Alan Ramsey, Mississippi Voter Integrity Project

1 year ago
114

Alan Ramsey, director the Mississippi Voter Integrity Project, presents Mississippi voter roll data anomalies found by the quantum computing techniques of Omega4America, and what YOU can do about it.
Dirt voter rolls are the mother's milk of election fraud.

IN THIS VIDEO:
Here are the simple highlights of Omega for America's analysis of the Mississippi voter rolls, as presented in the transcript:
Inaccurate Registration Dates: Thousands of active voters in Mississippi have registration dates listed as far back as 101 AD or 1801, which are "spoof dates" entered by the government due to missing or unknown data. These voters are often recent registrants who have voted in the last few years, showing a significant error in the voter roll data.

Voters at Colleges and Universities: Over 3,000 active voters are registered at college addresses (e.g., Jackson State University, Rust College) with registration dates going back decades (e.g., 1983, 1995), far exceeding typical college stays of 4-7 years. Many are still voting at high rates (60-90%).

Voters at Transient Locations: Hundreds of voters are registered at temporary locations like homeless shelters, Job Corps centers, and hotels (e.g., Motel 6, Ramada Inn) for decades, with many still actively voting. For example, 106 voters at a homeless shelter and 99 at a Job Corps center include long-term registrants who vote.

Non-Residential Addresses: Dozens of voters are registered at non-residential locations like UPS stores, commercial warehouses, churches, and a Salvation Army site, where living is not possible, yet they remain active and voting.

Outdated Voter Rolls: The analysis found 152,301 inactive voters on the rolls. Additionally, cross-checking with the National Change of Address (NCOA) database revealed 138,000 people had moved (59,000 within 18 months, 70,000 within 19-48 months), 20,175 addresses were vacant, and 133,000 were invalid, indicating poor synchronization with current data.

Potential Election Impact: The number of ineligible or anomalous voters (thousands identified in minutes) is claimed to be large enough to potentially swing a statewide election.

Technology Limitations: Current relational SQL technology used by Mississippi cannot efficiently detect these issues due to its inability to perform cost-effective time series analysis or cross-database searches (e.g., with NCOA or property tax records).

Fractal Solution: Omega for America promotes its Fractal technology, which can clean voter rolls by identifying ineligibles, syncing with multiple databases, and running in parallel with existing systems. It’s cost-effective (less than 20% of traditional methods), quick to implement (30 days), and requires no special training.

These findings suggest significant inaccuracies and outdated entries in Mississippi’s voter rolls, which Omega for America attributes to limitations in current technology and proposes to address with their Fractal system.

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