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Dabo is not going anywhere

We definitely have things to fix but look across the landscape everyone does. Were what 12-2 in our last 14 games. To the people crying go donate to the NIL fund. No one is dominating like we were in our 5 year run. We had 1 bad loss last week and we bounced back. There’s no other coaches Clemson can get that are better than Dabo. People fail to realize before Dabo we were not a historically dominant team consistently in the spotlight. I hate the struggles at times to were fans it’s normal but to call for Davis job like there is someone else is a little ridiculous or to even say he’s retiring soon he’s getting older does not mean he does not want to coach. We will be fine no team will go undefeated anymore the new normal will be 1-2 losses with top 15 teams.

The Errors The Lies and The Coverup in the Georgia 2020 Election


By Jim Hoft Nov. 24, 2023 8:00 am
The information in this article was provided by Georgia citizen Joseph Rossi, originally appeared on JoeHoft.com, and was republished with permission.
Georgia-Secretary-of-State-Brad-Raffensperger-and-Gabe-Sterling-chief-operating-officer-COO-in-the-office-of-the-Georgia-Secretary-of-State-600x399.jpg
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Gabe Sterling, chief operating officer (COO) in the office of the Georgia Secretary of State.
Material errors were embedded in Georgia’s 2020 Election recount efforts in Fulton County. The Secretary of State and his team initially lied about these errors, and then they worked with the Attorney General’s office and the State Elections Board to exonerate the Secretary of State.

Summary

After the 2020 Election, a Risk Limiting Audit (RLA) was carried out by Georgia’s Secretary of State’s (SOS’s) Office. The results of this exercise confirmed the 2020 Election results.

However, thanks to the efforts of Georgian Joseph Rossi, 36 errors were found in the Fulton County data in the RLA report posted on the SOS website.
Rossi doggedly went after those in authority in the state to review his data. He was turned down and ignored numerous times. But eventually after a series of events, Rossi was able to get these errors in front of members of Governor Kemp’s office.
7 Reasons to Stock Up on Long-Term Storage Premium Beef Right Away
As a result of Rossi’s work, the Georgia State Elections Board (SEB) initiated an investigation into the Fulton County data from the RLA report. This investigation was labeled SEB2021-181. Eventually the SEB identified violations and errors in the recounts of the 2020 Election in Fulton County.
** Our next article in this series will show that the SOS’s office lied about the accuracy of the recounts in Georgia.
** Our third article will show that with their backs to the wall post-Governor Kemp’s validation letter from November 17, 2020 – the SOS’s office, the AG’s office, and the Georgia SEB worked and continue to work to this day to exonerate the SOS of any responsibility for these numerous errors and violations.
And, by the way, there is an open inquiry before the Georgia SEB (SEBBI2023-001), regarding Election Code Violations committed by the SOS.
[Remember that the 2020 results were certified for Biden three days after the election. This was after he overcame President Trump’s 200,000 vote lead on election night to steal the election by less than 12,000 votes in Georgia. – See The Steal – Volume II: The Impossible Occurs for more information.
Note also that the investigations in this series were independent of two court cases that took place in Georgia after the 2020 Election. At least three individuals involved in a recount that occurred in the state after the election identified 148,000 ballots that appeared to have been created by a machine and to be fraudulent. Fulton county and state are still preventing access to these ballots even though the Georgia Supreme Court ruled that the plaintiffs have the right to audit these ballots.
In addition, a separate audit of voting machines was initiated after the 2020 Election which was finally released years later which showed that the systems used in Georgia had security issues and bad actors could hack into them and change the results of an election.]

The Errors

A Risk Limiting Audit (RLA) was prepared of the results from the 2020 Election in Georgia. The report of this audit is still available at the wayback machine here. The report concluded:
Following the November 2020 General Election, the Secretary of State selected the presidential contest for a statewide risk limiting audit (“RLA”). Due to the tight margin of the race and the principles of risk-limiting audits, this audit was a full manual tally of all votes cast. The audit confirmed that the original machine count accurately portrayed the winner of the election.
[These RLAs are garbage “audits” as they only count ballots which may be fraudulent after the election.]
Attached to the RLA was a supplemental report with results from the 2020 Election in each Georgia County. One individual in Georgia by the name of Joseph Rossi decided to review the numbers included in this report specifically related to Fulton County and he found numerous errors in the process. Rossi identified 36 errors that resulted in a net of 4081 false absentee by mail votes counted for Joe Biden in the 2020 Election.
After numerous tries, Rossi was able to reach Gabriel Sterling of the SOS’s office who admitted to errors in the report in an email dated February 26, 2021 when the complainant pointed out 1 of the 36 errors to him. “It appears that Fulton made a data entry error.”
Gabe-Sterling-Email-February-26-2021-800x600.jpg

Rossi continued to press forward with his observations and eventually Georgia Governor Brian Kemp got involved. His team reviewed Rossi’s work and per a letter from Governor Kemp to the Georgia SEB dated November 17, 2021 validated the errors identified by Rossi.
The 36 inconsistencies noted by Mr. Rossi are factual in nature…To determine whether it was appropriate to refer Mr. Rossi’s claims to you, my office tested the veracity of his work by independently repeating the research.”
Furthermore, the Governor’s letter, explicitly calls out that the errored RLA Report was posted publicly on the SOS website.
The data that exists in public view on the Secretary of State’s website of the RLA report does not inspire confidence. It is sloppy, inconsistent…”
Governor Kemp was sure to say that these errors did not dispute the outcome of the 2020 Election.
SEB Letter 11.17.21.01 by Joe Ho on Scribd

Along with the governor’s report was a review of the inconsistencies in the RLA performed across the state.
Review of Inconsistencies in the Data Supporting the Risk Limiting Audit Report by Joe Ho on Scribd

On December 16, 2021, SOS Investigator Vincent Zagorin confirmed that the errors existed within the RLA Report posted on the SOS website. At the 00:31:39 mark of this meeting with the complainants, Zagorin referred to the length of time it took the complainant to find the errors and then adds that he found the errors quickly. “I can see it took you 15 minutes. It took me four.”
See the transcript of this meeting below:
Im Going to Turn in Warner Robins (From Aliceapp.ai) by Joe Ho on Scribd

By March of 2022, Fulton County Attorney Ringer admitted to errors during the March 16, 2022 hearing on investigation SEB2021-181. Ringer stated when referring to the errored RLA Report, “Fulton County did not have the time to go back and fix the errors…”
After the March SEB hearing – the Board voted 3:1, in agreement that the RLA Report had errors, and to send the case to the Attorney General’s office for further investigation.
The attorney for SOS Raffensperger was Ryan Germany. He was also on the phone call with Raffensperger and President Trump after the 2020 Election. In an email dated July 9, 2022, Germany acknowledged to Rossi that errors existed in the RLA report posted on the SOS website.
…our investigators looked at the alleged allegations, and found that Fulton did make mistakes in the audit counting/reporting.”
Ryan-Germany-email-800x600.jpg

We also know that errors existed in Fulton County because the Attorney General’s Consent order for Fulton County confirmed errors exist in the RLA Report and that Fulton violated a SEB audit rule.
By failing to enter all of the audit batch sheet data accurately, Respondent violated SEB Rule 183-1-15-.04 regarding audits.”
Signed_Consent Order SEB 2021-181 and 2022-025 (Fulton County) With Exhibit A_Redacted by Joe Ho on Scribd

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) performed an internal review of the errors found in the RLA Report for Fulton posted on the SOS website and confirmed the existence of errors.
A rough estimate by the AJC indicates the errors identified by investigators amounted to about 3,000 too many absentee votes counted for Biden during the audit…”
Note that the AJC review of the errors was not as extensive as the reviews completed by the complainants and the Governor’s team, hence the “rough estimate,” reported by the AJC.
Also, regarding Machine Count2 for Fulton County, a complaint was filed July 8, 2022. The complaint specifically called out 3125 duplicate ballot counts and 17,852 votes counted that do not have a corresponding ballot image. This complaint resulted in investigation SEB2023-25. This investigation is complete and the results of this investigation will be presented to the SEB on December 19, 2023. This complaint has been categorized by the Board as “violations found.”
SEB202325violationsfoundcategory – Copy by Joe Ho on Scribd

SOS Raffensperger and his gang claimed there were no issues in the 2020 Election. This was not true. Next, we will show how the SOS’s office lied and then work with others to cover this all up.
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**** Coach Prime

Deion Sanders is living up to the hype at Colorado — 'We have earned where we are'

By: Dan Wetzel - Yahoo! Sports

Deion Sanders was running through some Colorado football stats the other day — like leading the Big 12 in sacks or being one of just five teams nationally with four different receivers recording a 100-yard game.

“Three-plus turnovers in three straight road games for the first time since Moby Dick was a minnow,” Sanders joked.

“Road wins back-to-back for the first time since I had a curl,” he said, laughing.

Colorado is 5-2 and will host Cincinnati on Saturday (10:15 p.m. ET) in a game with significant stakes in the Big 12 championship race and a possible automatic bid to the College Football Playoff. It will take place (again) in a sold-out Folsom Field and broadcast (again) on national television (ESPN).

“We have earned where we are,” Sanders said. “We actually feel like we're better than what we are. Because we are just starting to see the fruit of the work and the understanding of the expectation that we have for ourselves. Forget what others have for us, but what we have for ourselves.”

Sanders arrived in Boulder to much fanfare and much criticism. He made no apologies about essentially running off players he didn’t believe in and bringing a new roster (“my Louis’”) through the transfer portal.

There was a lot of bold talk and brash goals. The Buffaloes were a television hit right away, but there was plenty of backlash at a program some thought hadn’t proven a thing. They started fast last year, but finished 4-8.

Well, here we are, and with each successive strong performance, Coach Prime’s way is looking like a winning way. There are five games left in the 2024 season, so in terms of final record, anything can happen.

Yet any judgment of Sanders’ Colorado program has to be done with the backdrop of what he inherited — the worst major program in the country.

The 2022 Buffs went 1-11 and struggled to draw much of a crowd or any national attention. It wasn’t just the program’s 16th losing season in 17 years, it was non-competitive. The Buffs lost those 11 games by an average of 32.4 points. They gave up 50 more touchdowns than they scored.

Sanders would become their ninth head coach — full-time or interim — since 2010.

Now they boast both a thrilling, two-way Heisman Trophy candidate (Travis Hunter) and a likely first-round pick at quarterback (Shedeur Sanders) and are actually being asked if they wish they didn’t have to be on national TV so much because they’d get an earlier kickoff slot.

“Once upon a time [we] were begging to be on television,” Coach Prime said. “We are not going to turn our noses up for being on national television.”

Anything Deion comes with preset opinions — often passionate — on either side. That’s always how he has been. He does things differently.

Yet it’s worth noting that Colorado would have been thrilled with any coaching hire who in a season and a half could turn around a mess of a loser into what it has become. Revenue is up. Merchandise sales are up. Season ticket sales are up. Applications are up.

It’s the work of Sanders, who went unapologetically into the portal, believing he could build a team that way despite the doubters.

Now Colorado isn’t just good, it appears to be getting better. Consider that CU isn’t just leading the Big 12 in sacks, but that 16 of them came the past three weeks as the defensive line has gelled in a way many thought was impossible with short-term rentals.

“We kind of know what we are doing,” said Sanders, who previously coached a prep school in Texas and FCS Jackson State. “I know it didn’t seem like we did that early on. We’ve been doing this for a while. Building teams since I was at the youth level, went and made something out of nothing in the ’hood in Dallas.

“We kind of know how to work the landscape a little bit,” he continued. “And now it’s coming to pass and we are excited about it.”

Unlike other coaches, Sanders does not prioritize high school recruiting — CU has just eight commits from the Class of 2025. He’d rather load up on the transfer portal at season's end and be selective with young players. He expects a big haul this December because he is no longer selling a concept of success in Boulder.

“Winning does help with recruiting,” he said. “The overall thought process of people joining something that’s successful. People don’t want to join something that is failing. They want to join something that is successful.”

As for bringing in dozens of high school recruits, he doesn’t see the point. He only wants guys who have a chance to hit the field right away.

"Why would you pull 30 kids out of high school when 30 kids are not going to play?” Sanders said. “I know last year, we may have played arguably the most freshmen in the [conference].”

All of this got Sanders a lot of attention — some good, some bad. So far though, no one can argue it hasn’t worked at a place where nothing had worked for most of the last two decades.

Can he keep it up when Shedeur and Hunter go to the NFL? No one knows, but replacing that kind of talent is what all good programs have to deal with. Will he stay at CU forever? No one knows, but any coach who turns a 1-11 team into a winner this quickly would have options to leave too.

Right now, Coach Prime is all about CU. He spent time this week shaking hands with some of the campus grounds crew out of appreciation for their work.

“This campus is unbelievable, a few of us walk around it every day and I was just talking about how beautiful it is,” he said. “These grounds are impeccable.”

A season and a half into this experiment, the grass is pretty green right now in Boulder.
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