The Daily Populous

Friday November 8th, 2024 day edition

image for Election Deniers Went Suddenly Quiet When Trump Won

Since Donald Trump lost the 2020 election, a vocal subset of his supporters have been shouting online about the specter of voter fraud.

“Shoutout to you all for keeping this election from being stolen this year, you are all heroes!“

Speaking to the Times, Cleta Mitchell—an Oklahoma politician turned Trump activist—said the movement’s “election integrity warriors” “kept a lot of the serious things that happened in 2020 from happening again.”.

What they think happened in 2020 is that widespread-yet-ambiguous fraud at the polls allowed Democrats to “steal” the election from Trump and hand it to Joe Biden.

“As soon as it started to look like Trump was going to win, the election denialism went very, very quiet,” Welton Chang, whose company—Pyrra Technologies—monitors alt social networks, told the Times.

These appear to have come from Russia, and don’t seem to be of huge concern to the “election integrity” activists.

If anything, some appear to be blaming the hoax on Democrats, allegedly another installment in the plot to disqualify Trump. »

LignoSat: World’s first wooden satellite, developed in Japan, heads to space

Authored by edition.cnn.com
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The world’s first wooden satellite, built by Japanese researchers, was launched into space on Tuesday, in an early test of using timber in lunar and Mars exploration.

Named after the Latin word for “wood,” the palm-sized LignoSat is tasked to demonstrate the cosmic potential of the renewable material as humans explore living in space.

“It may seem outdated, but wood is actually cutting-edge technology as civilisation heads to the moon and Mars,” he said. »

Racist text messages spamming Black Americans in Ohio, across U.S.

Authored by dispatch.com
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Racist text messages are being sent to Black Americans in Ohio and around the nation, telling them they're selected to be enslaved and assigned to pick cotton on a plantation.

More:Racist spoof text messages spam Black Americans in the US.

"Some students have received these hateful text messages," said Ohio State University spokesman Ben Johnson. »