@libsoftiktok “After a while the Gentiles will gather by the thousands to this place, and Salt Lake City will be classed among the wicked cities of the world.” - Heber C. Kimball
You know what the CRAZIEST thing about the Hantavirus is?
The Epstein Files are still largely unreleased, heavily redacted and no one has been arrested over them.
@RepLuna@realannapaulina It would be nice to see any one of the higher ups get arrested for anything. Insider trading, sexual harassment, pedophilia, murder. Anything. Just one.
@rawsalerts Crazy idea. Let’s abolish the TSA. Let the airlines decide if/how much security they want and let customers choose their airlines based on how much security they feel like they are willing to go through.
RFK Jr: "A compliant child must take between 69 and 92 vaccines to stay in school in some states, and not one of them has been safety tested in a pre-licensing placebo-controlled trial. And that is just malpractice."
Utah’s the only red state naive enough to cling to universal vote by mail, sending ballots to every registered voter since 2019, despite distrust in mail voting surging nationwide. Gov Spencer Cox, who launched this risky system as Lt. Gov., and Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson are forced to tirelessly defend it against rollback attempts, with Henderson crowing about “saving vote by mail” from critics who see it as a blueprint for stolen elections straight out of the Democrats’ MO.
Their stubborn protection of this flawed system, only delaying opt in changes to 2029, ignores how mass mail ballots invite fraud and chaos.
Cox and Henderson’s obsession with defending mail voting plays right into schemes that could undermine elections. Meanwhile, Republican-led states like Georgia, Florida, and Texas have restricted mail voting due to fraud concerns, especially after the 2020 election controversies, yet Utah stands alone.
Project 2025, a conservative policy blueprint, advocates ending no-excuse mail voting, highlighting a growing ideological divide that Henderson and Cox seem to ignore. The 2020 election saw significant mail voting due to COVID-19, but subsequent years have seen a backlash, with states like Arizona and Nevada facing legal challenges over mail ballot collection, influencing Utah's unique and risky stance. Utah's system, while praised for convenience, faces criticism for potential vulnerabilities, as seen in other states where mail ballots were central to election integrity debates, yet Henderson and Cox maintain its security and transparency against all evidence. What’s your take?