Strange … Since Election Day, Over 100 Dominion Employees Vanish
[If true, this adds to the strangeness of Dominion machines. Jan]
Employees of the voting machine company Dominion are vanishing. At least, their LinkedIn profiles are. Since election day, at least 100 of 243 Dominion workers were deleted. When people noticed that, it didn’t take long to realize that “all their software engineers are in Serbia.” Hmmm.
Rush to delete data at Dominion
The American public is demanding to know exactly why there is such a rush to delete personal information profiles of Dominion employees from LinkedIn. It makes nervous voters wonder what they have to hide.
Until election day, virtually every employee of the firm proudly shared their credentials and biographies with the world. Suddenly, in the wake of election fraud accusations, “Over 40% of Dominion’s employees with profiles on LinkedIn” have “eliminated their profiles from the social media giant.” Why?
Rosie Memos wants to know, “why are all the Dominion people deleting their profiles on LinkedIn?” Also, it “looks like all their software engineers are in Serbia. Nothing could go wrong.”
The Gateway Pundit did some research and came up with a comparison chart where they note, “Here is a list of some of those profiles before they were taken down.” They also mention, “Also of note was that all their software engineers were located in Serbia.
This is the company that managed the vote counting process and reported vote tallies in the 2020 US election.”
Voting machines, it turns out, and the code to run them, both firmware and software, don’t come from a particularly secure source. According to ComputerWorld, “Voting machines are privately manufactured and developed and, as with other many other IT systems, the code is typically proprietary.” Dominion keeps it tightly secret. Just like the Facebook and Google display algorithms, nobody outside the company has any idea what all that code really does.
An office in Belgrade
Ideally, the code used to program voting machines, including Dominion machines, should be freely available for anyone to look at. That way flaws can be detected and repaired before they are exploited.
The Open Source Election Technology Foundation is fighting hard for an “election system that shifts from proprietary, vendor-owned systems” to one owned “by the people of the United States.” That isn’t doing much good now though.
Dominion claims they “develop” their systems in the U.S. and Canada. They just happen to have “an office in Belgrade, Serbia.” They recently ran an ad to hire “four senior software developers in Belgrade.” Firm spokesman Chris Riggall (allegedly his real name) admits, “some of our software development is undertaken outside the U.S. and Canada, specifically, in Serbia, where we have conducted operations for 10 years.”
Dominion insists they take measures “to ensure the accuracy, integrity and security of the software we create for our products.” Do they also build in back-door features? Election officials in Michigan admitted “that 6,000 Trump votes were entered by mistake for Biden, due to a ‘software error.’
The same software is associated with ‘bugs’ in Georgia.” Just by coincidence, “The company is part of a globalist network. The lobbyist of that company is the assistant of Nancy Pelosi, the leader of the Democrats in the Congress.
The Clinton Foundation is also connected with the company.” That makes Americans feel much more secure. Secure in the idea that they stocked up on ammo long before summer.