Lost In The Mail

Via email;

This is a very small story but I thought you might be interested:

I live in a tiny community in the southern California desert. Our voting precinct, located in {redacted] County, has always been vote by mail only, and we currently have 13 registered voters. (The mail is delivered daily to a USPS contract station, a community postal center, formerly a rural branch, which is general delivery only. The clerks are actually my employees and under my supervision and receive daily mail directly from a USPS employee.)

No one registered here has received their ballots and the primary is June 7th. I talked to family members and neighbors and then called the registrar’s office and they said my ballot was mailed on May 5th.

My mother, 84, has lived here and voted here for most of her life. This has never happened before, according to her.

Come on San Andreas… looking for some beachfront property. 🙂

7 Replies to “Lost In The Mail”

  1. The DemonRats numbers have collapsed. This is desperation at it’s most extreme.

  2. Why would they send ballots to rural areas?
    Those folks might vote along Unapproved Lines.
    Best to just leave them out of the process and pretend it was an accident.
    That way we will not have to use too many mules with “better” votes.

  3. Funny. My California-born daughter received the whole package last week… in British Columbia!

  4. Chinese printed Mail in democat Ballots haven’t been unloaded yet.
    Those Ships are still about 25 miles offshore.

  5. Good to know that Canada Post is so efficient. We can all clearly see rural Canada becoming mail in ballot in the near future. Add that to gov. efficiency and soon anyone in rural areas won’t be able to vote. Most citizens living in cities don’t know or care that a few rural votes won’t be counted. They (can be used as a pronoun here, hahaha) don’t receive any education on the importance of life outside their city block

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