Last Tuesday, White Hats intercepted and later destroyed a shipment of “made in China” optical scanner voting machines that had allegedly been pre-programmed to overcount votes for Democrat candidates by a ratio of 1.4:1 and discard fractional remainders.
If the machines worked as advertised, Biden, or whoever replaces him, would have received one fraudulent vote for every three legitimate votes, a source in General Eric M. Smith’s office told Real Raw News.
The seizure took place on July 2 when U.S. Marines stopped an 18-wheeler on Interstate 69, halfway between Fort Wayne, Indiana, and the truck’s destination, Lansing, Michigan, according to an after-action report reviewed by Real Raw News.
The report said the “solid black” tractor-trailer was registered to a family-owned transportation company headquartered in Houston, Texas, but sources had redacted the company’s name, citing pending investigations.
Per the report, General Smith, on June 27, received from an unimpeachable source an electronic voting machine produced by a phantom Chinese electronics manufacturer calling itself, loosely translated to English, “Most Reliable Consistent Engineering.”
White Hats could not verify the company’s existence, nor could Real Raw News find that or a similar name on a Chinese-language search website for company registration details.
Since official Chinese company names are always in Chinese, business registrations are made only using Chinese characters, meaning that even if a China company registration search website were made available with an English-language interface, users would most likely still require knowledge of the Chinese language to carry out successful searches on the database.
And Chinese doesn’t translate to English with 100% accuracy.
Aside from the dubious branding, the voting machine’s exterior was visually identical to Dominion machines, which generated controversy and lawsuits in the aftermath of the stolen 2020 presidential election.
Even its internals were remarkably like Dominion’s, except for the chipset produced by Melexis-Ukraine, a supplier of micro-electronic semiconductor solutions.
General Smith thought it improbable that the ballot scanner, if made in China, would contain a relatively obscure foreign manufacturer’s hardware, not its own proprietary chips or ones sourced from China’s rapidly expanding technology sector.
He wanted proof the device functioned per his source’s claims.