Thursday, March 16, 2017

How to defeat EVM

There is one strategy which can render the proposed use of Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) at the next general election in 2019 ineffective, or even impossible. The strategy involves denying the EVM a database. That database is the voters' roll. If voters refuse to register for the elections, there will be no voters' roll to program into the EVM.

To counter such an eventuality, the EVM scammers are feverishly scrounging around for other sources of the voters' roll. They have now turned to banks to force customers to "renew" their accounts on the pretext of compliance with International anti-money laundering standards. What gives the game away is the banks' demand for a letter/affidavit from the customer's chief (kgosi) stating that the customer is a bona fide member of the chief's subjects, resident at such and such a location. The banks will not accept the national "Omang" identification as proof that the customer is a bona fide subject of some chief in Botswana, and yet to obtain the "Omang", one had to produce such a letter in the first place. So why is the Omang ID not sufficient for "renewal" of the account?

The answer is the EVM voters' roll. The EVM scammers among whom we count the "IEC" are setting up emergency sources of the voter's roll, in case the population refuses to register for the 2019 elections. They foresee a real possibility that the EVMs will be denied a voter's roll, so they are making contigency plans to counter that right away.

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