
In 2021, Tina Peters demonstrated unparalleled bravery by preserving critical election data as Mesa County Clerk just before a mandated "trusted build" software update on Dominion Voting Systems equipment. This act revealed potential vulnerabilities, including database manipulation and changes in the total election count, positioning her as a true whistleblower who prioritized preventing tampering over compliance with questionable protocols. Others began to follow her lead and using their positions in government to blow the whistle an expose different aspects of a national election heist. Without her bravery the injustices in our election machines might have remained hidden indefinitely. Tina's bold steps directly continue to inspire my deeper involvement, propelling me to join her cause, fight for her release, and fulfill her purpose of taking back the Secretary of State's office from the machines.

In 2022, Tina ran for Secretary of State before me fighting for election integrity. She face and lost to a nobody candidate, Pam Anderson, who is a bard member of CTCL, a election fraud non profit we had previously sued. Pam Anderson raised and spent just over 1% as much as Tina and yet the election machines, being controlled in Serbia, stole the primary election from her. My team offered our support for her case helping her to organize and secure funding for recounts in 63 Colorado Counties. After the recounts circumvented Colorado law and failed to conduct the require preliminary comparison of the voting machine performance with a limited hand count according to C.R.S. 1-10.5-102(3)(a)&(b) (the law has since been changed to cover for Jena's crimes), we assisted her and other recount victims in taking legal action against Jena Griswold's illegal rules and the conduct of the county clerks. (Photo of me serving the El Paso County Clerk, Chuck, and the County Attorney)

In November 2022 these was an automatic recount in CD3 which resulted in further illegal recount testing procedures and a further lawsuit this time by a group of CD3 voters whom I organized. Like before, Colorado's technically illiterate courts brushed us aside. (Picture of me confronting the Alamosa County fake recount testing)

That year I began to work with and valued Colorado's election integrity community. Many hundreds of volunteers and thousands of donors made the work of the recount coalition possible. Those Colorado leaders pictures and millions of others supports around the country remain committed to seeing Tina Peters walk free.
(Coalition Members named omitted for privacy)

While only the governor can, and should, pardon Tina, when elected I will publish all internal office related to:

It's clear that these soulless machines represent a long-standing threat to the integrity of our sacred human elections. The Mesa reports documented unauthorized access, and software manipulations that could alter vote counts without detection, underscoring the need for immediate action. These issues aren't isolated; they stem from a global web of international connections that undermine U.S. election security and the sovereignty of nations around the globe. It is in the interest of humanity to be vigilant in the defense of liberty and to strike out against the tyranny of machines.

This betrayal of trust traces back decades, proving these machines have always been unworthy of safeguarding our democracy. It began in the 1990s with Brent Beleskey, of the International Voters Coalition, who ran for office in Ontario, Canada, and exposed how early electronic voting machines cheated him out of victory. Dominion itself is a Canadian company, named after the Canadian "dominion" of the English crown and it spread from there, later establishing its headquarters in Denver, Colorado. Meeting Brent in 2021, I spent hundreds of hours talking to and working with him. He mentored me as the longest standing election integrity expert.
By 2000, the flaws were glaring: Florida's hanging chads fiasco led to Clint Curtis' testimony before Congress, where he revealed designing vote-flipping software at the request of a Florida lawmaker. I first encountered Curtis' video in 2011 at age 17, which convinced me the system was rigged and inspired my 15-year journey as a libertarian activist. 11 years later I met my earliest anti-machine inspiration when I worked with Curtis in 2022, confirming the ease of digital sabotage that affects thousands of votes invisibly.

The corruption deepened in Venezuela, where Chavez leveraged Smartmatic to seize power, then exported the tech globally, infiltrating U.S. systems via Dominion, ES&S, and Hart. In Colorado, this infiltration occurred under Republican leadership, including former Secretary of State Scott Gessler, who allowed these machines under the guise of efficiency, with guarantees that candidates could request paid recounts involving random machine tests against hand-tabulated paper records. If mismatches occurred, full hand counts would follow—but in practice, this rarely happened. Successive Republicans partnered with Dominion to position Colorado as a model state or "gold standard" for unverifiable elections, introducing mail-in ballots and automatic voter registration. Democrats, cheered on by figures like former Secretary of State Wayne Williams—who finalized the statewide Dominion rollout—completed the job, entrenching a system beholden to soulless tabulators over human oversight. Members of both parties, loyal to these machines, continue to prioritize corporate interests over their fellow citizens.

Without Trump's partnership with Musk to neutralize the Serbian remote elections operations, 2024 could have been another stolen election. While this was a lucky save, we need decisive permanent action to prevent machine elections. Emerald Robinson, an independent journalist, reports the full story with historical background.
While this was a lucky save, we need decisive permanent action to prevent machine elections. Our first attempt at this came in December 2020, I join and as executive director highlighted the groundbreaking class-action lawsuit O'Rourke v. Dominion Voting Systems et al., the only post-election case brought directly on behalf of the American people themselves—purporting to represent all 160 million registered U.S. voters as a class. Unlike the dozens of lawsuits filed by the Trump campaign or state parties challenging procedures or seeking to overturn results for a candidate, this civil rights action alleged a vast conspiracy involving Dominion, Facebook, CTCL (Zuckerberg-funded grants), and officials in key states had violated voters' constitutional rights through unreliable machines, illegal voting methods, and suppression—burdening every citizen's vote equally. Seeking $160 billion in nominal damages and declaratory relief, it stood alone in fighting alleged fraud as a direct injury to the electorate, not a political party. Though wrongly dismissed on standing and maliciously sanctioned as frivolous, it boldly amplified concerns about machine vulnerabilities that fuel my ongoing mission to decertify them and restore human sovereignty over elections. This case and everything else that has been revealed in 5 years of revelations from investigations in Fulton, Maricopa, and Mesa Counties, twitter files, and signed confessions by the likes of Zuckerburg, has vindicated the work of Dominion Class Action, begun in 2020. (Watch my first interview with Gary Fielder Esq.)

Also explained was everything I saw when I stood outside of Dominion's headquarters and watched them dump ballot boxes and other evidence. We remain in the struggle, reclaiming human liberty in the battle against slavery to the dominion of silicon and copper.

On my first day in office, I'll strike a decisive blow by executive action: decertifying all electronic voting machines, from ballot markers to tabulators. As Secretary of State, I certify these systems, and revoking certification is the swiftest path to liberation without needing legislative approval. Counties will prepare, guided by my advisory staff, for hand-count elections starting in 2027. The justification is rooted in federal mandates under CISA standards, which demand robust cybersecurity, no WAN capabilities (wireless or wired) that expose systems to hacks, and tamper-proofing—none of which Colorado's Dominion, ES&S, or Hart machines meet, especially after the 2024 BIOS password leak that left them vulnerable online.

This decertification aligns with first-principle arguments: while fraud is inevitable in any system, electronic devices create massive failure points impacting thousands of votes, unlike human errors or sabotage, which are detectable and correctable through redundancy, visual oversight, and auditory checks. Digital flaws are opaque, often irreversible without full restarts, eroding trust. As an immediate replacement, we'll insist on hand-count procedures per my election creed: one-day in-person voting, voter ID for one-citizen-one-vote, paper ballots without electronics, and no mail-ins except in rare cases. To institutionalize this, I'll issue a state monopoly charter to the Colorado Ballot Counters Association—a nonprofit chapter of the International Ballot Counters Association—comprising unmodified human volunteers, driven by civic duty rather than machine interests.

Broader reforms will amplify direct democracy: deregulating Title Board restrictions and slashing ballot initiative petition thresholds to bypass legislative gridlock; eliminating contribution limits for full transparency, redirecting funds from PAC-driven negative ads to positive campaign messages. Together, these steps will dismantle the machine-dependent status quo, restoring elections to the people where they belong.

As executive director of Project Thaler, an anti-cartel trafficking organization, I helped efforts to expose one of the largest money laundering operations in U.S. history. Our investigation uncovered a sophisticated scheme where the Sinaloa Cartel used fake notarized deeds, fraudulent trust documents, and manufactured property records to launder tens of billions of dollars through single-family home transactions. These falsified records—often involving phony buyers, sellers, and escrow companies—allowed illicit funds to flow undetected into legitimate real estate markets, bribing officials and masking narcotics proceeds. The fragility of traditional public recording systems enabled this massive fraud, revealing how easily records could be tampered with or fabricated without immutable safeguards.

This work aligned closely with courageous actions in Arizona, where former Rep. Liz Harris allowed a detailed presentation in the state legislature exposing similar deed fraud tied to cartel influence in Maricopa County. Investigator Jacqueline Breger, drawing from extensive document reviews, highlighted phony deeds and illegal transfers used for bribery and racketeering. Though controversial, the session amplified these findings, leading to a comprehensive report submitted to the governor documenting systemic vulnerabilities in property records that facilitated laundering and corruption.

These experiences form the foundation of my conviction that Colorado's public records must be revolutionized through blockchain—the "Liberty Ledger." By digitizing and embedding all official records, from historic land grants issued under Abraham Lincoln to modern voter registrations, property deeds, business filings, charities, notaries, and birth certificates, we create an immutable chain preventing tampering, cartel laundering, or hidden fraud forever. Building on Colorado's existing frameworks like SB18-086 and the Digital Token Act, this ensures eternal transparency and auditability.

To integrate human oversight with unbreakable technology, notaries will serve as officers of the blockchain, required to upload digital scans of physical records. Encryption-encoded mechanical stamps will generate verified time keys, imprinted in ink at signing and tagged digitally in the chain alongside high-resolution photos of signature/notary pages. This hybrid system—human accountability fused with cryptographic security—turns technology into a tool of liberation, empowering individual sovereignty while closing doors to dominion by machines or corrupt networks. As the Red Flame of Liberty, I'll deliver this protection for every Coloradan.

I assisted in the development and publication of this book of a Father's incredible story exposing international criminal cartel money laundering schemes.
On September 19th, 2023 we published the book but our work to destroy the cartels is just getting started.

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