RED ALERT Private Spanish Company Will “Count” 2012 presidential election Votes!

English: Electoral college map for the 2012, 2...

Its an outrage that a foreign company will count the 2012 presidential election.  That right a  Spanish Company Will “Count” American Votes Overseas In November!  If you want to put salt in the wounds the foreign company is owned by NWO card carrying Communist party member George Soros.  This story was Broadcast Sept 11, 2012 on coast to coast am.  Its looking  like a two headed snake is what we have to vote for, once again the NWO has both of their dogs in this fight.  Now that Ron Paul is out of the fight and Gary Johnson of the Libertarian Party is not given a voice on the Main Stream Media stage.

Scytl - smartcard reader
Scytl – smartcard reader (Photo credit: ACC1Ó – Competitivitat per l’empresa)

This same company also is counting votes for many other countries around the world.  Bain alumni, now raising big money as Romney bundlers are also in the electronic voting machine business. This appears to be a repeat of the the infamous former CEO of Diebold Wally O’Dell, who raised money for Bush while his company supplied voting machines and election management software in the 2004 election.

  Perhaps Obama had reason for supreme confidence when he said “after my election” rather than “in case of” to Russian President Medvedev!  It was once said  “It doesn’t matter who votes, it only matters who counts the votes”. Joseph Stalin 

This section copied from:http://www.setyoufreenews.com

Spanish online voting company SCYTL bought the largest vote processing corporation in the United States, it also acquired the means of manufacturing the outcome of the 2012 election. For SOE, the Tampa based corporation purchased by SCYTL in January, supplies the election software which records, counts, and reports the votes of Americans in 26 states–900 total jurisdictions–across the nation.

And although the votes will be cast in hometown, American precincts on Election Day, with the Barcelona-based SCYTL taking charge of the process, they will be routed and counted overseas.

SCYTL itself is a leader in internet voting technology and in 2010 was involved in modernizing election systems for the midterm election in 14 American states.

But although SCYTL’s self-proclaimed reputation for security had won the company the Congressionally approved task of handling internet voting for American citizens and members of the military overseas, upon opening the system for use in the District of Columbia, the University of Michigan fight song “The Victors” was suddenly heard after the casting of each ballot. The system had been hacked by U of M computer teachers and students in response to a challenge by SCYTL that anyone who wished to do so, might try!

Nevertheless, in spite of warnings by experts across the nation, American soldiers overseas will once again vote via the internet in 2012. And because SCYTL will control the method of voting and—thanks to the purchase of SOE–the method of counting the votes as well, there “…will be no ballots, no physical evidence, no way for the public to authenticate who actually cast the votes…or the count.”

The American advocacy group Project Vote has concluded that SCYTL’s internet voting system isvulnerable to attack from the outside AND the inside, a situation which could result in “…an election that does not accurately reflect the will of the voters…” Talk about having a flair for understatement!

Ron Paul Scares the GOP and 4 Reasons He Might Still Get the 2012 Republican Nomination

Why the GOP Is Scared of Ron Paul and 4 Reasons He Might Still Get the 2012 Republican Nomination

Posted: 08/21/2012 3:55 pm
Wait, isn’t Dr. Ron Paul out of the presidential race? Isn’t it all tied up nicely in a bow with the Romney/Ryan ticket?

No.

Why would the GOP be scared of Ron Paul but end up nominating him?

I’ll explain.

Romney and the GOP have demonstrated both poor judgment and poor sportsmanship that might cost them by damaging Romney’s electability among the Ron Paul supporters thus leading to a splitting of votes, which in turn, could cost the GOP the entire election.

Dr. Ron Paul is still in the race for president and is a strong contender for the 2012 GOP nomination.

To be on the GOP ballot Aug. 27, 2012 in Tampa and get a 15-minute speaking slot, a candidate must have won the plurality (majority) of delegates in at least 5 states.

Well, Ron Paul did win the plurality of delegates in 5 states, enough to be eligible for the nomination and a 15-minute speaking slot at the GOP convention. The states he won are Louisiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Maine and Nevada. Then Ron Paul went on to win the plurality in Massachusetts, Romney’s home state and half the delegates in Oregon. Dr. Ron Paul also has around 500 delegateswho support him. The exact number of delegates that Romney and Paul have is still a mystery but should be clarified at the convention.

So… Ron Paul won his 5-plus states, he’s on the ballot and writing his speech, right? Not exactly.

What happened next is what may cost the Republicans and Romney the entire election. Instead of accepting that Ron Paul, the GOP underdog, had won enough delegates in enough states to be allowed his rightful place on the ballot and his 15-minute speaking slot, the GOP and Romney’s people decided to try and take these legitimate wins away from Ron Paul and his supporters. Ron Paul supporters fought hard, played fair and won. Romney supporters didn’t play fair and still lost those 5-plus states. These Ron Paul pluralities were won in spite of shenanigans and tricks tried by Romney supporters and the GOP to prevent or undermine Ron Paul wins. The Ron Paul supporters were well prepared and won the needed amount of states anyway.

So, how did Romney and his supporters handle their losses of five measly states to Ron Paul? Honorably? Graciously? With dignity? Maturely?

No. Quite the opposite.

Romney’s people ran to Big Daddy GOP to rescue them from their defeats by trying to disqualify the valid Ron Paul delegates and to take away Ron Paul’s right to speak and be on the ballot by reducing his states won to fewer than the five needed.

So far, Romney and the GOP have contested the Ron Paul wins in LouisianaMaineMassachusettsand Oregon. They threw out the Massachusetts Ron Paul delegates after the GOP tried to force the delegates to sign a long legal document that required them to vote for Romney. This was not something that had ever been done before. The GOP allowed Romney, big lawyers and big bullying to invalidate Ron Paul’s solid win in Massachusetts.

As in the other states, the Ron Paul delegates in Maine played by the rules and won. Even Governor LePage of Maine, a Republican, is appalled with GOP efforts to throw out the duly-elected Ron Paul delegates.

The entire plot to reduce Ron Paul wins to under five states to take his name off the ballot and take away his 15-minute speaking slot is well under way. If Romney/Ryan are so great, why can’t they handle a little competition without whining and crying like sore losers?

Are they afraid of losing the 2012 nomination to Ron Paul if he speaks and is on the ballot?

Why not play fair and let the best man win?

Who cheats? The lazy, bratty, insecure and less-qualified people who can’t win honestly and fairly. Is that really presidential material?

I wonder if Romney and the GOP are worried that if Ron Paul speaks and gets the nomination, that Ron Paul will fire all of them. Is the GOP that terrified of change, even if it is for the betterment of the country?

Here is why I think that Ron Paul might still walk away with the nomination.

4. Lots of regular “little people”, like me, want Ron Paul to be the 2012 GOP presidential candidate. We, the little people, do not like being trod upon and when we join together, we are stronger than big money. Remember, “We the People”? Ron Paul’s donors areregular working people, many military men and women, not banks.

3. Ron Paul is the David to Romney’s Goliath Machine but the spirit, character and faith of we “little people” count more in America than just money. Romney has raised$152 million to Paul’s $39 million. Ron Paul has more passionate support from his supporters due to Ron Paul’s character and dedication to serving America and Americans based on our founding principles embodied in our Constitution. Money, media manipulation and bullying can’t buy this type of support. But, Romney and his lawyers couldn’t let Ron Paul keep 5-plus wins?

2. Ron Paul wants to serve his country, and has served in the military, and would end the wars. Ron Paul’s supporters and Americans want someone they can trust and believe in. Dr. Paul is that man.

1. Mitt Romney is much less qualified to be president than Ron Paul, who understands the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Watch this link where Romney is asked a basic Constitutional question and replies, “I’ll have to ask my lawyers”. Ron Paul tells Mitt Romney, “Read the Constitution.” Ron Paul is the only Republican Presidential candidate who is qualified, experienced and credible.

We, little people, similar to Ron Paul and his supporters, work hard, play fair and expect the same from others.

If Romney and his supporters had been gracious losers about Ron Paul’s 5-plus state wins and Ron Paul’s 15-minute speech, Romney had a chance to garner both the GOP 2012 nomination plus the support and votes of Ron Paul and his supporters. (I say “a chance” because many Ron Paul supporters do not see Romney as a fiscal conservative.)

Not anymore. It is hard to vote for someone who has acted so dishonorably, even for the sake of party loyalty.

The misguided Machiavellian advice Romney got and took to “win at all costs,” may cost him dearly in November due to the bad will generated with Ron Paul supporters. Too many people have lost too much respect for Romney to vote for him. To the contrary, even though Ron Paul’s campaign was repeatedly slighted and undermined by Romney and his supporters, Ron Paul stayed gracious and denounced mistreatment of Romney. He has told his delegates to “Make yourself heard but be respectful.”

By playing dirty and being greedy, Romney supporters may have lost Romney both the nomination and the election.

Romney and the national GOP are showing their ugly colors by attempting to take away Ron Paul state delegate wins that were earned fair and square.

In speaking with some Ron Paul supporters, here is their current plan. If Ron Paul doesn’t win the 2012 GOP nomination, many Ron Paul supporters will elect to vote for Gary Johnson, the Libertarian presidential candidate. Why wouldn’t Ron Paul supporters write in Ron Paul on ballots around the country? For those write-in votes to count, a write-in candidate must be listed in every state and some Ron Paul supporters do not know if their Ron Paul votes would count.

And, due to the shabby treatment Ron Paul and his supporters have received from the GOP and Romney’s people, many Ron Paul supporters may refuse to vote for Romney in 2012, even if it means Obama being re-elected for four more years. One supporter told me, “I want the GOP to see how many votes they lost by playing dirty. They will only be able to count all the lost votes if I vote for Gary Johnson.”

If you want to learn more about Gary Johnson click here. He stands for small government, government staying out of your business, liberty and fiscal responsibility. He is like Ron Paul without the Roe v Wade concern. Gary Johnson has had virtually no media coverage so you may not have heard of him.

As I heard in grammar school and it remains true: “Cheat, Cheat Never Beat”.

Ron Paul is the only qualified person for the 2012 Republican Nomination who can unify conservative Republicans, Independents, Libertarians and stabilize the economy. If the GOP is smart and humble enough to do a mea culpa and nominate Ron Paul, Republicans stand a better chance of winning in November. If Ron Paul doesn’t get the nomination, many Ron Paul supporters will likely be voting for Gary Johnson. All Romney and the GOP had to do was play fair and win honorably, but I guess that was too much to ask.

But here is the GOP’s conflict: If the GOP nominates Ron Paul and he wins, many of the GOP cronies will be shown the door. There will be a big house cleaning of corrupt politicians, like turning on the lights and the cockroaches scatter. On the other hand, if they don’t nominate Ron Paul, they risk losing all the Ron Paul supporters, which would likely split the vote and lose the 2012 election entirely.

It is hard to make those type of decisions when choosing what is best for the country doesn’t figure in at all, but choosing what is best for their own selfish principles of self-preservation, greed and thirst for power rule the day.

Romney and the GOP need to leave Ron Paul’s five-plus states alone, place him on the ballot and allow Ron Paul to speak.

Follow Laura Trice on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LaurasWJF

Super Tuesday, March 6, 2012. Live Broadcast with News and Information


https://i0.wp.com/media2.myfoxatlanta.com//photo/2012/03/05/SupTueWebcast640x480_20120305183037_320_240.JPG
player img
Super Tuesday 2012 is the name for March 6, 2012, the day on which the largest simultaneous number of state presidential primary elections are held in the United States. It includeds Republican primaries in seven states and caucuses in three states, totaling 392 delegates (17% of the total). Super Tuesday involves Republicancontests in: Alaska (24), Georgia (76), Idaho (32), Massachusetts (38), North Dakota(25),Ohio (63), Oklahoma (40), Tennessee (55), Vermont (17), and Virginia (46). Eighteen RNC delegates from the states are not bound to the voting result.

 

John Best 2012

JOHN BEST FOR PRESIDENT IN 2012



Results for U.S. Republican Presidential Primaries
State Gingrich Paul Romney Santorum reporting
03/03 WA 10.3% 24.8% 37.6% 23.8% 100%
02/28 AZ 16.2% 8.4% 47.3% 26.6% 100%
02/28 MI 6.5% 11.6% 41.1% 37.9% >99%
02/11 ME 6.7% 34.9% 39.0% 18.1% 87%
02/07 CO 12.8% 11.8% 34.9% 40.3% 100%
02/07
10.8%
27.1%
16.9%
44.9%
100%
02/07
12.2%
25.3%
55.2%
100%
02/04
21.1%
18.8%
50.1%
10.0%
100%
01/31
31.9%
7.0%
46.4%
13.3%
100%
01/21
40.4%
13.0%
27.8%
17.0%
100%
01/10
9.4%
22.9%
39.3%
9.4%
100%


Contents

[hide]

[edit]Overview

Super Tuesday overview
Candidate States won Votes Projected delegate count
AP CNN FOX
Mitt Romney 0 0 0 0 0
Rick Santorum 0 0 0 0 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0 0 0 0
Ron Paul 0 0 0 0 0
Unprojected delegates: 410 410 410
Total: 410 410 410

[edit]Individual state contests

[edit]Alaska

Alaska Republican caucuses, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Unpledged 0 0% 0
Totals 30

[edit]Georgia

Georgia Republican primary, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Buddy Roemer 0 0% 0
Michele Bachmann 0 0% 0
Herman Cain 0 0% 0
Jon Huntsman 0 0% 0
Rick Perry 0 0% 0
Gary Johnson 0 0% 0
Totals 76
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest

[edit]Idaho

Idaho Republican caucuses, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Buddy Roemer 0 0% 0
Totals 76
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest

[edit]Ohio

Ohio Republican primary, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Jon Huntsman 0 0% 0
Rick Perry 0 0% 0
Unbound 66
Totals 66
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest

Notes:

1. In the six congressional districts where Rick Santorum submitted only a partial slate of district delegates and district alternates by the late December 2011 deadline, he will be automatically awarded only the number of delegates he submitted, assuming he wins the particular district. The Ohio Republican Party said on March 2, 2012, that the remaining delegates in such districts will be “considered unbound” until a panel composed of three members of the Ohio GOP’s central committee decides which campaign (if any) is permitted to appoint such delegates.[1]

2. In three congressional districts (OH-6OH-9 and OH-13), Rick Santorum did not make the district-specific portion of the ballot.

3. In every district, each of the six candidates listed above appears on the “at-large” portion of the ballot. The results of the at-large ballot will determine the allocation of fifteen national convention delegates.

[edit]Oklahoma

Oklahoma is the only state voting on this day that has a competitive primary in both major parties.[citation needed]

[edit]Democratic

Oklahoma Democratic Primary, March 6, 2012[2]
Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates
Barack Obama
Jim Rogers
Bob Ely
Darcy Richardson
Randall Terry
Unprojected delegates: 45
Total: 45

[edit]Republican

Oklahoma Republican primary, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Michele Bachmann 0 0% 0
Herman Cain 0 0% 0
Jon Huntsman 0 0% 0
Rick Perry 0 0% 0
Gary Johnson 0 0% 0
Totals 40
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest

[edit]Massachusetts

Massachusetts Republican primary, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Michele Bachmann 0 0% 0
Herman Cain 0 0% 0
Jon Huntsman 0 0% 0
Rick Perry 0 0% 0
Gary Johnson 0 0% 0
Totals 76
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest

[edit]North Dakota

North Dakota Republican caucuses, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Unprojected delegates: 0
Total: 0 0% 0

[edit]Tennessee

Tennessee Republican primary, 2012
Candidate Votes Percentage Estimated national delegates
Rick Santorum 0 0% 0
Mitt Romney 0 0% 0
Newt Gingrich 0 0% 0
Ron Paul 0 0% 0
Buddy Roemer 0 0% 0
Michele Bachmann 0 0% 0
Herman Cain 0 0% 0
Jon Huntsman 0 0% 0
Rick Perry 0 0% 0
Gary Johnson 0 0% 0
Totals 58
Key: Withdrew
prior to contest

[edit]Vermont

Vermont Republican primary, March 6, 2012[3]
Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates
Mitt Romney
Rick Santorum
Ron Paul
Newt Gingrich
Unprojected delegates: 17
Total: 17

[edit]Virginia

In Virginia, the ballot restrictions were more restrictive than in most states, resulting in most of the candidates failing to get on the ballot. Several candidates unsuccessfully sued to reverse the decision.

Virginia Republican primary, March 6, 2012[4]
Candidate Votes Percentage Delegates
Mitt Romney
Ron Paul
Unprojected delegates: 46
Total: 46

[edit]References

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