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There is plenty of evidence and wrong doing in the video already released for state law enforcement to open up investigations. They have everything they need to identify and question these "mules" to get the answers they need. Showing additional video footage publicly just to satisfy a few folks who won't do anything constructive with that evidence anyway isn't necessary to move investigations forward.
This. True the Vote is doing what investigative journalists
used to do. They saw something which didn't look right and built a plan to test their theories. They Built their database from a mixture of publicly available data, data for purchase, and FOIA requests. They developed a very reasonable set of criteria to reduce petabytes of data into a subset of
the outliers. This included only focusing on those individuals whose daily patterns changed during the these drop boxes were in service.
Video, or not, this is all circumstantial evidence until it is followed up with a formal investigation from state/local officials. It doesn't make sense to release all the information public, it should be turned over to the authorities.
As to Dinesh, the movie, the money, etc. It cost money to buy the data, do the research, and build the evidence so I don't have any issue with them trying to recoup those costs. With regards to Dinesh and the marketing of the movie, he needed to resonate with those who
could be swayed. I don't know how you couldn't be prepared for the attacks, and I damn sure don't know why you would give your attackers ammo.