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I think what you're doing is extremely dangerous. Why is it dangerous? Because you're spreading conspiracy theories.
It's not a conspiracy theory.
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Do you have forty five dollars?
I'm not undermining.
I'm not saying I'm not saying people are voting there.
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Yeah, it's all a conspiracy theory.
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David, why do you think these people are so adversarial whenever somebody asks them about elections in the state of Georgia? Why is that such a controversial issue?
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Thanks, Rob, for having me back. It's good to be back. It's a good question, honestly. And that's what we've been trying to investigate the last few weeks.
I had no idea who this lady was when she arrived to the scene, but the way she sounded when she arrived to the scene seemed like she was important.
And I know that there's only one Republican on that committee that oversees the states or the or excuse me, the county's commission. And of course, right away,
I asked her, what are you going to do since you're running for Georgia's secretary of state office? What are you going to do about the voter rolls?
And the fact that she called me a conspiracy theorist right away is outrageous.
All you have to do, as I said in that video, is purchase the voter rolls and you can do the same thing.
I actually offered to take her and show her so she doesn't even have to spend the $45, although I know she has it. She makes about $500 a week or a month in her elected role right there.
But I have no idea why. We're still trying to figure why Democrats especially act this way when you ask them such a simple question.
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I don't get it, especially six years after the 2020 election.
Why are they so defensive?
The last time you were on, you told us about the thousands of people who are allegedly registered to vote all across Georgia in abandoned homes, UPS stores, churches, parking lots, under bridges.
We reached out to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, and he gave us this statement, quote, "As Secretary of State, I've made Georgia the best, most secure state for fair elections by using every available tool to keep our voter rolls accurate, including citizenship verification and systems that flag voters potentially registered at business addresses or mailbox stores."
He's running for governor now. Do you agree with anything he said in that statement?
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No, not at all. Maybe they're doing a good job making sure these people don't end up voting, although it seems through various FOIA requests that people have submitted that people do end up actually submitting election ballots, especially in the 2020 election from there.
But our main issue, what we're trying to resolve here with the state, especially with the Secretary of State's office, is why is it so simple for me to go there and see for myself that obviously nobody lives there, but based on the Secretary of State's registration rules, people are actively registered to vote from there.
Why won't they just simply go investigate and purge?
And why every time we bring this up to them, like we brought this up to the Secretary of State, why does he have to respond like this?
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Yeah.
He went on to say that Congress must, quote, update the National Voter Registration Act, as I've repeatedly called for, so that voters can be removed immediately once they're determined to be ineligible.
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