Sunday, August 14, 2022

New York's Voter Matrix: An Alternate Structure Within Voter Rolls

The Voter Matrix

  • There is a pattern embedded in the identification numbers assigned to voters in New York's voter rolls that creates an alternate structure within the voter rolls
  • The effect of this is that it makes nefarious manipulation of records possible
  • It presents the possibility that no amount of "cleaning the rolls" or "purging records" can fix the problem because the Matrix can regenerate phantom voters all day long

Two other peculiarities:

  • About 75% of all alphanumeric CID numbers were registered on New Year’s Day
  • In New York County, over 121,000 of 143,000 cID numbers have a January 1st registration date
  • NYCA has identified five distinct matrices in New York's 62 counties. One, dubbed "The Spiral," is used in 52 counties.
  • Each Matrix has built-in variations that interfere with any attempt to easily understand or visualize what it is doing.

Similar to cryptography, where a message is disguised by changing its content based on a set of rules

  • Steganography goes a step further, by hiding the fact that there is a message
  • The Spartan king Demaratus once scraped the wax off of a writing tablet, wrote a message to his city on the wood underneath, then replaced the wax and sent it past guards outside a city.
  • Voter rolls are public. They cannot be hidden without violating public access laws.

NYCA tried to identify a legitimate purpose for the Matrix

  • Their top contenders were all related to database optimization
  • By restructuring voter identification numbers into a well-defined matrix structure, it becomes possible to place, track, and interact with phantom registrations
  • The Matrix found within New York's voter rolls closes the loop started with ballot trafficking
  • For trafficked ballots to have any effect, they must be counted, and to prevent an overcount, the vote count must match the voter count

https://www.redvoicemedia.com/2022/08/new-yorks-voter-matrix-an-alternate-structure-within-voter-rolls/ 

No comments: