Facebook, which was criticized as the “speech police” for blocking Democratic presidential candidates Biden and his son in a scandal before the U.S. election, is now being sued by the company’s chief executive Mark Zuckerberg for allegedly investing huge sums of money in key swing states and even paying “fees” to polling judges to influence the outcome of the election.
According to a lawsuit filed in Pennsylvania District Court on October 19, Zuckerberg provided $10 million to the Center for Technology and Civic Life (CTCL), a nongovernmental organization that allegedly has close ties to former President Barack Obama, explicitly requesting that no fewer than 800 new polling places be opened in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania’s largest city, and that the funds also include “compensation” for judges to enable them to “oversee the vote count and handle disputes over the results.
The plaintiffs in the case, including the “Pennsylvania Voters Alliance” (Pennsylvania Voters Alliance), several public servants and candidates, etc., representing the plaintiffs’ legal counsel, King (Tom King) said, municipal leaders to cede the role of local authorities to CTCL, abandoned the power of the people of Pennsylvania, as if the billionaire to bring influence into the voting booths.
Canadian political commentator Mark Steyn (Mark Steyn) lamented that the swing state’s elections have become a Facebook subsidiary “Votebook” (Votebook).
The Washington Times reporter Rowan Scarborough was quoted as saying that three days after the polls closed on November 3, there were still people voting in Pennsylvania, which would definitely be considered election fraud by UN election observers.
Former Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline supports Pennsylvania’s lawsuit. He said, “We’re fighting Zuckerberg across the country” who used CTCL to funnel hundreds of millions of dollars to left-wing strongholds in several swing states to influence election results. It’s a j scheme designed by partisan activists under the guise of supporting the epidemic.
This “privatization” of elections undermines the credibility of elections, Klein stressed, and there is a huge influx of private money into government election offices to influence and change elections, including Philadelphia.
In September, Zuckerberg pledged to donate $250 million to CTCL to coerce local governments to fund personnel, training, and equipment needed for the November elections, and in October, Zuckerberg announced that he and his wife, Priscilla Chan, had reunited. In October, Zuckerberg announced that he and his wife, Priscilla Chan, had donated another $100 million, saying it was to strengthen voting infrastructure; Zuckerberg denied the donations were politically motivated.
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