The Democrats Will Steal the Election if We Let Them
The longstanding Democrat tactic of stealing elections threatens a reappearance on November 2. It would be foolish to pretend otherwise and rely on the voters’ voice to be heard merely because the public has turned on the Democrats.
A number of comments on my recent pieces dealing with electoral issues (particularly “The American Left Slides Into Psychosis”) have mentioned the importance of protecting the vote to assure that standard corrupt Democratic tactics are not allowed to lessen the weight of the impending November avalanche. This is certainly a valid point in this age, when Stuart Smalley has found his way from the tube to the Senate and the Black Panthers have been resurrected from their status as footnote to the ’60s to serve as enforcers for humane, progressive liberalism. It will serve us well to take a close look at the Democrat record in this matter, consider what they may be up to regarding this election, and, the most serious question of all, ask why the GOP lets them get away with it.
Democrats and election-stealing by any means necessary go back a long way.
In the heyday of Tammany Hall in the mid- to late 19th century (the name allegedly was derived from that of an early New York-area Leni Lenape chief — they were practicing PC even then), entire armies of thugs were recruited from Manhattan’s gangs to take control of polling places, oust any opposition, and assure that only Row A votes were counted. One description I read years ago stated that some of these goons filed their teeth to points, while others had metal finger caps fitted with sharp nails. This is a step beyond Philly’s Panthers, I’m sure all will agree.
In San Francisco during the 1850s, elections were controlled by the Locofocos, a Tammany offshoot that had headed west (to get away from all those teeth, I imagine). In alliance with a group of Southern Democrats called the Chivs, the Locofocos (the name referred to locofoco or “lucifer” matches, which the members used to light their inaugural meeting after Tammany regulars shut off the gas) ruled central California until borax king William T. Coleman reorganized the San Francisco Vigilantes in 1856 and ran them off.
Read the whole story at American Thinker
If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.

Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a comment