there's one thing.
If they take property the auditors of the public accounts of the attorney general are under the provision in subsection of the statute liable for civil penalty. Okay. The state may request that the attorney general bring a civil action in the superior court for the Judicial District Hartford, which I tried, to seek imposition and recovery of such penalties. So what I'm saying is when all the third party vendors robbed you of your motor vehicle data due to Chris Murphy and the Department of Homeland Security, all these vendors are liable under the digital contract. And the attorney general is to bring civil action.
Well, what's happening here is that the attorney general is defending them and not attacking them. So the attorney general of the state of Connecticut, who is Tung, has violated his oath of office. And he is a defendant in the election fraud case. And the Democrats are saying that his own delegate signatures, which is par for the course. So we have the Attorney General selling the Voda data through the company that's supposed to be cleaning that we're paying to clean up the voted data, we pay them 61,000 a so $600 went to cleaning up the voter data, which was never done.
And in fact, under twelve-four eleven, Connecticut General Statute, the state of Connecticut shall, within 30 days hit Chapter 219 of the Gen of the Connecticut General Statutes. Okay. So let's see what Connecticut General Statute, Connecticut General Statute statute 2/19. Let's see. Sales and uses of taxes.
Okay. Hit. So what happens is it's a legal condition of tax on out of state mail. Okay. So it touches on a lot of different areas, folks.
But for the the Cathedral Corporation, for example, to mail out 4,000,000 unsolicited absentee ballots that are false documents. That's a problem because they shared the information. So I don't want to push it well beyond that. But were adding, operation to the problem that the attorney general created, and we've already added the attorney general as a defendant. Thank you very much.
Sorry to bore you. But if you don't look at some of the documents, you won't understand how
@Flynn2022 - 2024 John Flynn US Senate Candidate For CT
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