Society's Child
The president of the Arizona State Senate asked the chairman of the Maricopa Board of Supervisors in a letter on Tuesday to address "three serious issues that have arisen in the course of the Senate's ongoing audit of the returns of the November 3, 2020 general election in Maricopa County. "
Arizona State Senate President Karen Fann identified those three issues in her letter to Maricopa County Supervisors Board Chairman Jack Sellers as: (1) ongoing non-compliance with legislative subpoenas, (2) chain of custody and ballot organization anomalies, and (3) deleted data bases.
In an editorial published Friday to mark its bicentennial, the Guardian listed the "worst errors of judgment" the British daily has made since its founding in 1821.
These "mistakes" included supporting the 1917 declaration issued by then foreign secretary Arthur Balfour, a document seen as a key milestone in the State Israel's establishment and which the Guardian described as having "changed the world."
"The Guardian of 1917 supported, celebrated and could even be said to have helped facilitate the Balfour declaration," the left-leaning newspaper wrote.

Supporters of President Donald Trump storm the US Capitol, January 6, 2021.
Homeland Security Committee chair Bennie Thompson (D-Mississippi) and ranking member John Katko (R-New York) seem to have agreed on a proposed format and scope of the commission, made up of five Democrats and five Republicans appointed by their party leadership. The commission will only be able to issue subpoenas with a majority vote or agreement between the chair - a Democrat - and the Republican vice-chair. Its report will be due by the end of the year.
Comment: It seems that time and distance has given Republicans a little more intestinal fortitude to publicly question the official 'blown-out-of-proportion' narrative about the January 6th incident.
See also:
- Ashli Babbitt's family to sue police, officer who shot her at US Capitol: Beyond 'rookie' blunder
- Biden calls the Capitol Riot 'the worst attack on our democracy since the Civil War'...really?
- Ashli Babbitt's legal team addresses DOJ abruptly closing Capitol riot murder investigation
- Oath Keepers founder to cooperate with prosecutors in first guilty plea from Capitol riot
- Keeping the 'insurrection' alive? Anti-Trump Lincoln Project LIVE-TWEETS Capitol riot & gets accused of 'retraumatizing' people
- No charges for officer in Capitol riot shooting of Ashli Babbitt: prosecutors
- Capitol Police ordered to use light touch in riot response, given inadequate equipment, failed to follow up on intel
Project Veritas — with aid from a former British spy and Erik Prince, the founder of Blackwater — was part of a campaign that involved surveillance operations against members of the FBI.
The overall effort, the Times wrote, also included a plan for a sting operation against Trump's former national security adviser H.R. McMaster that involved some Veritas staffers, though Veritas itself has denied any involvement with that plot.
Comment: As O'Keefe points out in the video above, the Times piece stops short of actually accusing Project Veritas of taking part in the operation, hedging with "Although several Project Veritas operatives were involved in the plot, it is unclear whether the group directed it." It could be nothing but a smear aimed at a non-profit that's poised to sue the pants off them.
See also:
- Project Veritas busts CNN director admitting coverage of black-on-Asian hate crimes would 'set back' BLM movement
- Twitter permanently bans Project Veritas founder James O'Keefe
- James O'Keefe: Project Veritas suing CNN for defamation, new video will expose network's 'fraud' related to Covid-19
- Project Veritas busts CNN again: 'We were creating a story -- our focus was to get Trump out', admits deliberately targeting Matt Gaetz
- Project Veritas video reveals makeshift migrant detention facility under BRIDGE
- NY Supreme Court hands Project Veritas a major legal victory against New York Times
- Project Veritas: Merrill Lynch whistleblower leaks phone call about Robinhood and Gamestop trade restriction
- Twitter suspends accounts of Project Veritas, James O'Keefe
Trump won every bellwether county except one and every battleground race in the US House.
Comment: This seems obvious by now, but it's nice to have yet more evidence of the steal.
See also:
- Courts repeatedly refused to consider Trump's election claims on the merits
- Supreme Court tosses Trump's last election appeals on technical grounds, not evidence
- Supreme Court still sees no steal, again declines to hear Trump lawsuit against Pennsylvania's dodgy election rule changes
- Trump won two-thirds of election lawsuits where merits considered
- "MAGA terrorism" - CNN's Jake Tapper says Trump supporters who question 2020 election results need to be 'held accountable'
- Trump team's Peter Navarro drops third major report on historic election fraud - confirms Trump won

Kenosha, Wisconsin police outside a building burned down in August 2020; The Intercept accused eight reporters of 'smearing' Black Lives Matter with their riot footage.
"Meet the Riot Squad: Right-Wing Reporters Whose Viral Videos Are Used to Smear BLM," blares the headline of the Intercept article, written by Robert Mackey and published Thursday.
It names eight reporters who "roam from city to city, feeding the conservative media's hunger for images of destruction and violence on the margins of left-wing protests" and calls them part of a "video-to-Fox News pipeline."
A group of the world's leading scientists have written an open letter urging more investigation into the possibility that the coronavirus pandemic was caused by a leak from Wuhan's Institute of Virology, saying that the World Health Organisation has dismissed the notion without proper consideration.
The scientists, who all work for the globe's leading universities and health organisations, urged that the origins of the pandemic must be further investigated and that the lab leak theory remains "viable" despite the WHO's statements to the contrary.
Comment: The theory that the virus escaped a lab is plausible, even likely, but these theories always seem to leave out the Fort Detrick connection. Just because it was reported in Wuhan first doesn't mean that's where the virus originated.
See also:
- It's time for the West to halt Beijing blame game as WHO says Chinese lab leak didn't cause Covid
- Cover-up: WHO expert says coronavirus leak from Chinese lab unlikely, most probably jumped to human via intermediary species
- Bolsonaro says that coronavirus possibly made in lab to wage "biological warfare"
- Speaker of Russian Duma: 'Covid-19 may have leaked from US lab'
- How scientists at Wuhan lab helped Chinese army in secret project to find animal viruses
- Over a year and $85bn later, US spies still don't know 'where, when or how' Covid-19 hit the world - but it 'could've been a lab'
- WHO report finds coronavirus did NOT originate at Wuhan market or state lab - but it may have leaked from a lab elsewhere
- China says US lab Fort Detrick could be COVID-19 origin as claims explode on Chinese twitter

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex speaks to the media at Windsor Castle following the birth of his son on May 06, 2019 in Windsor, United Kingdom.
During a Thursday appearance on Hollywood actor Dax Shepard's 'Armchair Expert' podcast, the prince - who now lives in California after stepping down from his royal duties - said, "I've got so much I want to say about the First Amendment. I still don't understand it, but it is bonkers."
The comment angered many Americans who questioned why Prince Harry was living in the United States if he didn't appreciate and respect its Constitution.

Amazon's hiring spree, which the business secretary called a 'huge vote of confidence in the British economy', will take the US firm's UK workforce to 55,000 by the end of 2021.
The company, which has also announced it intends to hire 75,000 workers in the US and Canada, is opening a parcel centre in Doncaster and four fulfilment warehouses in Gateshead, Swindon, Dartford and Hinckley this year to keep up with shopper demand.
The new jobs include a wide range of roles at its corporate offices, such as engineering, fashion, video production and cloud computing, in London, Manchester, Edinburgh and Cambridge. There will also be opportunities at its growing Amazon Web Services division, which offers internet services to third parties, and at the new centres opening as part of its operations network.
Comment: The vast majority of these jobs will be low skilled and low paid.
Comment: Hardly a cause for celebration:
- Corbyn wishes Amazon "many happy tax returns" on its 25th anniversary
- Amazon drivers launch legal challenge over working conditions: up to 200 parcels a day with no breaks while earning less than minimum wage
- French court orders Amazon to limit warehouse activities over worker protection, US employees protest sales of 'non-essential' sex toys
- Amazon, Google join hundreds of American corporations in signing letter against voter IDs, claiming to support 'voting rights'
Dagny discovered that the FBI had seized the contents of her safe deposit box — about $100,000 in gold and silver coins, some family heirlooms like a diamond necklace inherited from her late grandmother, and an engagement ring she'd promised to pass down to her daughter — almost by accident.
She'd been asked by a friend to recommend a convenient and secure location for keeping some valuables. Dagny searched Yelp to find the phone number for U.S. Private Vaults, a Beverly Hills facility where she'd rented a safe deposit box since 2017. That's when she saw the bad news.
"Permanently closed."
After a brief moment of panic, some phone calls, and several days, Dagny and her husband Howard (pseudonyms used at their request to maintain privacy during ongoing legal proceedings) figured out what happened. On March 22, the FBI had raided U.S. Private Vaults. The federal agents were armed with a warrant allowing them to seize property belonging to the company as part of a criminal investigation — and even though the warrant explicitly exempted the safe deposit boxes in the company's vaults, they were taken too. More than 800 were seized.
Howard tells Reason there was no attempt made by the FBI to contact him, his wife, or their heirs — despite the fact that contact information was taped to the top of their box. Six weeks later, the couple is still waiting for their property to be returned. (Both individuals are supporters of Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this website.)
The FBI and federal prosecutors have "no authority to continue holding the possessions of some 800 bystanders who are not alleged to have been involved in whatever USPV may have done wrong," Benjamin Gluck, a California attorney who is representing several of the people caught up in the FBI's raid of U.S. Private Vaults, tells Reason.
Legal efforts to force the FBI to return the items seized during the March 22 raid have so far been unsuccessful, but at least five lawsuits are pending in federal court.












Comment: There's been hinkyness in the Arizona election process from the get-go. Let's hope the citizens keep pushing.