I realize a lot of good people are skeptical about claims that the Ohio vote was so seriously flawed that it cannot be accepted as legitimate.
I ask you to go to Columbus, Ohio, on Election Day and stand in line at polling stations in Black neighborhoods and see for yourself what actually happened. When you do, you will understand.
Although thousands of Black voters in Ohio including the elderly, the disabled, and people with tired young children in tow had to stand outdoors for hours in the cold, wind, and rain of November 2nd,
you can observe the disgraceful spectacle of their second-class status from the warmth and comfort of your own homes and offices, as you sit in front of your computer screens.
Surely we can all do that much for them. After all, it is these people whose children are on the front lines of Iraq.
Watch this video (on the home page of the VoteCobb.org site). It shows raw documentary footage, taken in Columbus on November 2. Until you bear witness to what these people are going through, I respectfully ask that you reserve judgement about the Ohio election.
Please give these people some respect listen to their testimony and watch with your own eyes what they endured. If you voted, and if you did not have to wait outside in the rain for four hours to vote, and if you were not reduced to voting on a provisional ballot that was later rejected, then please see this video before you express an opinion about the Ohio election.
After you have taken the time to become better informed about what happened in Ohio on November 2, my challenge to you is this:
How can we sit quietly on January 6th, and allow this apartheid voting system to go unchallenged?