Recently, we broke the story that a nationwide cellular network for "Public safety" called FirstNet was being used to connect election systems throughout the country.
CISA PROMOTES STATEWIDE FIRSTNET ELECTION CONNECTIONS. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency supposedly exists to protect critical infrastructure from cyber threats.
Congress recently released a report that CISA has "Metastasized into the nerve center of the federal government's domestic surveillance and censorship operations on social media." A top priority for CISA has been illegally censoring Americans' doubts about the integrity of the 2020 election while it pushed the propaganda that the 2020 election was the "Most secure in American history."
To date, CISA has done nothing to investigate the thousands of reports of fraud and irregularities that are still being made about the 2020 and subsequent elections.
CISA has been busy expanding election jurisdictions' uptake of FirstNet services to connect their precinct election machines.
The vulnerability created by connecting an entire state's election system to a single centrally accessible, hackable network is enormous.
PROOF OF A MANIPUATED ELECTION IN MERCER COUNTY, NEW JERSEY. But is there any evidence that New Jersey's elections have been manipulated? Yes, there is.
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECRETARIES OF STATE PROMOTES FIRSTNET FOR ELECTIONS AND NOMINATED THE NEW JERSEY'S MODEL FOR AWARD. Secretaries of State have largely shrugged off the public's growing concern over the vulnerability of the election system.
Oddly enough, NASS promoted increasing election system vulnerability by promoting the use of FirstNet in elections during their 2022 Winter Conference.
CTCL FUNDS USED FOR FIRSTNET CONNECTION IN KENOSHA COUNTY, WISCONSIN. Kenosha County was in the news a few months after the 2020 election when it was revealed that a Democrat operative named Michael Spitzer-Rubenstein had "Significant influence over the administration of the presidential election" and "Played point man for the coordinated effort among the"Wisconsin 5" cities: Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, Kenosha, and Racine - which received a combined $6.3 million in Zuckerberg money.
You must wonder why the DHS has supported election officials moving in the direction of connecting their election systems to FirstNet if they know it's inherently vulnerable and a risk to national security.
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