Biden approves the sale of citizens’ data to 189 countries

Today’s Executive Order only applies to these six countries: China, Cuba, Iran, N. Korea, Russia, and Venezuela. What about the other 189 countries in the world? Companies based in those can buy and sell personally identifiable information (PII) of 339.1 million Americans without paying the people whose identities have been stolen.

LA DA has reopened the Eugene Yu criminal embezzlement case

The hearing starts in one hour. Konnech CEO Eugene Yu was charged with embezzling $2.7 million from LA taxpayers on Oct. 13, 2022. This is the fourth hearing on the Yu crimes this month. The others were on Feb. 14th, 9th, and 1st. Konnech is based in China and Malaysia. It makes PollChief election software. It sends, receives, and stores customer election data in Beijing, Wuhan, and Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Mayer named DOJ's Election Czar

Jonathan, 37, oversees the NSA’s transfer of all election data overseas to flip votes to re-elect the President and Congress on Nov. 5th. It was done in the 2022 election when the majority in the Senate was reversed.

Trump’s Scorecard with America

Trump prevented a war with Russia. However, he never opposed scanners counting handwritten ballots. They flip votes using virtual machine voting systems (VMs) that are untraceable. They plug into foreign databases. Trump never finished the “Wall” on the Mexican border. However, Trump reduced the average price of gasoline to $1.82 a gallon by removing federal regulations designed to reduce domestic oil production.

Germany has GA’s voting machine passcodes

Ryan Germany controls passwords to Georgia’s Dominion Voting Systems instead of local county election officials. Ryan’s authority supersedes the President and Congress. He signed a treaty giving the UN’s Carter Center access to Georgia’s voting data on Oct. 13th, 2022.

Biden invents new secret spy court

The Secret Court has a surveillance net over the U.S. and Europe. The data can then be sold to the highest bidder, like BlackRock. Congress passed it under International Law without needing Senate approval for the judge’s appointments.