Will you cast your vote this fall on a faulty electronic machine that's partly owned by the Romney Family?
Will that machine decide
whether Romney will then inherit the White House?
Through a closely held equity fund called Solamere, Mitt Romney and
his wife, son and brother are major investors in an investment firm
called H.I.G. Capital. H.I.G. in turn holds a majority share and three
out of five board members in Hart Intercivic, a company that owns the
notoriously faulty electronic voting machines that will count the
ballots in swing state Ohio November 7.
Hart machines will also be used
elsewhere in the United States.
In other words, a candidate for the presidency of the United States,
and his brother, wife and son, have a straight-line financial interest
in the voting machines that could decide this fall's election.
These
machines cannot be monitored by the public. But they will help decide
who "owns" the White House.
They are especially crucial in Ohio, without which no Republican
candidate has ever won the White House.
In 2004, in the dead of election
night, an electronic swing of more than 300,000 votes switched Ohio
from the John Kerry column to George W. Bush, giving him a second term.
A
virtual statistical impossibility, the 6-plus% shift occurred between
12:20 and 2am election night as votes were being tallied by a
GOP-controlled information technology firm on servers in a basement in
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
In defiance of a federal injunction, 56 of
Ohio's 88 counties destroyed all election records, making a recount
impossible.
Ohio's governor and secretary of state in 2004 were both
Republicans, as are the governors and secretaries of state in nine key swing states this year.
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