Wednesday, March 04, 2020

Big Tech Manipulation

Selwin Duke writes in part in the American Thinker,
If you could transport yourself back to the Middle Ages and tell people that living things too small to see can cause disease, they’d think you were crazy. Seeing is believing and, quite often, not seeing is not believing. Tragically, this phenomenon is also operative with the virus in our political system called Big Tech bias, which is, unseen by most and with no paper trail, killing Republican electoral chances and remaking our nation.

What if I told you that Big Tech could have been responsible for President Trump’s impeachment? What about the credible expert who warns that Big Tech can shift up to 15 million votes in November? Note here that over the last eight elections and 32 years, no president has won by more than 9.5 million votes. Shifting 15 million is easily enough to turn most any modern election.

...Conservatives understand vote fraud — a subject I’ve reported on for years — and are wary of it. But after studying Big Tech manipulation, I can tell you that vote fraud is small potatoes in comparison.

The aforementioned expert, Dr. Robert Epstein, a Democrat-favoring liberal who is the senior research psychologist at the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology, has warned for years that “Big Tech companies now have unprecedented power to sway elections.”

I know what you may be thinking: “No tech nerd can change my vote.” Heck, I hear all the time from conservatives who won’t even use Facebook or Twitter. But it’s not about you. It’s not about me. We’ll vote our passions regardless. It’s about swaying undecided voters — and a majority of Americans now get a good percentage of their news from Big Tech.

Roughly speaking, approximately 35 percent of the electorate will vote Democrat and 35 percent Republican regardless. It’s the 30 percent in-between who’ll “decide” the election. Capturing a majority of them will likely win you the day.

Now, these are people who, like so many others, often make emotion-based voting decisions. They have no firm party allegiances and choose who they perceive is the best candidate. So, if you alter their perception, you alter their vote. This is what big Tech does.

...Worse still, Epstein reports that if the whole of Big Tech favors the same candidate, it can shift up to 15 million votes in November. I mentioned earlier how significant this figure is, and it’s why Epstein wrote last month that Trump can’t win “[n]o matter which weak candidate the Democrats ultimately nominate.” I myself wouldn’t be so sure; then again, maybe Epstein knows something I don’t.

...Big Tech will win the Democrats millions of votes in November.
Read more here.

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