You found the backup wrap up your go-to podcast for all things
Speaker:backup recovery and cyber recovery.
Speaker:In this episode, however, we're taking a little detour from our usual backup
Speaker:talk to dive into something that's been on a lot of people's minds lately.
Speaker:Election integrity, having worked several primaries and elections as a poll worker,
Speaker:I've got some insider knowledge on how our voting system actually works.
Speaker:We're gonna break down the whole process from paper ballots to mail-in voting, and
Speaker:all the checks and balances in between.
Speaker:I'll debunk some of the wild theories out there and show you
Speaker:why it's practically impossible to pull off large scale voter fraud.
Speaker:If you care about election integrity, this is your episode.
Speaker:By the way, if this is your first time listening to us, I
Speaker:am w Curtis Preston, AKA, Mr.
Speaker:Backup, and I've been passionate about backup and recovery for
Speaker:over 30 years, ever since.
Speaker:I had to tell my boss that we had no backups of the production
Speaker:database that we had just lost.
Speaker:I don't want that to happen to you, and that's why I do this.
Speaker:On this podcast, we turn unappreciated backup admins into cyber recovery heroes.
Speaker:This is the backup wrap up.
Speaker:Welcome to the show.
Speaker:If I could ask you to just take a quick second and click subscribe
Speaker:or follow whatever platform you're watching or listening on.
Speaker:Remember, you can watch us on YouTube, you can listen to us on your
Speaker:favorite podcast player and, um, you know, if you subscribe or follow,
Speaker:you'll always get our great content.
Speaker:And I have with me my friend who can help celebrate the major project that I.
Speaker:Have recently finished and by I, I mean the people I hired to finish the project.
Speaker:You know, that's like 99.7% of my projects,
Speaker:Meaning that you hire somebody to do
Speaker:them.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:they don't get done one of the two.
Speaker:And it's, and it's, well, we'll see, we'll see if this continues.
Speaker:It's just, I'm, I'm, I'm speaking of course of, you know,
Speaker:completely redoing The
Speaker:flooring and painting.
Speaker:So it was half me and half the, the contractors and, um,
Speaker:I painted all of the upstairs.
Speaker:I got a new paint sprayer
Speaker:Did you remember to clean it up by the way?
Speaker:After you're done?
Speaker:I did, of
Speaker:course I did.
Speaker:What is funny though is, you know, the, the
Speaker:tip, you know, the tip is currently in the cup holder in my car.
Speaker:I don't know why.
Speaker:It just is.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:and, um, no, I, yeah, me neither.
Speaker:Um, and, uh, yeah, so the painting finished and then the, you know,
Speaker:the, the flooring guy finished.
Speaker:Uh, technically the flooring is at like 99%.
Speaker:They've got a couple of little pieces of, uh, trim they're gonna
Speaker:do.
Speaker:Um, but it's, yeah, it's
Speaker:Which, which for people who may not know, I think it was last year
Speaker:or the year before you did all of the downstairs flooring yourself.
Speaker:I did, I did do all of the downstairs flooring.
Speaker:And you may recall that what I said after the end of that project,
Speaker:uh, was I'm too old for this shit.
Speaker:Um, and now that I'm currently, uh, suffering like some weird,
Speaker:uh, meniscus thing going on on my
Speaker:Are you sure it's, I, I, I heard it's, you know what I heard?
Speaker:It's actually called
Speaker:What?
Speaker:Old Age.
Speaker:Yeah, I am a year older than I did when I did, when I did the flooring down here.
Speaker:Um, I will say I certainly miss the cost that I had down here, right?
Speaker:Um, upstairs is somewhere between a half to two thirds of the size of downstairs
Speaker:and I had, uh, $4,500 in labor alone.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:But, but I think one other thing you should also be thankful of
Speaker:is it didn't take two months.
Speaker:it didn't take two months.
Speaker:It took longer than I wanted it to.
Speaker:Uh, for those who have ever hired contractors, they said they'd do it
Speaker:in three to four days, and it was more like seven to eight days because,
Speaker:you know, they had other projects and
Speaker:things.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:But, um,
Speaker:But it looked good.
Speaker:And it
Speaker:and I didn't, yeah,
Speaker:it looked great.
Speaker:it looked great.
Speaker:Um, and it, it's very weird to make that final transition
Speaker:from carpet to, um, LVP, which
Speaker:is luxury vinyl planking.
Speaker:And, um, it is very weird, but it is so nice, so clean and, you know, um, I
Speaker:missed the carpet on my feet, but I don't miss the lack of the cleanliness aspect.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Do you have a,
Speaker:it's not a Rosie Juju.
Speaker:B Judy.
Speaker:GDB.
Speaker:what
Speaker:what is it, Judy?
Speaker:What is that?
Speaker:What, what?
Speaker:room bug called?
Speaker:Oh, oh, June.
Speaker:Oh, that's Junie BI don't have a June.
Speaker:Yeah, I don't have a Junie B for upstairs.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:might be something
Speaker:and currently June.
Speaker:Currently Junie B is not working
Speaker:actually.
Speaker:Um, I need to spend some time with Junie B.
Speaker:Give her a little bit of love.
Speaker:Um, and,
Speaker:um,
Speaker:know it's Curtis's.
Speaker:Roomba.
Speaker:yeah, that's the name, that's the name for it.
Speaker:Was it?
Speaker:It was, um, it was, uh, my granddaughter named it Junie b Jones,
Speaker:um, which is from the book, from the book series.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:Uh, so I, we're gonna do something very, very different.
Speaker:Uh, we've done
Speaker:this before.
Speaker:Yeah, I was gonna say it's, it's different but not different.
Speaker:It's very, very diff I mean, unless you're an avid follower of the podcast and have
Speaker:been listening for at least two years, you've never heard me talk about this.
Speaker:Um, and it's a subject that's near and dear to my heart for multiple reasons.
Speaker:More dear to your heart than backups.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Outside of my career, it is, that is definitely a, um, you know, it, it is very
Speaker:near and dear to my heart, and I, I want to sort of like, I'm an American, right?
Speaker:I mean, I'm a very proud American and I, you know, we've
Speaker:made, we've made our mistakes.
Speaker:We continue to make our mistakes, right.
Speaker:Um, and, but I am proud of what we have.
Speaker:Acco, you know, many of the things that we've accomplished
Speaker:on, and I'm a, and I'm proud of of things that we're trying to do.
Speaker:And one of the things that I am really, really impressed with.
Speaker:Is the American system of election, right?
Speaker:Hey, what system?
Speaker:What system exists?
Speaker:What are you talking about?
Speaker:so the way in which every two years we elect, you know, people, right.
Speaker:You know, people are like, what do you mean every two?
Speaker:You don't, you mean every four years?
Speaker:No, I mean every two years.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Every two years.
Speaker:We either have a presidential election or what we call the midterms, which is,
Speaker:um, the, uh, when we, when we elect just senators or, um, house of Rep, you know,
Speaker:members of the House of Representatives
Speaker:Or
Speaker:it could be your local representatives too.
Speaker:That, that as well, right there, there could be local, there, there could
Speaker:also be measures, you know, things.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and the fact that we have, I think it was over 150 million
Speaker:people voted in the last election.
Speaker:Um, the fact that that happens and the fact that it's done in such
Speaker:a way that allows you to vote and allows you to vote anonymously, 100%
Speaker:anonymously and in a way that, like, it tracks that you voted right.
Speaker:You can
Speaker:not what
Speaker:record, not what you voted right.
Speaker:Not what you voted for.
Speaker:but it tracks that you, that you voted in an election.
Speaker:But it, but it, but yeah, but they don't know what, what, you know, what they voted
Speaker:but Curtis, I, so right now it's October 14th when we're
Speaker:recording this, right?
Speaker:And the, uh, presidential elections are right around the corner.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And just like we heard four years ago and the
Speaker:time before that, right?
Speaker:Everyone always complains about the election, right?
Speaker:They're like, oh, I'm voting on old school paper.
Speaker:I don't trust the electronic
Speaker:voting system because there's that entire hoopla about the dominion
Speaker:voting systems and how they can
Speaker:be hacked and everything in the world.
Speaker:Like we talk on this podcast about ransomware and
Speaker:hacking and everything else,
Speaker:and yet we're putting our full faith in the system
Speaker:that most people are not aware of, right?
Speaker:No, right.
Speaker:that is actually what is so amazing to me in that, let me draw an analogy.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:It, it's gonna sound bizarre at first, but you, you are, you
Speaker:are aware of, of Taylor guitars.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Okay, so Taylor guitars happen to be manufactured 100%.
Speaker:Well, true.
Speaker:Taylor guitars are manufactured 100% in San Diego, California.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:They're ma measured, manufactured in El Cajon.
Speaker:I've taken a tour of, of, of Taylor Guitar Factory, and I
Speaker:say, I say truth Taylor Guitars.
Speaker:There are Taylor guitars that are now made in Mexico, and I'm, I'm not
Speaker:putting them in the same category.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:they, um.
Speaker:And they're, and those are made for a different price point
Speaker:and all this stuff, right?
Speaker:What I was amazed about with Taylor Guitar was their combined
Speaker:use of old world craftsmanship and new world technology, right?
Speaker:so?
Speaker:where, where a, a human being can add value.
Speaker:They used a human
Speaker:being.
Speaker:And where a computer or a robot could add value, not just
Speaker:do it cheaper, but do it better, right?
Speaker:Here's a perfect example.
Speaker:Um, the, the applying lacquer.
Speaker:To a finished guitar.
Speaker:They have a robot that is the classic one armed
Speaker:robot from a manufacturer.
Speaker:It was an, it was a, it was made for cars,
Speaker:okay.
Speaker:And the first thing they had to do was to teach it how to
Speaker:hold a guitar and not crush it.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:They, they, they talk all about it, about how many guitars they destroyed.
Speaker:Um, getting, teaching it to hold a guitar tight enough that you know,
Speaker:that it doesn't go anywhere, but not too tight, you know, not so
Speaker:tight that it crushes the guitar.
Speaker:And they've programmed that to two things.
Speaker:One is they patented a process of electro electrostatically
Speaker:charging the guitar negatively.
Speaker:Charging it.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And then positively charging the lacquer
Speaker:very similar process to
Speaker:go.
Speaker:Yeah, go ahead.
Speaker:Very
Speaker:similar to powder coating.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And, uh, and then moving the robot in exactly the right way so
Speaker:that they, they apply a perfectly uniform coat of lacquer and also
Speaker:reducing the amount of waste in the
Speaker:process.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So when I look at elections, uh, and again, I, I, I, I can
Speaker:speak with quite a level of
Speaker:authority on how we do it in San Diego, but
Speaker:Because
Speaker:you've been doing this for how long?
Speaker:because I've now participated as an election worker in every election and
Speaker:every primary since the 2016 primary.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So that's
Speaker:several.
Speaker:That's a lot.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, I have also, I.
Speaker:Witnessed, you know, you, you, it, the, the entire process is open
Speaker:and you can watch it at any time.
Speaker:I've witnessed the process of how mail-in ballots are harvested.
Speaker:I've, I've witnessed a process of how the, the, the ballot, the physical
Speaker:ballots are counted, how the physical ballots are reconciled, and how, you know,
Speaker:and, and how signatures are verified.
Speaker:And I've seen, I, I'm pretty sure
Speaker:every portion of the process on the backend, and I've physically participated
Speaker:in the front end of every part of the
Speaker:And, and you've also been a site manager multiple years, right?
Speaker:And so I, you know, I'm, I'm a, I'm a site manager.
Speaker:Um, this year I'll be the site manager.
Speaker:Um, in fact, as I'm recording this, I'm, today, I, I went to my first
Speaker:of three days of training, uh, to be
Speaker:the site manager for
Speaker:but
Speaker:okay.
Speaker:So as a site manager, you're basically running the voting
Speaker:site or the election site,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:you have a team under you, and you
Speaker:have certain processes
Speaker:that you have to follow, and certain things you have to know is three days
Speaker:really enough time to learn everything?
Speaker:Because you said you're in three days of training for site manager.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, uh, I wish I had 10 days, but but what, what I can, what I can tell you is
Speaker:that, and, and I think this is the overall message, and I don't want to get into
Speaker:it, obviously in a little bit of detail.
Speaker:The overall concept is that it's enough training given that you, um, you
Speaker:have layers upon layers of checks and balances, um, so that you know when, when
Speaker:somebody's trained to do a job, you know, in the classroom today, for example.
Speaker:We had 29 poll workers that were, uh, being trained and,
Speaker:and three site managers.
Speaker:And in that 29, only five or six were the, it was their first time.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So there's this constant sort of recycling.
Speaker:You have newer people, you have people that have done this
Speaker:several times.
Speaker:We have people in there that have been in an election since, you know, forever.
Speaker:And, um, you look at me and many of the people in the room, we've done every
Speaker:election since we started doing it,
Speaker:the newer, uh, way.
Speaker:And,
Speaker:we'll talk about in a bit, but
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Um, so Go ahead.
Speaker:and the one other thing I wanted to cover though is even with the
Speaker:three days, right, it's not like they're just like tossing you out
Speaker:to C and being like, Hey, go at it.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:They give you support, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The, the people that are, um, the trainers.
Speaker:So the trainers by the way they go through, I.
Speaker:A month of training to become trainers.
Speaker:And, and by the way, I have some vision, I have some, uh, visibility
Speaker:into that as well because my wife is a
Speaker:trainer and so she has gone through a month of training to
Speaker:do her first, uh, to, to do the
Speaker:training.
Speaker:And, and, and then they have support and they have, um, you know, they
Speaker:have junior and senior people in the
Speaker:training as well.
Speaker:My wife is now, this is her third time doing training
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:and then,
Speaker:go
Speaker:and then even like the day of the, like when you're on site, right?
Speaker:There's still people you can talk to if you needed
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So all of those trainers, the moment they stop training, they go into support mode
Speaker:and they become the poll worker hotline.
Speaker:And, um, so they have to train, I don't know how many trainers they have.
Speaker:So it, so in San Diego County we have 280, somewhere in the neighborhood of 280 vote
Speaker:centers, and each of those vote centers is gonna have somewhere between seven to.
Speaker:15 poll
Speaker:workers.
Speaker:So think about that.
Speaker:280 sites, you know, let's say an average of
Speaker:10 poll workers, that's
Speaker:3000 people that you gotta train, right?
Speaker:So they have a big team of trainers.
Speaker:Um, and I, I, I think the, the overall thing that impresses me, and
Speaker:by the way, in the room, so we get, you know, one of the first things
Speaker:out of the mouth of the trainers is we're here to help people vote.
Speaker:You are to represent, um, the registrar voters or the ROV.
Speaker:You're not here to represent your political views.
Speaker:Um, you, you are not a Republican or a Democrat or an independent
Speaker:or a, you know what, whatever you, you are a poll worker and our job.
Speaker:And, and, and it's amazing 'cause I, I participated in, in a few, in
Speaker:enough of these, it's amazing to see.
Speaker:People that are at political opposites of the, you know, or that they're at the
Speaker:opposite ends of the political spectrum.
Speaker:And you can, you spend enough time with 'em, you can kind of get an
Speaker:inkling of where they fall politically.
Speaker:You have enough conversations with 'em.
Speaker:And by the way, uh, I'm at, I'm at an 11 day site.
Speaker:There's a lot of chitchat and 11 day site.
Speaker:'cause there's a lot of downtime.
Speaker:Except the last couple
Speaker:an idea.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Except the last couple of days, especially the, of election day.
Speaker:Um, you kind of see, you can kind of get an idea where they fall politically.
Speaker:And sometimes you might even, you might even, somebody might
Speaker:slip who they might vote for.
Speaker:But what's what's amazing is they all have an equal desire to.
Speaker:Make this voting process a good one, right?
Speaker:Uh, one with integrity, one that where the voter has a pleasant voting experience.
Speaker:Um, and so when I do hear people saying, and I had, I had a really
Speaker:interesting conversation with a, a, a, you know, a colleague the other day,
Speaker:and he was really, he was, um, he was.
Speaker:Saying things like, you, you, you know that there's got to be these problems.
Speaker:And I'm like, no, I don't know it, and neither do you.
Speaker:And tell me what you think is like your best idea of your evidence, right?
Speaker:And, and let me explain to you why I don't see the things that you're
Speaker:worried about are even possible.
Speaker:Um, and so, so I thought, so, I thought we'd, you know, it,
Speaker:it, it, we're recording this, like you said, October 14th.
Speaker:I'm gonna put this as the next, uh, episode.
Speaker:Even if it's not the one, the next one in rotation.
Speaker:I'm gonna put this out because I want people to vote,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:I want you to vote.
Speaker:I want, I, you know what I want you to do?
Speaker:I want you to question the process, but I don't want you to question
Speaker:the process like, you know.
Speaker:Without talking to people that actually know what they're talking about, I want
Speaker:you to go to your registrar voters or whatever they call it, they should call, I
Speaker:think they all call 'em registrar voters.
Speaker:Go to your ROV and ask questions.
Speaker:Hey, I heard this.
Speaker:Can you tell me?
Speaker:Is this possible?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, I heard that people can stuff the ballot box with thousands of ballots.
Speaker:Is that possible?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, I heard that.
Speaker:Um, you know, the, and then people can like
Speaker:can be counted after
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:after
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:The votes that, yeah.
Speaker:And I'm concerned about, you can say things like, this is my concern.
Speaker:I I have this problem.
Speaker:One of the main problems that I think a lot of people that have been around
Speaker:a few years is we have, and covid.
Speaker:Covid drove this to some degree.
Speaker:We have much more mail-in voting than we did before.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And, mail-in votes definitely take longer to process and count than old school
Speaker:votes.
Speaker:And so it takes longer to certify the election than it used to.
Speaker:And we're used to going to bed on election night knowing the result,
Speaker:or having a pretty good idea.
Speaker:You know, the election has been called for so and so,
Speaker:and that doesn't happen as
Speaker:well, and especially given the numbers, right?
Speaker:Just the sheer quantity it can sway an election.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:It absolutely can't, you know, the elections, so many elections
Speaker:have been very, very close.
Speaker:Um, and, um, so I want you to, I want you to ask questions,
Speaker:So I have some questions for you
Speaker:since we're asking.
Speaker:So one of the things that I've heard a lot of is people can go vote in one
Speaker:place, go to a different place, vote that
Speaker:because especially I.
Speaker:I.
Speaker:think that there was a slight reduction in the number of
Speaker:vote centers, voting centers.
Speaker:And sometimes they're not all connected together.
Speaker:And like I know as an example, my neighborhood polling place
Speaker:that I used to go to or vote center was in someone's garage,
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:right?
Speaker:And um, after or during Covid that went away and now they just
Speaker:have a couple central places like the library near my house.
Speaker:They have one.
Speaker:There you go, vote.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:what
Speaker:prevents me from going to one voting center, voting there, going to a different
Speaker:voting center, voting there, going to yet another one all within my county,
Speaker:especially since I don't have a dedicated place anymore like I used to.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So that's a great question.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:There are two ways that we have done voting, and I think most counties
Speaker:have gone to the latter way.
Speaker:The old way was the precinct style of voting.
Speaker:You are assigned to a precinct, you have a voting location for that precinct.
Speaker:You go there and there's a physical printed, um, poll book.
Speaker:Your name is either in it or it's not in
Speaker:it.
Speaker:And then you say, I'm here to vote and I'm Prasanna Malaiyandi.
Speaker:And depending on where you live, you may or may not be presenting voter
Speaker:ID to prove that you're that person.
Speaker:And then you, uh, and then you vote, you cannot go, uh, normally
Speaker:you cannot go down the street.
Speaker:Uh, or, or you know, let's say you work downtown, you can't go to a random garage.
Speaker:You know where there, you know, many of these polling places were in very
Speaker:small places, like someone's garage.
Speaker:You cannot go to the, you know, a different garage and vote because your
Speaker:name's not gonna be in the polling book.
Speaker:Now, some states, some counties, would allow you to do what was called a
Speaker:provisional vote under that thing of like, okay, I cannot make it to my.
Speaker:My precinct, my normal place, I would like to vote provisionally.
Speaker:And they would have a way of doing that.
Speaker:And when we used to do it that way, there were tons of
Speaker:provisional votes because of that.
Speaker:I can't find this person in the roster.
Speaker:Maybe they just went to the wrong polling place and we would do a provisional vote.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That's the old way, right?
Speaker:Even with the provisional vote, so right.
Speaker:It was marked as a provisional ballot such that when it got to the backend
Speaker:where they were doing all the counting, they would just make sure that the
Speaker:person did not vote twice, right?
Speaker:right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So when you do a provisional vote, there's lots of extra paperwork.
Speaker:It goes into special envelope that goes into a special pile.
Speaker:It gets special handling so that you make sure that that person doesn't vote twice.
Speaker:Um, there are many downsides to that way.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:One of them is, it's actually a lot harder to.
Speaker:Manage the integrity of one or two people voting in, you know, managing voting in
Speaker:a garage across thousands of locations.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That's actually quite hard.
Speaker:It's easier to have a large team, right?
Speaker:Um, and, and ensure that, you know, you, you, you have lots of training
Speaker:and lots of support and all that stuff.
Speaker:So it's actually easier to, to, to do a, a tighter process
Speaker:with larger groups of people.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:So what, so what we now do, at least, again, I can speak only with
Speaker:authority with what we do in San Diego, but I'm, but from what I've
Speaker:read, many counties around the country have done something very similar.
Speaker:And that is, they've gone to an electronic poll book, they've gone to a smaller
Speaker:number of vote centers, uh, where they're staffed by groups of people, like,
Speaker:like what I was talking about earlier.
Speaker:And they, um, you go to that vote center, they have an electronic poll
Speaker:book, which is connected via a secure location to a database somewhere.
Speaker:And then they can look you up in that database and they can see what part
Speaker:of the county you live in, therefore what ballot you should receive.
Speaker:And then they, um,
Speaker:By that
Speaker:you mean?
Speaker:Uh, like if you have local measures or if you have
Speaker:local candidates,
Speaker:you, you wanna make sure you get the, the appropriate ballot for your neighborhood.
Speaker:And, um.
Speaker:And then they're able to give you access to that ballot.
Speaker:There's a couple different ways that they do that.
Speaker:Um, some, uh, counties, like right up the street, orange County,
Speaker:California, they actually print out what I would call an old school.
Speaker:Uh.
Speaker:You know, ballot that you're, that you're, used to seeing, right?
Speaker:And then you, you fill it out with bubbles and stuff, right?
Speaker:And then, and then you turn that ballot in the way San Diego does it.
Speaker:We u we use all BMDs ballot marking devices, these are provided by Dominion,
Speaker:uh, that you go in and you mark your choices and then you tell you, you
Speaker:can then review your choices and then you can print and then those choices
Speaker:and print it out onto your ballot.
Speaker:And the machine does not have a network connection.
Speaker:The machine does not store any data.
Speaker:Um, and the, the machine does not, you know, your, your votes are not,
Speaker:I don't think there's any, I may be wrong, but there were some, San Diego
Speaker:years ago did use a, a machine where, a voting machine where you made.
Speaker:Your vote and then it.
Speaker:stored the vote in that machine and then you print it out a tally.
Speaker:I don't, I don't think anyone's doing that anymore.
Speaker:Um, that definitely the election integrity.
Speaker:People in general don't like that way.
Speaker:They like this way.
Speaker:And it's funny, you, you talked about the paper ballot.
Speaker:The beauty of the paper ballot system is that it can be audited,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:So as long as you produce a paper ballot, and whether you're using the
Speaker:mail-in ballot style, the old school mail-in ballot or the, the, the
Speaker:BMD printed ballot, everyone has a paper ballot and we can track
Speaker:all those paper ballots and we can go back and we can review, right?
Speaker:So, um, the way it works, uh, here is that at the end of each voting
Speaker:day, all of the BMD ballots and, and in California every registered
Speaker:voter gets a ballot mailed to them.
Speaker:They can either mail that in, they can drop it off at a mail-in, you know, vote
Speaker:location, or they can actually rip the envelope up, bring in the printed ballot,
Speaker:and they can bring it in and vote that ballot.
Speaker:If they'd prefer to do that, instead of use the BMD, that's fine as well.
Speaker:Again, we just want people to
Speaker:vote, right?
Speaker:Or they can come in and use the BMD and um, and then they get a printed ballot.
Speaker:In every case, it's a paper ballot, right?
Speaker:Then all of the paper ballots that we are given as a site, we then
Speaker:put it in, uh, a ballot carton, and it's sealed for that night.
Speaker:It immediately goes to, uh, we call it dart.
Speaker:Uh, I can't remember what DART stands for.
Speaker:It's something about recovery team like.
Speaker:It's something, um,
Speaker:But someone
Speaker:comes and picks that up.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Well, we, they, there's a
Speaker:location where all of the vote centers, um, in, in an area have a
Speaker:location that they, they go to dart.
Speaker:There's a van
Speaker:with multiple people in it at all times.
Speaker:All ballots have multiple people, um, with them.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:There's a van.
Speaker:That van, as soon as all of the sites in that area that are supposed to
Speaker:go to that, that location, that van then immediately goes to, uh, the ROV
Speaker:It
Speaker:peels out and does a little burnout and
Speaker:hauls,
Speaker:and it goes to the ROV and they report that they're leaving for the ROV.
Speaker:You know, when we, when, when our votes, when our ballots leave our
Speaker:site to go to dart, we call the ROV, we are leaving to go to dart.
Speaker:And then we're the, okay, we're
Speaker:you know?
Speaker:You know what I'm thinking of?
Speaker:I'm thinking
Speaker:of like the secret service with the president on my way to dart.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Well, that's what we do.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, and, um, Eagle is leaving.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:And then when they, when they gather all of the appropriate ballots
Speaker:from that area, then that then they are, then they notify, you know,
Speaker:uh, ROV, that they're on the way.
Speaker:And then when they get there, they, they, they do that and then they take each
Speaker:ballot carton is kept, all those ballots, whether they're mail ballots or, or,
Speaker:well, they're, uh, we call 'em a carry in ballot, meaning a ballot that was mailed
Speaker:to somebody, but they brought in and voted it in person, or it's a BMD ballot.
Speaker:They're all kept in that carton.
Speaker:Why does that matter?
Speaker:At some point that that carton is tallied.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, it, it's always after.
Speaker:It's always, once election day happens, they don't count the votes
Speaker:Oh, oh, sorry.
Speaker:Do you count how many are in that
Speaker:Thank Yeah, thanks for, yeah.
Speaker:So yeah, that's, that's part of the, that's part of the,
Speaker:the checks and balances.
Speaker:We know how many I.
Speaker:Uh, carry in ballots.
Speaker:People brought in, we know how many BMD ballots were printed out.
Speaker:We know it by which BMD, you know, how many ballots each BMD printed.
Speaker:We add all that up and we're like, we got 150 of these, we got
Speaker:120 of those, how many we have?
Speaker:270.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:So it's not possible for somebody to come in and put even one ballot
Speaker:and have all the numbers add up.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, certainly not possible for someone to put hundreds or thousands of ballots in.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:What, uh, so I would, one question,
Speaker:since you talked about adding ballots, what about not putting a ballot in?
Speaker:So that would be someone that sort of disenfranchised themselves,
Speaker:Oh,
Speaker:or sorry.
Speaker:Is there something, some check in the system to prevent,
Speaker:say, a poll worker acting
Speaker:Uhhuh?
Speaker:and not accepting a ballot from
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So, so the, um.
Speaker:Um, first off, I will say that the person accepting the ballots
Speaker:has no idea what's on the
Speaker:Mm-Hmm.
Speaker:right?
Speaker:They, they're, they're given a piece of paper and a privacy seat.
Speaker:They have no idea.
Speaker:Um, and the voter is watching them as they're handing the stuff, and
Speaker:so they're putting it in there.
Speaker:There are also processes where we, you know, we there, the, the first voter
Speaker:process where the voter comes in and verifies that the, that the ballot box
Speaker:is empty.
Speaker:We lock the ballot box.
Speaker:Then each voter that comes up, they're, they're watching us put
Speaker:their ballot in the ballot box.
Speaker:And, um, so I don't see how a vote, how a poll worker could get away with
Speaker:leaving one out.
Speaker:And even if they wanted to do that, they wouldn't know which ones to leave out.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:The other thing is also, I think you've told me before that the
Speaker:person checking someone in is different than someone in the back.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:It, it's a whole team, right?
Speaker:You got people checking people in.
Speaker:You got people doing, giving
Speaker:them the ballots.
Speaker:You got people ma managing the BMDs, and you got people
Speaker:managing the ballot box.
Speaker:And at all times there's, there's at least two people, you know,
Speaker:whenever there's ballots, right?
Speaker:Um, and so, yeah, so any, any, anything where the numbers would not add up would
Speaker:be glaring, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and then, so then all those go back and then they go into a carton
Speaker:and they stay with that carton.
Speaker:And each carton, they know that this carton came from this vote
Speaker:center, vote center number 1 53 from, November, whatever.
Speaker:Um, and they know how many ballots are in that carton, right?
Speaker:Then that carton is counted and those ballots go back in that carton.
Speaker:So it's
Speaker:always kept together, right?
Speaker:Always kept in that carton.
Speaker:Why does that matter?
Speaker:Because then at the end of the process, once all of the votes have been counted,
Speaker:And by the
Speaker:way, That's, automatic, right?
Speaker:The accounting.
Speaker:yeah, it is automated.
Speaker:Thank you for bringing that up.
Speaker:It is an automatic counting process, but here's the thing.
Speaker:We need to double check.
Speaker:That the, that the machines are doing, the computers that are doing the counter,
Speaker:that are doing what they're supposed to be doing, that they're not flipping votes
Speaker:like has been suggested by some
Speaker:people, right?
Speaker:We need to, you know, or they're not just making mistakes, they're
Speaker:not doing it maliciously, but they're just making mistakes.
Speaker:So you need a human check to the computer process.
Speaker:And so the way we do it here in San Diego is we take, and I think this is actually
Speaker:dictated by California law, and so each of the state or each of the counties
Speaker:is doing, um, this, you do a 1% manual
Speaker:check.
Speaker:So you take 1% of those cartons, you take that carton, you know, and they
Speaker:just go up randomly to the shelf and they grab up 1% of the cartons.
Speaker:They then, um.
Speaker:They sit around a table and you have one person reading the ballot, and
Speaker:then, then other people that are marking down tallies and then they
Speaker:have no idea what the count is.
Speaker:And they, they literally go measure by measure, uh, candidate by candidate.
Speaker:They say, who, who, you know this person voted for what?
Speaker:And then, uh,
Speaker:people num number up the tallies and then they check those tallies against
Speaker:the computer tally of that carton.
Speaker:And if there's anything that's off it sets up all kinds of alarm and could, if there
Speaker:were, you know, massive I irregularities, it would trigger a much bigger
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:And so just so people understand the scale in San Diego County, 1%
Speaker:of votes is approximately how many
Speaker:that's a great question.
Speaker:Hang on.
Speaker:So I just took a quick look and it was in the last election, 1.7 million
Speaker:votes were cast in San Diego County.
Speaker:And that doesn't mean, so it's the 1% check is 1% of the cartons,
Speaker:Lot of
Speaker:the votes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Not of the votes.
Speaker:So they take a look at the however many cartons that they have.
Speaker:They take 1% of those cartons that would come out to, did I
Speaker:get the math right about 17?
Speaker:Like if it was evenly distributed, it'd be about 17,000
Speaker:votes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And it takes several days, by the way
Speaker:to do that.
Speaker:because you, like you said, you're doing across the entire
Speaker:ballot for every candidate,
Speaker:for every measure or every position and every measure.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And all the
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And again, um, and that's done to ensure that the computers that
Speaker:are doing work for us are doing what they're supposed to be doing.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:One of the things I remember you had mentioned is you had talked about sort
Speaker:of wanting to know the process Right.
Speaker:And making sure, and I think you went and actually observed
Speaker:them counting the boxes, right?
Speaker:yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Um, by the way, we use the term cartons,
Speaker:boxes are a different thing.
Speaker:sorry.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:So it's a ballot box, ballot carton.
Speaker:These are two we, we use very specific terminology.
Speaker:Um, a ballot box is where you put your ballot in, and the carton
Speaker:is, is is where they're stored.
Speaker:Um, it sounds silly, but it's just,
Speaker:it keeps terminology right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, but anyway, what were you gonna say?
Speaker:so you went and observed, right?
Speaker:You
Speaker:went one year, right?
Speaker:And
Speaker:that,
Speaker:that, by the way, that's another thing that, that's amazing to me is that this
Speaker:thing is, is a hundred percent open.
Speaker:You can watch any part of the process.
Speaker:I had a voter in the last election who was very distrustful.
Speaker:Distrustful, is that the right word?
Speaker:Just she was not trusting the ballot, the, the election process.
Speaker:And I said, you know, you can watch it, you can come tonight, you know, at
Speaker:five o'clock when we close the poll, you can come and you can watch The
Speaker:way we tally the, the, the ballots.
Speaker:We don't tally the votes, but we tally the ballots to
Speaker:make sure that the numbers match up and everything.
Speaker:And then we, the paperwork and the chain of custody log and all that stuff.
Speaker:And, and then how two people will take it to dart.
Speaker:You can watch that entire process.
Speaker:You can then go to the ROV and you can watch them count the ballots.
Speaker:You can watch them do the mail-in ballots.
Speaker:You can watch 'em do the signature verification, right.
Speaker:Um, and yeah, so the, it's a hundred percent open process.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Yeah, so what I was describing up to this point is the in-person voting process.
Speaker:At the same time, the majority of voters aren't participating
Speaker:in that process at all.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So the majority of voters in California, I don't know what the actual
Speaker:percentage is, but I know it's the vast majority, uh, every in, in California.
Speaker:And, and I'm guessing they're gonna continue this.
Speaker:Every registered voter in California is sent a mail ballot.
Speaker:And this is where a lot of accusations have happened.
Speaker:And so, you know, we should talk about that process.
Speaker:People move in and people move out
Speaker:and, and people get mail.
Speaker:They get mail-in ballots for registered voters that no longer live in a location.
Speaker:So could they just turn those in?
Speaker:Short answer.
Speaker:Sure.
Speaker:Or mail gets stolen all the time these
Speaker:Mail gets stolen.
Speaker:Could they steal that ballot?
Speaker:That, that, that mail-in envelope, by the way, I'm looking over right now.
Speaker:Hang on, hang on one second.
Speaker:Welcome to the Preston household.
Speaker:Here are all the mail-in ballots.
Speaker:Mail ballot in my house.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Um, these are, these are all family members of mine.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Could I take every one of these ballots and then fill them out for the candidate
Speaker:and measures that I like, and then sign their name and send them in?
Speaker:Yes, I absolutely could.
Speaker:I would be committing a felony, number one.
Speaker:Number two, the, the challenge is on the backend signature verification
Speaker:because every single one of these ballots, uh, actually let me
Speaker:just, I shall open my ballots.
Speaker:So, you know, it comes in a, it's funny, I never even thought about doing
Speaker:this, but here's my mail-in ballot,
Speaker:did you cover
Speaker:your address?
Speaker:It's got my address.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Did you
Speaker:cover it from the YouTube video?
Speaker:uh, yeah, we'll see.
Speaker:We'll see how that goes.
Speaker:And then in this ballot, um, so I get a, I get a, uh, you know, instructions on what
Speaker:to do, and I get a, I voted sticker here,
Speaker:Woo hoo.
Speaker:And this is when I was talking about old school ballot.
Speaker:This is what I was talking about, right?
Speaker:This is the old school ballot, right?
Speaker:And this has, um, you know, obviously the presidential stuff as well as the
Speaker:local measures for my, um, you know, I got prop, prop five, prop four,
Speaker:prop three, and then I have this, this is the key to this whole thing.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:So on this ballot, I'll cover up some personal information on this ballot here,
Speaker:right is some numbers and a barcode.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:All of that.
Speaker:And it means that it's gibberish to me, but that barcode and
Speaker:those numbers are assigned to me,
Speaker:to this, this ballot, and me as a voter when I send in this ballot.
Speaker:Um, so, so a couple things.
Speaker:One is you, so every bo every ballot that is sent to a voter is tracked.
Speaker:And, if I fill out this mail-in ballot, and I put it in this mail-in
Speaker:envelope, when it gets sent on the other side, one of the things is that
Speaker:I have to sign it here and date it.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And then on the backend, there is a team of highly specialized people
Speaker:that I got to watch in detail.
Speaker:Whose job it is to verify these signatures.
Speaker:And they verify them against the signatures that they have on
Speaker:file with the DMV and the ROV.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:And they have a, a series of teams.
Speaker:One is a computer check, and, uh, you know, if it's like perfectly matched
Speaker:and then a computer could pass it.
Speaker:And then if it's not perfect, then it's actually a very small percentage
Speaker:that could pass through that.
Speaker:And then if it's not perfect, you have a, a series of teams of people
Speaker:who are more specialized and more
Speaker:experienced that they just pa they're like, I can't, I can't verify this.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Some are like really obvious.
Speaker:They just, they printed
Speaker:it instead of signing it.
Speaker:And it's very, it's obvious, but sometimes, and then at the very top of
Speaker:it, someone can reject a mail-in ballot.
Speaker:And when that happens, the voter that this ballot is, is, uh, you
Speaker:know, from, is sent a curing letter
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:I was gonna say, it's like special, right?
Speaker:It's not like, Hey, I'm just rejecting you Don't get to participate
Speaker:in the election at all.
Speaker:It's just we can't accept your current ballot.
Speaker:We will let you then.
Speaker:Then there's this
Speaker:Let you fix it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And they'll, they'll send you a, they'll send you a, a letter to say,
Speaker:you know, if, if this was your ballot, uh, and you intended it to be your
Speaker:ballot, you can sign this letter and you can either mail it to us or you
Speaker:can drop it off at a vote center.
Speaker:But the thing, really important thing to understand is that all of
Speaker:this stuff, it's all gotta work.
Speaker:It's all gotta match this idea that someone would magically pro, pro, uh,
Speaker:produce a bunch of fake things of these, these are all in a computer somewhere.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, so that you can't just produce a bunch of ballots and a bunch of mail-in
Speaker:envelopes and then send them in and then have signatures also on file.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You following
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, that's what I was just gonna think, because going back to my scenario
Speaker:that someone steals your mail, steals all the ballots in your neighborhood,
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:right.
Speaker:And they just put all the votes they want.
Speaker:The signatures matching, I think is the hard part.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:like there's, there's entire fields of of signature matching.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:I thought about a malicious way to do that, though.
Speaker:Maybe I shouldn't mention it.
Speaker:Go ahead, go ahead.
Speaker:So what you do is you pretend to be someone collecting
Speaker:signatures for some proposition or some measure to gain support.
Speaker:You walk the neighborhood, you collect all the signatures.
Speaker:Now you have the signatures of all the people.
Speaker:You steal all their ballots, and now you duplicate or copy
Speaker:their signatures onto the ballot.
Speaker:Yeah, that is a significant effort.
Speaker:Um, number two, I would say the, the possibility of you successfully producing
Speaker:all of their signatures is quite
Speaker:low.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And
Speaker:stealing all those ballots without
Speaker:Not to mention sealing all the ballots, not to mention how many felonies
Speaker:you've been producing along the way.
Speaker:And by the way, this is, I, I'll just throw out one of my favorite sort of, has
Speaker:nothing to do with the process, but one of my favorite reasons why I don't think
Speaker:that any, uh, you know, there's already been hundreds of investigations and they
Speaker:never found enough, you know, significant voter fraud that would've ever overturned,
Speaker:uh, any, you know, uh, election.
Speaker:But, but here, here's the Curtis Preston way of thinking.
Speaker:Um, have you ever tried to throw a, um, uh, a surprise birthday party?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Have, do you know how hard it is to throw a surprise birthday party
Speaker:to get 10 people
Speaker:to
Speaker:say anything.
Speaker:not say
Speaker:Curtis, just look at you.
Speaker:You could barely keep the secret about your floors from your wife.
Speaker:yeah, so it, it's a little silly, but.
Speaker:In order to throw an election like this, you need thousands of people to agree to
Speaker:commit multiple felonies, to throw your election, um, and then not talk about it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Not ever get a twinge of guilt and then turn you all in.
Speaker:Um, and there was one, um, there was one story, and again, this came out in,
Speaker:in talking to my, there is one story of one election in North Carolina in
Speaker:2018 where, um, some, it happened to be Republicans that were, um, that were
Speaker:busted doing some mail-in voter fraud.
Speaker:Now, having said that, most of it was just them violating, I, I know this
Speaker:is gonna sound weird when I say it.
Speaker:At first, all they did.
Speaker:For the most part was violate the laws on how ballots of
Speaker:mail-in ballots can be collected.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Uh,
Speaker:Oh, they were collecting it from people.
Speaker:They were collecting from people and then, and depositing them and, and I'm
Speaker:assuming that they would just collect them from people that they knew how they would
Speaker:vote.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:The North Carolina law requires two witnesses,
Speaker:and so they were faking the two witnesses and
Speaker:things.
Speaker:Now there were some, apparently there was some evidence that
Speaker:they also changed some votes.
Speaker:Um, and, and I, I, you know, that obviously all of this is wrong,
Speaker:uh, it did get discovered and they actually, uh, redid the election.
Speaker:Uh, but that's the only one.
Speaker:But what's interesting is it kind of proves my point that when you do something
Speaker:big enough to throw an election, you, you
Speaker:You're gonna talk about it?
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, but anyway, the, the, the, I think.
Speaker:That given the process, the mail-in ballot method is the most
Speaker:secure way that I can cast a vote.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:I can ensure that my, you know, the, the, I can either turn it
Speaker:in physically or I can mail it.
Speaker:And, um, the, the US mail system is also a, you know, an, an amazing thing.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Is it perfect?
Speaker:No.
Speaker:But, uh, a mail carrier friend of mine said once, you know, you do few
Speaker:things in life with the certainty
Speaker:that you, do when you, uh, with placing a first class envelope
Speaker:in the, in the mail system.
Speaker:And I'm like,
Speaker:that's kind of true.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you'll get notified when your ballot is received.
Speaker:You'll get notified when your ballot is, is counted.
Speaker:And, uh, and so if if that doesn't happen, you could, you
Speaker:could do something about it.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And the thing is that every single step of the process has
Speaker:all of these checks and balances.
Speaker:Also the people who, what do they call 'em?
Speaker:The election observers, right?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:So you are at any point.
Speaker:We had an observer today in training.
Speaker:By the way.
Speaker:That was the first that I've seen.
Speaker:Um, we had an observer who sat there and watched an entire day of training.
Speaker:And, uh, he was very interested and you can do that.
Speaker:You can go and watch, you can observe.
Speaker:There are two different types of, of, of observers.
Speaker:There are observers that are just observing the integrity of the process.
Speaker:There, there are also observers that are watching after a particular measure
Speaker:they're trying to get.
Speaker:So remember how I said people don't know how you vote?
Speaker:But they know that you did vote.
Speaker:You can at any time go up and find out.
Speaker:You can go to a polling place and you can find out who in
Speaker:this neighborhood has voted.
Speaker:And you can, you can, if you're a registered Republican
Speaker:or a Democrat, you can
Speaker:say what Republicans have voted, what Democrats have voted.
Speaker:And you can literally then go knock on the doors and say, Hey man,
Speaker:you, you know, you gotta come vote.
Speaker:Actually, I just wanna go back to something you said earlier.
Speaker:This idea what, and I, and I know I kind of said it already, but
Speaker:this idea of like, why are we, why are we so antiquated with paper?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:That seems antiquated, right?
Speaker:And I see people that don't know what they're talking about, or at least they've
Speaker:never talked to anybody that, that knows anything about the election system.
Speaker:Why is it that we're doing this with this, this antiquated, you
Speaker:know, we can put people on Mars.
Speaker:Well, not yet, right?
Speaker:We can put
Speaker:catch a rocket
Speaker:we can catch a rocket, we can have a rocket land and reuse
Speaker:and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker:We gotta have a car that drives itself, but we've gotta use paper to vote.
Speaker:What is wrong with that?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:I, I get that concept.
Speaker:Um, the, and the reason is that it can be audited.
Speaker:You can, at any time, you could go back if you wanted to, you could go back and
Speaker:re-litigate Gore versus Bush, right?
Speaker:By the way, many groups have, and every time that, that election was so close.
Speaker:That many groups have done it, and every time they do it,
Speaker:they get a different result.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Because they're doing a manual count, they're not doing a computer count.
Speaker:And there is the, the idea of the hanging Chad.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And by the way, just as long as we're talking about, and this is
Speaker:computer people, Chad is plural.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:It's like confetti.
Speaker:Chad is the stuff left on the floor after creating a punch card.
Speaker:There is no such thing as a Chad.
Speaker:Anyway, sorry, I digress.
Speaker:Um, the problem with that ballot, that was the butterfly ballot.
Speaker:Do you
Speaker:yep, yep, yep, yep.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There were people, I am convinced to this day that there were people
Speaker:that thought they were voting for one person and they actually ended
Speaker:up voting for a different person.
Speaker:But, you know, we gotta
Speaker:a pass.
Speaker:Exactly.
Speaker:That's the past.
Speaker:Um, and which is why we don't, we don't, we don't use those style of ballots.
Speaker:Um, those got thrown away a long time ago.
Speaker:So this is why paper's important at any time, if there's a question,
Speaker:if there if, if some people that run stats go, this is really weird.
Speaker:Why, why do the numbers look this way in North County San Diego?
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Let's look at every carton
Speaker:Because try to
Speaker:stuff the ballot
Speaker:from, from Curtis's Vote Center, right?
Speaker:And, um, they can look at those at every time.
Speaker:They can also then do fingerprint analysis on
Speaker:the pieces of paper that went through all the machines, right?
Speaker:Um, they can do, they can do all, all of these things.
Speaker:They can do that at any point.
Speaker:And those ballots get kept in that carton for a certain period of time.
Speaker:And they can do that, you know, as long as they need to do that.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, oh, I, I know where I was gonna go to go back to something that I said earlier.
Speaker:One of the problems.
Speaker:That that people have today is that we don't get the results
Speaker:on election night the way
Speaker:we used to.
Speaker:That is the only kind of downside to a significant amount of mail-in voting.
Speaker:Um, because processing these mail-in votes looking, those
Speaker:signatures takes a lot longer
Speaker:than the mail, than the in-person voting.
Speaker:while we have increased the number of mail-in pallets, we've always had them for
Speaker:like service spend who are abroad right.
Speaker:And right to make
Speaker:sure they don't get disenfranchised because they
Speaker:don't
Speaker:have the ability to show up out of a voting center.
Speaker:We've always had them and different states had different laws.
Speaker:California was one of the ones where you could, you could get a mail-in
Speaker:ballot if you just wanted one.
Speaker:Some states are very specific on the, who can get mail-in ballots,
Speaker:you know, you need to be unable to make a polling place or whatever.
Speaker:Um, and I, I just want to just speak to, I, I can't think of any issue that I
Speaker:have with the integrity of that system.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and the, um, the fact that all of the signatures are counted, the fact
Speaker:that, um, you know, and, and the, and those ballots are, are stored.
Speaker:Um, but it does have this downside.
Speaker:And by the way, I'll just speak to Pennsylvania in a minute.
Speaker:One of the one, one of the states that people bring up all the time is that
Speaker:Pennsylvania, it takes so long, right?
Speaker:Well, the reason Pennsylvania takes so long is they have.
Speaker:Unlike many states, they have a law that says you can't touch
Speaker:the ballots until election day.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:And so we've gone to a process whereby the ballots take a lot longer to process.
Speaker:And you still have this law from many years ago that says you can't
Speaker:touch the ballots until election day.
Speaker:And as a result, they, you know, they take a significant
Speaker:sit there.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And then back in 2020 there were, you know, there were, there, there was
Speaker:a big thing about how they're like, gee, because of covid we got so many
Speaker:mail-in ballots, and because of that, it's gonna pass a deadline that we
Speaker:set for counting the ballots.
Speaker:And so it went to the courts and the state Supreme Court
Speaker:said, listen, it's Covid man.
Speaker:Yes, we, we've had this massive increase of mail-in ballots.
Speaker:Basically when I look at it, their choices were, should we.
Speaker:Stop the process because there's a law that says, you know, we have to
Speaker:count by three days or should we count all the ballots?
Speaker:And
Speaker:the state Supreme Court said, we count all the ballots.
Speaker:because otherwise you're
Speaker:how you would've done anything different.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And so, you know, I just saw, I just saw a congressman today on, on the
Speaker:news referring to that and saying, you know, we'll see that, you know,
Speaker:they've gotta follow their laws.
Speaker:They followed their laws, right?
Speaker:They, they went to the state Supreme Court to see what we should do.
Speaker:And um, the state Supreme Court said, yeah, we should count the votes.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, and um, and I understand that, that we missed the old days when we
Speaker:knew the results on election night.
Speaker:But it doesn't, what's really important about this, it doesn't
Speaker:mean it has less integrity.
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:It just takes longer
Speaker:because we're doing it in a different way.
Speaker:yeah, and I think it's also important to note that it's not just mail-in
Speaker:ballots which have integrity, right?
Speaker:It's also if you show up in person and do
Speaker:your voting Right.
Speaker:everything in the process has all
Speaker:these checks and balances and has been fully thought through to make sure
Speaker:that your vote counts and there is no fraud.
Speaker:And one of the, one of the things that, um, well, let me
Speaker:speak to that for a second.
Speaker:There's fraud.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:There is absolutely fraud.
Speaker:I am sure that there is a person here and a person there that goes in
Speaker:and pretends to be someone else and votes for their, their wife who can't
Speaker:make it on election day or whatever.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Or
Speaker:votes for their girlfriend or whatever.
Speaker:Um, but, but, but in all the investigations that they found,
Speaker:they haven't found enough fraud that would, that would,
Speaker:change an election.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Here's my thing that I want to just, the, the, the thing that I always say
Speaker:to anybody who's concerned about the integrity of their election system.
Speaker:Go ask questions
Speaker:Go ask questions.
Speaker:Do one of two things.
Speaker:Go ask, go to your ROV and ask all the questions you want.
Speaker:Go to your local vote center.
Speaker:Ask all the questions you want
Speaker:or volunteer.
Speaker:or volunteer.
Speaker:Right now, I don't know how it is in other states, but in California because the,
Speaker:the vote system got, so we do multi-day
Speaker:voting in California.
Speaker:I'm gonna be running an 11 day
Speaker:vote center, right?
Speaker:By the way, the way it's gonna work is over 10 days, we're
Speaker:gonna get about 200 votes.
Speaker:And on the 11th day, we're gonna get another 200 votes,
Speaker:Yep.
Speaker:right?
Speaker:Um, IL's not a big place.
Speaker:Um, and most people are voting in mail-in ballots,
Speaker:but, um.
Speaker:I had a point with that.
Speaker:What was I saying?
Speaker:That if you
Speaker:yes.
Speaker:My, oh, my point is, because it's such a big process in California,
Speaker:it's a paid volunteer position, right?
Speaker:You get paid to go to training, you get paid while you're in as a poll worker.
Speaker:It's not, it's not the kind of volunteer position where you
Speaker:have to give a, a ton of time,
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And you get
Speaker:to learn about the system.
Speaker:and you get to learn about the system.
Speaker:You get to
Speaker:ask all the questions you want
Speaker:in poll worker training.
Speaker:Well,
Speaker:and this is one of the things, it's like with voting, right?
Speaker:Most processes that exist, it's kind of in secret, right?
Speaker:Like, like, uh, right.
Speaker:And with voting though, it's the exact opposite, right?
Speaker:Everything is open.
Speaker:Everything is open.
Speaker:You're allowed by law, you're allowed to see any part of the voting process,
Speaker:and you're allowed to question any part of the voting process.
Speaker:You know, go into your vote center and say, I've heard this or that.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:By the
Speaker:way, one of my biggest jobs as a site manager is to answer
Speaker:those types of questions,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:Do you remember Sharpie Gate?
Speaker:Use an example.
Speaker:Sharpie Gate.
Speaker:The, the idea was if you were, if you were, you know, um, Republican,
Speaker:you would go to vote and then people would, uh, hand you a Sharpie instead
Speaker:of an official ballot marking pin.
Speaker:It would cause your, the, the vote to bleed through to the other side.
Speaker:It would invalidate your ballot, right?
Speaker:Because, you know, when you look at these ballots, you know, there,
Speaker:there's, here, here's the ballot.
Speaker:I'll just talk about this.
Speaker:So here's the ballot, right?
Speaker:And so if I, if I write my ballot over here and I, and, and my,
Speaker:my thing bleeds through, it's gonna show up on the other side.
Speaker:But guess what?
Speaker:The things don't line up.
Speaker:Bullets, the, the bubbles don't line up.
Speaker:And so even if that happened, it wouldn't invalidate a ballot.
Speaker:That's
Speaker:never been the case.
Speaker:So Sharpie gate wasn't a thing,
Speaker:Now,
Speaker:now the one
Speaker:So ask those questions, right.
Speaker:And get answers.
Speaker:but I think though, the one thing people should know though is right.
Speaker:I know you've told me this, when you are in a voting center,
Speaker:right, you cannot wear clothing or ATI that represents a political party.
Speaker:You actually, you, you can represent a political party.
Speaker:You cannot represent a candidate.
Speaker:sorry.
Speaker:A candidate.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, you can put, you can put, you know, whatever.
Speaker:Vote red, vote blue,
Speaker:you can put that right.
Speaker:Vote Republican, vote Democrat, um, you know, vote 'em all out.
Speaker:You
Speaker:can put, you can put that in there.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, the, um,
Speaker:uh, vote.
Speaker:None of the above.
Speaker:What, and what you cannot do is have the name of a candidate or a measure,
Speaker:right.
Speaker:Uh, vote no on Prop
Speaker:37.
Speaker:You can't have that.
Speaker:That's called electioneering.
Speaker:and then the other thing also is don't be belligerent when you go into these, right?
Speaker:Don't be mean.
Speaker:Because they're all volunteers.
Speaker:They all want the process to work.
Speaker:They,
Speaker:you'll find people like Curtis who wanna answer your questions, but
Speaker:go with an open mind and be kind.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Be kind.
Speaker:Rewind.
Speaker:Um, there's an old, there's an old phrase.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so I, I, I do believe strongly in the, in the, in the American voting process.
Speaker:And I, I, and because I believe strongly in it, I investigated all
Speaker:of these claims and it's like, okay, the thing that you're saying isn't
Speaker:possible, like Sharpie Gate was, was one
Speaker:of them.
Speaker:The thing you're saying isn't possible and that when you, when you hear things
Speaker:about, you know, all these ballots, um.
Speaker:You know, being, like, one of the things that people like to talk about is they
Speaker:call it ballot harvesting, which is
Speaker:one person turning in another person's ballot and one person turning in
Speaker:hundreds of other people's ballots,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:Um, and the thing is, because, and, and again, different states have different
Speaker:laws, but in California, we don't care who drops off your ballot, we're gonna verify
Speaker:the signature that it, that it matches.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, and, uh, so in, in California, what is called ballot harvesting
Speaker:is legal, but again, we don't care,
Speaker:um, as long as the, the signature gets matched,
Speaker:but with, if you are submitting someone's ballot on that form or on the envelope,
Speaker:there is a spot for that person to
Speaker:sign as well.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:There, uh, where's my ballot?
Speaker:Yeah, that goes right here, right here.
Speaker:If you're the person dropping off somebody else's ballot, you put who, who you are
Speaker:and your relationship to that person.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Well, I, I feel strongly I want you to go vote.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, we're gonna put this out.
Speaker:You've got time.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I will say, I, I will say I like that California offers
Speaker:same day voter registration.
Speaker:And I think all states should do that.
Speaker:I think all states should do early voting.
Speaker:I think they should do whatever they can to allow people to vote.
Speaker:And, you know,
Speaker:However they
Speaker:the voting day is a, is a, is a is not a national holiday.
Speaker:It should be.
Speaker:And by, by the way, you know people, oh my God, you do Same day voter registration.
Speaker:And by the way, I get people coming up and say, Hey, I hear, you know,
Speaker:illegal aliens are voting, right?
Speaker:It's like, okay, you have to be a citizen to vote, right?
Speaker:And, and yes, you could walk up to our polling place because in
Speaker:California we don't have voter id.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, and, and I know we could, we could talk about that for 20 minutes.
Speaker:But, um, but what does happen is someone does have to check that ID and
Speaker:has to check their citizenship status before that ballot will be counted.
Speaker:It
Speaker:goes into a, uh, a conditional voter registration.
Speaker:It's a specific envelope, and that person's citizenship status and,
Speaker:you know, identification will be checked before their vote is counted.
Speaker:Um, and so if you're in a state that you, where you can still register and
Speaker:you're not registered to vote, do it,
Speaker:man.
Speaker:You know, if you don't vote, you don't get to complain.
Speaker:That's my, uh, that's my thing.
Speaker:And, um.
Speaker:Uh, oh, and by the way, by the way, just to, we could talk about this forever.
Speaker:When you do send in your mail-in ballot, it gets indicated in that system.
Speaker:And so if you then go after you've done a mail-in ballot, and you go
Speaker:and try to vote in person, the system will say, Hey, this person's already
Speaker:voted right?
Speaker:Or if you vote in person and then you try to send in your mail
Speaker:ballot, you only get to vote once,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:That's a basic concept that is enforced in many, many
Speaker:different ways.
Speaker:But, um, well, I hope you guys have, you know, I hope you've
Speaker:learned something and I, if
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:I've learned a
Speaker:else out of this, if you get nothing else out of this, if you want to have
Speaker:a better understanding of how the vote system works in your area, volunteer
Speaker:and, um, make a little money, uh, and learn a ton.
Speaker:Um, I mean, I know so much more about elections than I did,
Speaker:um, you know, before say 2016,
Speaker:Exactly, and I know I have learned a ton about elections from you, Curtis.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:we've talked quite a bit.
Speaker:All right, well that is a wrap.