Deliberate use of COVID 19 bioterror on the part of the White House to force America into four more years of Trump. Starting with an e mail to USPS

I submit that the White House has given up on a win by popularity, but is resulting to rule by corruption and by bioterror as by having its fake "win" fortified as either a choice between submission to Trump and death by COVID 19. The following did NOT engage in terms of a "win" by biohazard. I.e. the TRUMP White House wishes to make the population submit by terrorizing the US voters into giving up, by weaponizing the CONAVIRUS to scare those hating Trump into not voting in person. OR DYING of COVID 19. What we need to do is to face the truth, and the way to do it, so as to realize the truth, is to realize what we need. We need to get it that TRUMP is using bioterror deliberately and to make this our argument against him.

The better arguements project starts first by realizing that the WHITE HOUSE has weaponized the CONAVIRUS as a way to rule by bioterror, and to face it.

Did the following former US Presidents do the same ? Did they make US Voters choose between their lives, and voting against them? NO.

Here we go into the attempt to rule by bioterror

https://www.thenewcivilrightsmovement.com/2020/08/usps-employees-got-an-email-today-telling-them-not-to-talk-to-the-press-under-any-circumstances/

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CRIMINAL ACTS

USPS Employees Got an Email Today Telling Them Not to Talk to the Press Under Any Circumstances

Published on August 20, 2020 at 05:18 PM ET

By Sarah K. Burris – Raw Story


While the U.S. Postal Service is under attack, everyone from letter carriers to union chairs and those working behind the doors in processing facilities has sounded the alarm about what they’re seeing from the top as part of the intentional mail slow down.

VICE News reported Thursday that USPS staff were sent a letter telling them that they can’t talk to the press under any circumstances.


The memo, dated Aug. 14, explains what staff should do if contacted, but it also says that if customers are asking questions, then employees should be “suspicious.”


Understandably, some employees have taken issue with the moves by the Trump administration to intentionally obstruct the passage of the mail, and quickly handed over to the media the memo saying not to talk to the press.

“The Postal Service continuously strives to project a positive image, protect its brand, and present a unified message to the customers and communities it serves,” the memo begins. “It is imperative that one person speaks on behalf of the Postal Service to deliver an appropriate, accurate, and consistent message to the media.”


“Avoid the temptation to ‘answer a few questions,’” it continues. “Keep in mind that, while most media representatives will identify themselves up front (sic), sometimes they do not. If you are dealing with a customer, especially one who asks a series of questions, it is perfectly appropriate to ask, ‘Are you a member of the media?’ Asking this specific question will help ensure your interaction is not used as the basis for any kind of ‘official’ Postal Service statement or position.”

The Trump administration has long been at war with the media and frequently twists the truth and spreads lies about them to his supporters.

It was reported earlier Thursday that the USPS processing staff was sent an email saying that regardless of what people read in the media, they are not to restart the sorting machines that Postmaster General Louis DeJoy took offline.

end of quote

And here is the great one, as far as terrorism

https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/20/politics/usps-reconnect-sorting-machines/index.html

quote

USPS email tells managers not to reconnect sorting machines

By Kristen Holmes and Paul P. Murphy, CNN

Updated 11:08 PM ET, Thu August 20, 2020


(CNN)While Postmaster General Louis DeJoy may be suspending changes to postal service operations, it doesn't necessarily mean machines that had been removed will be put back in use, according to an email obtained by CNN.

The email, sent hours after DeJoy's public suspension of changes on Tuesday, instructs postal workers not to reconnect any mail sorting machines that have previously been disconnected.

"Please message out to your respective Maintenance Managers tonight," wrote Kevin Couch, a director of maintenance operations. "They are not to reconnect/reinstall machines that have been previously disconnected without approval from HQ Maintenance, no matter what direction they are getting from their plant manager."

DeJoy announced Tuesday he would pause many of the new policies he put in place, including the removal of high-volume mail sorting machines, after postal workers, the public and some lawmakers, sounded alarms the changes were causing massive delivery delays, potentially putting the November election in peril.

It's unclear if there's been additional guidance since Couch sent the email, which appeared to have been sent to managers in the western region.


With slower mail and election concerns, Trump's postmaster general is in the hot seat

The USPS has not been attempting to reassemble or replace the mail sorting machines or letter collection recently removed in at least nine states, according to the union officials CNN spoke to in those states.

CNN spoke with union officials across the US on the local, regional and national level, and was only able to identify two facilities -- Dallas and Tacoma, Washington -- that had attempted to reassemble and reintroduce mail sorting machines back into USPS's daily operations.

The Postmaster General and USPS have been under intense scrutiny in recent weeks over changes put in motion ahead of the 2020 election. Many Americans have since grown concerned over the USPS' ability to handle the expected influx of ballots as more voters choose to vote by mail because of the Covid-19 global pandemic.

Dallas facility tried to restore removed mail sorting machines

Yared Wonde, the president of the American Postal Workers Union's Dallas Area Local, told CNN that management at the Dallas processing and distribution center, which serves nearly all of Dallas, unsuccessfully tried to put back four delivery bar code sorter machines.

Problems at the post office could devastate these small businesses

DBCS machines make up the bulk of the mail sorting operation across USPS, handling envelopes which includes ballots heading to voters.

The machines, which Wonde says were removed in July, cannot be put back into service because they are missing pieces. Wonde said it was unclear what moved management at the Dallas facility to attempt to reassemble the DBCS machines.

End of quote

It gets worse, TRUMP is intending to get his assets in line to terrorize those who DO show up in person. TO VOTE, even if the choice between COVID 19 death and voting is made in favor of voting

https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/20/politics/trump-election-day-sheriffs/index.html

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Trump pledges to send 'sheriffs' and 'law enforcement' to polling places on Election Day, but it's not clear he can

By Fredreka Schouten

Updated 11:48 PM ET, Thu August 20, 2020


(CNN)President Donald Trump on Thursday said he would send law enforcement officials to polling locations to guard against voter fraud in November's election, although it's not clear he has the authority to do so.

"We're going to have sheriffs, and we're going to have law enforcement, and we're going to have, hopefully, US attorneys, and we're going to have everybody and attorney generals (sic)," Trump said during an interview on Fox News with Sean Hannity.

Trump's comments come as his campaign works to recruit tens of thousands of volunteers for what Republican officials have said could be their largest poll-watching operation. Even before Trump's comments, his party's plans to monitor the polls have sparked charges from Democrats and voting-rights groups that Republicans are gearing up to suppress voting in key states.

The President has repeatedly claimed, without evidence, that voter fraud will undermine November's election results.



Trump has no authority to deploy local law enforcement officials to monitor elections, although his campaign could hire off-duty police to work the polls, said Rick Hasen, an election law expert at the University of California at Irvine.

If Trump did so, it likely would trigger legal action from Democrats, who would claim the move amounted to a voter-suppression tactic. And it would have echoes of a case that resulted in a federal court decree that for decades sharply restricted the Republican National Committee's "ballot security" work without prior judicial approval.

The 1982 decree arose from a Democratic National Committee lawsuit that accused the RNC of trying to suppress votes in New Jersey by, among other things, posting armed, off-duty police officers at the polls in Black and Latino neighborhoods. The decree expired in 2018, and this election marks the first presidential contest since 1980 that the GOP presidential nominee and the RNC will work together on poll-watching.

Marc Elias, an election lawyer at the forefront of Democrat lawsuits on voting, hinted at legal action if Trump proceeds.

"Not without a legal fight he won't!" Elias tweeted in response to Trump's comments.

Poll-watching is a common practice, and both parties use it. Observers monitor how ballots are cast, the testing of equipment and counting procedures -- looking for irregularities. They also can challenge the eligibility of individual voters.

Earlier this year, a top Trump aide, Justin Clark, said the campaign was working to recruit 50,000 poll-watchers.

end of quote


The objective is to weaponize the CONAVIRUS into a lethal landmine to deliberately kill pro Biden voters via CONAVIRUS, and to rule by corruption and bioterror.

SEE THIS

https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/20/politics/trump-assault-on-democracy-intl/index.html

QUOTE

Many leaders used Covid as cover to dent democracy. Trump may be the first to openly admit it

Analysis by Luke McGee, CNN

Updated 7:34 AM ET, Thu August 20, 2020



London (CNN)In the months since Covid-19 swept the globe, leaders the world over have been accused of exploiting the pandemic for political gain while laying waste to democratic norms. Few, if any, have gone as far as to reveal those plans publicly.

A notable exception is President Donald Trump, who has openly admitted that he is trying to block much-needed funding for the US Postal Service because he wants to limit the number of Americans who can vote safely by mail in November's election.

The reason? Trump says postal ballots will hurt his campaign, and has repeatedly made the unfounded claim that widespread mail-in voting will result in the "most fraudulent election in history."


The USPS is more than a service. It's a symbol of a functioning society

By refusing to take steps to allow as many Americans as possible to participate in the election -- and by openly casting doubt over the legitimacy of the poll -- Trump is embracing tactics used by authoritarian leaders in countries with compromised democratic institutions, experts said.



"On one hand, he is claiming that postal voting could delegitimize the election while openly admitting that he opposes funding the post office to suppress the vote," said Nic Cheeseman, professor of democracy at the University of Birmingham. "It's a move from the populist playbook: blame someone else for the thing you yourself are doing."

Trump's moves also come at a time when some countries are expanding the availability of mail-in ballots and other early voting initiatives in an effort to allow people to take part in elections without risking their health at polling stations.

South Korea allowed coronavirus patients to vote by mail in April, and more than a quarter of the country's 44 million voters cast their ballots before election day -- a record figure. And in June, Poland held its first election in which wide-scale postal voting was allowed.

Donald Trump has repeatedly made the unfounded claim that mail-in voting will result in the "most fraudulent election in history."

As Cheeseman points out, in the case of the US election, Trump is "picking the postal service as an enemy while installing an ally to run it, meaning Trump himself is the person in the best position to manipulate it."

Of course, postal votes are inherently more vulnerable than in-person voting. "The two main vulnerabilities are how do you know people are not filling in ballots under duress, and how do you know that the vote is getting to the place it needs to be counted," said Cheeseman. But he added that mail ballots "are secure if the institutions are secure and impartial," and that there was "very little evidence of the postal vote being manipulated in the past."

Postal ballots and other alternatives to in-person voting have previously been deployed successfully in other countries too, from Australia to the United Kingdom.

Katya Andrusz from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, which will be monitoring the US election, points to Switzerland, where it is estimated that this method is used by 90% of voters.

Her organization's report on the 2019 Swiss election explains that this was possible because voters "must send their voter identification card, using a double envelope system, along with the ballot to prevent the possibility of voting additionally at a polling station."

Trump has also linked his unfounded claims about mail-voting fraud to his explosive suggestion last month that the US election be delayed until the pandemic had subsided. Only Congress can delay a presidential election, but his comments still sparked nearly universal condemnation.


Elections have been postponed in dozens of countries since the pandemic started. In some of those nations, critics believe the pandemic is being exploited by politicians wishing to avoid the electorate.

Hong Kong chief executive Carrie Lam last month announced that the city's elections were to be delayed for a year because of a second spike in the virus. But opponents claim she used colonial-era emergency laws to delay the vote in order to avoid an embarrassing political defeat, following Beijing's imposition of new security laws on the semi-autonomous city.

In Bolivia, an interim government has repeatedly delayed presidential elections, sparking protests and accusations from the opposition that it is seeking to remain in power indefinitely.

There are examples of nations where elections have been delayed to less controversy -- most recently in New Zealand. However, in those cases there has been broad agreement from all parties that this was the correct course of action.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced this week that New Zealand's election will be delayed because of the pandemic.

Clearly, that is not the case in the US, where Trump is not only discrediting the democratic process but meddling in it. Experts said his moves could have ramifications beyond America's borders.

The long-term risk, Cheeseman said, is that Trump "undermines confidence in the electoral process, risking political violence and seeking alternatives to democracy. And if that happens in America, it could easily have a ripple effect around the world."

And that could have even bigger consequences than copycat behavior from other leaders. "There is a connection between domestic policy in the US and the credibility of US foreign policy," said Andreas Bummel, executive director of Democracy Without Borders. "Seeing Trump claim that the election might be rigged while seemingly trying to rig it himself through the postal service makes it harder for America to call for democracy in other countries."

And if he continues to sow mistrust in American democracy at home, that could taint the democratic model elsewhere.

"Public trust is vital to the functioning of any democratic election process, and for that reason it's an area we always pay close attention to in our election observation," said Andrusz. "A significant level of mistrust in any part of the system can undermine public confidence in the whole process."

Trump seems unlikely to change tack as November 3 approaches. But the damage being done to the cause of democracy at home and abroad could last far beyond election day.

END OF QUOTE

AND TAKE THIS TO THE BANK:

Q'ANON WILL BE UTILIZED TO TERRORIZE AMERICANS INTO ACCEPTING TRUMP BIOTERRORISM

summing up

A. Q'ANON WILL BE UTILIZED TO TERRORIZE AMERICANS INTO ACCEPTING TRUMP BIOTERRORISM

B. Many leaders used Covid as cover to dent democracy. Trump may be the first to openly admit it

C. The objective is to weaponize the CONAVIRUS into a lethal landmine to deliberately kill pro Biden voters via CONAVIRUS, and to rule by corruption and bioterror.

D. USPS email tells managers not to reconnect sorting machines

E. The TRUMP White House wishes to make the population submit by terrorizing the US voters into giving up, by weaponizing the CONAVIRUS to scare those hating Trump into not voting in person. OR DYING of COVID 19

F. USPS Employees Got an Email Today Telling Them Not to Talk to the Press Under Any Circumstances


This is worse than what the NAZI's did in 1933 to destroy the WEINMAR Republic

Do we submit to this terrorism, America? Or do we fight back?

Andrew Beckwith, PhD

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