TexAgs91 said:
oldyeller said:
I just watched it, and while the allegations certainly merit investigation, I didn't really see a smoking gun, as I was surprised they didn't even consider the following:
- The folks wearing gloves could just as easily have been germaphobes, wary of touching surfaces touched by others due to all the COVID hysteria,
I stopped reading here because if you did watch it you weren't paying attention.
Watch it again at 39:27
https://www.bitchute.com/video/TizNoVq1qcwb/
They said they suddenly saw people starting to wear gloves on december 23rd - the day after someone got busted using their fingerprints on the ballots in Arizona.
Do you believe that people suddenly became germophobic on December 23rd?
No, but correlation does not necessarily mean causation, and simply because the brief video clip they selected to show seems to support that allegation doesn't make it so. It may simply be that they didn't start paying attention to gloves until the 23rd of December.
My point is that there are multiple instances where reasonable explanations were entirely dismissed, or not even really entertained, which undermines the strength of what they are trying to show, and likely why some in this thread accuse them of confirmation bias.
I was expecting to see a solid case, and thus came at it objectively, but the overall tone seems more like "preaching to the choir" than laying out a clear, undeniable case for wide-spread, organized, wholesale fraud.