Subject: Re: January 6, Part Deux

True, but not everything that alarmists said were going to happen.

We're only one year in. We are seeing cities terrorized by storm troopers, and one country subjugated. Imagine where we will be after four years.

In order to have a chance of this succeeding, you'd need to flood that Congressional district with hundreds of LEO's removing thousands of people.

The regime has manpower:

ICE Announces Historic 120% Manpower Increase, Thanks to Recruitment Campaign that Brought in 12,000 Officers and Agents

After receiving more than 220,000 applications to join ICE from patriotic Americans, ICE blew past its original hiring target of 10,000 new officers and agents within a year. In fact, we have more than doubled our officers and agents from 10,000 to 22,000. With these new patriots on the team, we will be able to accomplish what many say was impossible and fulfill President Trump’s promise to make America safe again.


https://www.dhs.gov/news/2026/...

No way that doesn't get lambasted in the courts.

Remember the 2004 election? The Bush campaign in Ohio was run by the person who was also the state official responsible for running the election in the state. Everything went smoothly in the GOP leaning, more rural, districts in the state. But the Dem leaning, union heavy, cities of Toledo and Cleveland were a cluster. Precincts were mysteriously short of voting machines, and some of the machines they did have mysteriously broke down. The polls in Ohio close at 7:30pm. On election night, the 11pm local Detroit news showed a live helo shot of people in Toledo, lined up, down the street, and around the corner, still trying to vote.


Objection to certification of Ohio's electoral votes
See also: 2004 United States election voting controversies

On January 6, 2005, Senator Barbara Boxer joined Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio in filing a congressional objection to the certification of Ohio's Electoral College votes due to alleged irregularities including disqualification of provisional ballots, alleged misallocation of voting machines, and disproportionately long waits in predominantly African-American communities.[11][12] Ohio's polling locations and equipment are determined by two Democrats and two Republicans serving on the county's Board of Elections, which ensures that any decision made about polling resources is bipartisan.[13] The Senate voted the objection down 74–1; the House voted the objection down 267–31.[11] At the time, it was only the second congressional objection to an entire U.S. state's electoral delegation in American history; the first instance was in 1877, when all the electors from three Southern states in the 1876 United States presidential election were challenged, and one from Oregon.[11][14] The third instance was in 2021, when Republicans objected to the certification of the electors from Arizona and Pennsylvania. An objection to a single faithless elector was also filed in 1969.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

Of course, the concerns about the 2004 Ohio vote were written off, by the winners, as "Bush derangement syndrome"

Steve