FINAL WARNING: Domestic Tampering
The President and Vice-President are the only public officials in the
country who are not elected through a direct vote of the people. Each
party, in every state, has a slate of electoral candidates, based on the
number of representatives it has in Congress. They are known as the
Electoral College. Presently, there are 100 Senators and 435
Representatives in the United States, for a total of 538 (includes 3
votes from the District of Columbia) electoral votes.
The electors of the Party receiving the highest vote are elected and
meet on the first Monday, after the second Wednesday in December, to
vote for their party’s nominees. Even though the members of the
Electoral College are pledged to vote for the presidential candidate of
their Party, they are not constitutionally bound to do so, and can
change their mind at any time. Technically, however, a candidate wins
all of the state’s electoral votes, if he wins a majority of the popular
votes. If a presidential candidate has the largest popular vote, but
doesn’t obtain the necessary electoral votes, he doesn’t win the
Presidency. This happened in 1824, 1876, 1888, and 2000. If no
candidate has a majority, then the House of Representatives chooses a
President from the three highest candidates, with all the
Representatives from each state combining to cast one vote for each
state. If a Vice-Presidential candidate receives no clear majority, then
the Senate chooses from the top two, with each Senator casting an
individual vote.
Therefore, the candidate’s objective is not to win a majority of the
popular vote, but a majority of the electoral votes, which is 270. Thus,
if a candidate could be guaranteed just eleven states (leaving 267
remaining electoral votes in 39 states, and the District of Columbia), he
could be guaranteed the Presidency: California (55), Texas (34), New
York (31), Florida (27), Pennsylvania (21), Illinois (21), Ohio (20),
Michigan (17), New Jersey (15), Georgia (15), and North Carolina (15).
Combined, these states have 271 electoral votes.
That is why you see a concentration of effort in these states at election
time. With the Illuminati controlling the media in these large population
centers, it is not a difficult task to alter public opinion and sway votes
to the candidate they choose. With these states in line, the rest of the
country generally follows. The bottom line is, that the people’s right to
choose a President has practically been taken away, and without the