Explain why my wife had her ballot accepted and counted even though the signatures did not match? She intentionally signed her name differently, so when we signed it correctly the next election it should be rejected, and it wasn't which is horrible because it absolutely should have been.
I did the same...well technically my wife did and we live in Alameda County. She voted in 2020 and signed her name (not her normal signature), and she voted again in 2024 and signed it using her normal signature and it counted because we checked the website after the election. We wanted it to be flagged actually, which she would have needed to prove it was her... which was fine, but I wanted to test the system. It was her voting, so nothing fraudulent. We also got mail in ballots for the previous tenant (2 of them). If the voter rolls were correct that should not have happened.
I live in Alameda County. My wife NEVER voted before and she was able to register and vote the same day in 2020 for the Federal Election. They never one time asked for her ID and I was right there. I already registered years before in 2016. I told her to sign her name and not sign it as she usually does. She than voted in 2024 signing her name as normal KNOWING it would not match. We did this on purpose hoping they would contest the signature. They never contested the signature and her vote def counted because we checked and verified with https://t.co/sIjlr4ZXqf
@RobGarfield7@TheDailyDigest@heartland_grump@nicksortor@USAttyEssayli correct. I live in California with just me and my wife.. I receive the ballots for the last 2 occupants of my home every election cycle. Could I vote and mail those back in? I guess so... which I never will, but the fact I am still receiving those is an issue.
@DingalingSlinga@JackWRing1@Sofia50020Sofia@grok The first hint is 10 seconds. Videos made by Grok are typically .10 If Grok made this, and can't even tell the platform....we are cooked. I thought it was Ai as well.