Author Archives: J Christian Adams

Forced Migration Complete, Tweaks Remain

The forced migration to the WordPress platform is complete with all posts going back to June 2010. It was harder than it should have been and ultimately an easier fix was found. But the process took longer than I had hoped.

There are some improvements and some functions not fully up. We’ve lost tags from the old posts. We’ve also lost identifying features between my posts, Tabella’s and Lex’s for posts previous to this date. Perhaps we can have a poll to see which of Tabella’s or Lex’s posts are attributed to me in some publication.

The old mailing list is also dead. I have yet to fully understand how to re-subscribe. There are lots of functions in this WordPress platform which have not been fully activated. In time. For now, the content is moved, the blog has a heartbeat, and it’s back to business.

Still Migrating Website

The slow migration from the old platform to the new continues.  Contributors are set up.  Posts are being moved over.  But many of the authors of the old posts cannot be attributed in this new platform.  Hence, posts by Tabella and Lex may appear either as admin posts or posts by me.  I’m sure that will cause some confusion in the future but there seems to be no way around it.  I’ve also lost all the mug shots of the voter fraud perps, an unfortunate loss indeed as we try to always post the photos of the voter fraudsters.  We’ll continue to do so but it seems the old photos are gone forever.

Voter Fraud in Minneapolis identified by DFL

PoliticsInMinnesota reveals how voter fraud deniers change their tune when they are the target of potential shenanigans, like 140 people registered at the same address.  An excerpt detailing the complaint of the DFL vote suppressors.
And that same day, Kahn campaign attorney Brian Rice filed a petition with Hennepin County calling into question the voter registrations of about 140 people at a single address in the Minneapolis district. Hennepin County officials are preparing to perform an inquiry based on allegations in the petition.

According to the document, which provides a list of people who have registered their residence as 419 Cedar Avenue South in Minneapolis, that address is a mailbox facility. Apartments above the building that make up multiple addresses don’t contain any of the same names in their registry as those who are registered to vote at the address. It is illegal under Minnesota law for voters to cast a ballot outside of the districts they live in, and a voter registration must include a person’s place of residence as the listed address.

“People have to be registered where they live, and you can’t live in a mailbox,” Rice said in an interview with Capitol Report. “You can’t register out of a mailbox and vote in Minnesota.”

Voting Fraud at the Residence Inn: “Man gets three years in prison for casting a single vote”

HOUSTON — Adrian Heath was recently sentenced to three years in prison and slapped with a $10,000 fine, and he has become an unlikely face for voter fraud in Texas.  His sentencing in a Montgomery County court capped a four-year journey that began with Heath’s plan to bring more oversight to a special utility district and ended with Heath a convicted felon.

…In May 2010, Heath, along with a handful of his neighbors booked rooms at a Residence Inn inside the Road Utility District.  H
eath and his friends claimed residency inside the district despite staying only one or two nights at the hotel. They did so to elect three of their colleagues and take over the district.

Link to story

Wisconsin Firefight: “Free Speech trumps John Doe”

A Tim McCumber column with the Baraboo News Republic: 
Federal Judge Rudolph Randa summed up in one sentence out of 269 pages what the infamous John Doe investigation against Gov. Scott Walker and his conservative allies was all about — suppressing the rights of conservatives to free speech and the right to assemble.

He also states in his opinion, “Therefore any attempt at regulation of free speech is subject to the strictest scrutiny, meaning that it is the government’s burden to show that its regulation is narrowly tailored to achieve the only goal of the regulation — preventing quid quo pro corruption or the appearance thereof as it pertains to elected officials or candidates.”

In essence, the five Democrat district attorneys who created the criminal investigation not only theorized alleged corruption, they couldn’t even come close to creating a case, least of all proving it. They didn’t have anything. Everything the defendants, Gov. Walker and his conservative allies were doing was legal and above board.

…The John Doe investigators are no better than King George. Using king-like authority they unilaterally moved to suppress a conservative movement that had just won the minds of Wisconsin voters.

“Bad News for Voter ID Foes”

AmericanThinker and the Blaze discuss the findings on voter turnout and impact in the NC primary election under the new law.  How does a court potentially grant a preliminary injunction requested by DOJ on a law when the turnout of minority is up almost 30%, and with other voters up approximately 15%. 

[A] study [is] showing not only more voters overall, but an increase in black voter turnout especially, after the law’s implementation.

The findings came before a scheduled hearing next week where the U.S. Justice Department will ask a U.S. District Court for an injunction against the law going into the November midterms. The Obama administration has argued that such a law will make it more difficult for minorities to vote.

Comparing May 4, 2010 North Carolina primary election data with the May 14, 2014 primary data, the study found that voter turnout increased across the board, but particularly among black voters, where it increased by 29.5 percent, compared to an increase of white voter turnout of 13.7 percent. The findings were based on Census Bureau data and public names who signed the voter rolls.