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Even when it is shown to them in black and white, liberals will deny its existence.
The Cyber Monkeys are saying that the information from the Dominion whistleblower is less than 1% of the information they have proving the fraud.
This is the biggest political event (and work of evil) since the American Civil War. Liberals, of course, are on the side of evil, like they always are.
You found Dominion's SOP on how to BIOS-disable a NIC, and in your minds this proves that "Dominion had Internet access"? I realize that you have precious few and small straws to grasp at, but...
Even when it is shown to them in black and white, liberals will deny its existence.
The Cyber Monkeys are saying that the information from the Dominion whistleblower is less than 1% of the information they have proving the fraud.
This is the biggest political event (and work of evil) since the American Civil War. Liberals, of course, are on the side of evil, like they always are.
They really have no choice other than to deny it's existence. I think we're going to see a lot of that in the upcoming days, as overwhelming evidence comes out. They're already the minority and their numbers are dwindling.
The video is of the Dominion Election Management System inside an election center in one of the states that used Dominion software and hardware.
Unproven. The claim isn't even made in the video.
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The video showed that the state holds the BIOS password - not Dominion, and not the county. In Arizona, it may be possible the password is be held by the Secretary of State.
The Senate subpoena is demanding that the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors turns over the BIOS password for all Dominion machines? A password that the video states is only in possession of "the state"?
And "possibly" held by the Secretary of State? Don't hurt yourself reaching for such an unsubstantiated conclusion.
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Toward the end of the video, the whistleblower asks the Dominion employee about connectivity and whether or not the machines can be connected to the internet. The Dominion employee confirms the machines can be connected to the internet.
Way to cut short what was said. The supposed Dominion employee said it was possible to enable Wi-Fi on the one specific machine to the internet *IF* one had the BIOS password, which is not held by anyone at the county level.
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There is no way to know whether or not the machines in Maricopa County were connected to the internet until the County turns the logs over to the AZ State Legislature. The logs have been subpoenaed. It doesn't appear the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors is going to comply with the subpoena.
Horse pucky.
The video that you linked refutes your own claim. It plainly states that it's not possible for a county employee to enable the Wi-Fi on the machine in the video because the county employee wouldn't have the BIOS password.
Bottom line - the video claims one thing and actually proves another - an ordinary person WOULD be able to enable Wi-Fi on the machine if they had the BIOS password, and...
THE MACHINES HAVE WI-FI CAPABILITY
That explains exactly why the auditors must examine the machines and the routers.
Thanks for clearing that up djmilf.
Yes, the machine in the video is purported to have Wi-Fi capability. And it's turned off in the BIOS. And the BIOS password isn't available to county officials.
Your own linked video make this statement.
No person would be able to enable the Wi-Fi without that unknown BIOS password.
An employee of Dominion has come forward with the instruction sheets for employees (with the appropriate password) to be able to link Dominion voting machines to the net.
These are not instructions for linking a Dominion voting machine to the "net".
These are instructions for configuring the RAID on a new machine prior to it being set up for loading the Dominion EMS software onto it.
That's the same stuff that's already been posted on this thread...and debunked.
A video showing that the integrated Wi-Fi on the computer motherboard is disabled in the BIOS and protected by a password, rendering it impossible for a person without the password to enable the Wi-Fi connection.
A page out of a freely available Dominion manual that shows how to set up a new machine for RAID prior to loading the Dominion software on it.
It appears that the only people who are on the Stop the Steal bandwagon are the grifters and the technically ignorant.
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