Lib Saboteur Was Given Access To CHANGE THE VOTES!

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Boy, isn’t it convenient that all of these things are coming out about everyone who helped Joe Biden steal the 2020 election when there isn’t a single thing that can be done to overturn the results?

Sure, they say, go ahead and tell them all of the stuff that they did that was so horrible. The problem is that we can’t do a single thing about it now.

Except, we can put them into such levels of punishment that they never think about doing anything like that ever again.

Emails show that Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein, Wisconsin state lead for the National Vote at Home Institute was not only given four of the five keys to where absentee votes were being counted in Green Bay, Wisconsin but that he was also given two internet connections at the site.

Votes can be changed and counts can be changed if tabulators are connected to the internet. Spitzer-Rubenstein is a Democratic operative and not an election official.

Wisconsin is one of the swing states that saw a huge vote dump for Joe Biden early the morning after election day. There were allegedly other suspicious happenings in the state that Biden won by a slim margin.

The Wisconsin Assembly has voted this week to authorize an investigation into the 2020 election, specifically about the actions by Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein.

It will be months before the investigation is finished and no matter what, it won’t affect the 2020 election.

The Daily Signal reported:

A veteran Democratic operative intricately involved in Green Bay’s November election was given access to “hidden” identifiers for the internet network at the hotel convention center where ballots were counted, according to emails obtained by Wisconsin Spotlight.

Green Bay city officials insist the presidential election was “administered exclusively by city staff.” But the emails show that Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein, Wisconsin state lead for the National Vote at Home Institute, had a troubling amount of contact with election administration Nov. 4.

“I’ll have my team create two separate SSID’s for you,” Trent Jameson, director of event technology at Green Bay’s Hyatt Regency and KI Convention Center, where the city’s Central Count was located on Election Day, wrote to Spitzer-Rubenstein.

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