The government is finally admitting serious software vulnerabilities in the voting machines
America’s Top Cybersecurity Agency Admits Voting Machines Are Hackable
The Trumpet reports:
Eighteen months after former United States Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency Director Chris Krebs called the 2020 presidential election “the most secure in U.S. history,” the government is finally admitting serious software vulnerabilities in the voting machines used in many states. In an advisory published on June 3, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency identified nine flaws in Dominion Voting Systems software.
Specifically, this advisory warns that Dominion voting software is vulnerable to manipulation by those with physical access to the voting devices or access to the Election Management System. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency maintains that these vulnerabilities are chinks in the armor of voting software that need to be repaired. Yet it stresses that there is no evidence that these chinks were exploited in the 2020 election.
But others disagree. Peter Navarro, former adviser to President Donald Trump, authored a three-part report on election theft that chronicled 136,155 voting machine irregularities in Georgia, 195,755 in Michigan, and 143,379 in Wisconsin. These digital spikes exceed Joe Biden’s victory margin in each state, so it is incredibly reasonable to suspect that Georgia, Michigan and Wisconsin were stolen from President Trump via hacking. Such theft would be in addition to the 5 million illegal mail-in ballots in Atlanta, Detroit, Milwaukee, Philadelphia and Phoenix that Dinesh D’Souza’s documentary 2,000 Mules exposes.