Sep 10, 2024
Abortion Supporters Are Allegedly Being INTIMIDATED By Florida Cops
Florida residents who signed a petition to get Florida's abortion amendment on the ballot were allegedly visiting by cops.
- 12 minutes
New reports out of Florida
allege that Governor Ron DeSantis
and his administration are waging a war
against Floridians who signed a petition
in order to get Florida's abortion
amendment on the November ballot.
Now, there was a lot in the news recently
about this amendment
[00:00:17]
on the November ballot.
They did manage to get enough signatures
in order to put this issue on the ballot.
So the voters in Florida can decide,
hey, do we want to keep
a six week abortion ban,
which is effectively
a total abortion ban in our state,
[00:00:32]
or do we want to go back to the standard
that was set in place during Roe v Wade?
And so we'll see how it plays out.
But based on polling, it does seem poised
to pass, which is good news.
Now, nearly 1 million Florida voters
signed this petition to get this amendment
[00:00:48]
on the November ballot.
And in fact, the individuals
who organized this entire campaign
managed to submit an additional 100,000
signatures just for good measure.
They wanted to make sure they had more,
way more signatures than they needed
so it would qualify for the ballot.
[00:01:05]
Now, one of the men who signed
this petition is Isaac Menashe,
who y vividly remembers signing it
at a farmers market last year.
He said, quote, I'm not a person
who's going to who's going out there
protesting for abortion.
[00:01:20]
I just felt strongly and I took
the opportunity when the person asked me,
so, yeah, I'll sign the petition.
Then, according to him who spoke
to the Tampa Bay times for this story.
A plain clothes police officer
showed up at his home
[00:01:35]
to investigate potential petition fraud.
The officer allegedly asked him
multiple times if he was actually the one
who signed this petition.
And of course, Menashe decided to confirm
because he did sign the petition,
[00:01:50]
though the officer
was professional and courteous.
Menashe, who has had little interaction
with police in his life,
said the encounter left him shaken.
He told The times that the officer
who showed up at his door
had a copy of his driver's license
and other documents related to him.
[00:02:07]
Menashe says he does not recall
which agency the officer was with,
and this isn't a one off.
There are other examples as well,
which I'll get to in just a moment,
but it does raise a question right.
Is there a possibility that they're just
ensuring that the signatures are real,
[00:02:24]
or is this an intimidation campaign,
100% intimidation?
Here's why.
So normally what happens in when you
investigate this type of fraud?
If there was fraud, you first look
at the people who, were disqualified
[00:02:40]
because what happens in a signature
gathering operation is you always have
to collect, to in order to be safe.
Twice as many signatures as you need. Why?
Because they disqualify signatures
all the time at a massive rate.
Like when I was running for president,
we needed 500 signatures in Arizona.
[00:02:58]
I forget the exact number we got,
but we got way above 500,
and we didn't make it because they
disqualified a giant percentage.
Oh, you were missing a zip code.
Oh, you had this wrong,
you had that wrong, I can't read it, etc.
So when you're looking for fraud,
the first thing you would go to is
the disqualified signatures, because that
is much more likely to get you to fraud.
[00:03:17]
If you're trying to do an intimidation
tactic to intimidate the people
who actually legitimately signed it,
you go to the people who legitimately
signed it with a cop at the door.
Go, what do you sign this for,
Now, it's not the cops fault.
They say the cop was polite. Right.
[00:03:32]
It's the person sending the cop that's the
issue they're trying to say the next time
you vote for something we don't like,
remember, tell all your friends
a cop might show up at your door
and start questioning you.
And you might be in trouble
whether you did something wrong or not.
And you have to prove
that you're innocent.
[00:03:48]
You stay.
In one case, they have to call
up the friend who was doing the petition,
find out that the petition,
I mean, he had to go through
an incredible process to prove that it was
him and that he signed a signature.
There's already a process for this.
When you send the cops to do it,
it's clearly intimidation.
[00:04:04]
So I want more reporting on this.
So Tampa Bay times
isn't a joke publication.
You know, it's it's they're doing
straight news reporting here and they're
not really taking a position on it.
But we need to find out
what's really going on.
Because, again, he's not the only one
who came forward and said that, you know,
[00:04:21]
he had a plainclothes police officer
show up to his door.
There's another person,
a Lee County voter, Becky Castellanos,
who had a similar interaction with police.
She said that Florida Department
of Law Enforcement Officer Gary Marinelli
[00:04:38]
knocked on her door last week.
He showed his badge and gave her his card.
He asked about a family member of hers
saying that they could be a victim
of fraud, so the officer did not mention
what type of fraud was being investigated
until they were brought inside.
While Castellanos basically called her
family member the one who the officer said
[00:04:59]
might be a victim of fraud.
And then Castellanos basically said that
she felt intimidated and was surprised,
but not surprised when she learned
that this was about amendment four.
That's the ballot initiative
that we're talking about here.
The officer asked about the abortion
petition her relatives signed.
[00:05:15]
And she said that, she said that
that's that's what the officer was doing
and sent a picture of it over one number
on the date of birth appeared wrong,
a three instead of a two, she said.
But her relative confirmed
it was his petition that he signed
[00:05:33]
and the officer accepted it.
So in that case, it seems like there
was an error, like a I don't know.
No, no.
If it was a significant enough error,
they would have already taken it out.
This is on like, okay,
now we're coming and going okay.
So now we're looking into is significant.
Wait, if it's an insignificant error
or 2 or 3, etc..
[00:05:51]
Why are we talking about fraud?
This isn't fraud.
This is just putting down
a wrong number by accident.
Like are you trying like guys?
So there is different ways
that you investigate fraud
and what some of the local authorities are
saying is this isn't how you do it.
[00:06:07]
So that we it's not like we've
never thought of fraud before.
And petition signature gathering.
We have a whole process for it.
They've created a new process.
And so to give you a sense
of why this might matter, they they hate
this ballot initiative, not only because
it would basically legalize abortion
[00:06:27]
in Florida and they don't want that,
but it's also going to drive out voters
and they think they're going
to vote against Republicans.
Yeah, exactly.
And they are going to vote against Trump.
But even more so as some Republicans
that are in danger of losing their seats.
So they're trying to intimidate
not only people in the future
[00:06:44]
from signing petitions like this.
They're also trying to find any BS reason
to pull the petition off the ballot.
Okay. Yeah.
And the third reason, Sarina,
is that they if you go to minority
communities and you start sending in cops
and intimidating people,
[00:07:00]
that word spreads like wildfire
and they want it to spread like wildfire
so that then people are worried.
And then when Trump goes on stage
and says, now we should have cops at
the voting stations, that then reinforces
if you vote in a way that we don't like
[00:07:16]
or you sign a petition we don't like,
you're going to be in a lot of trouble
and we're going to try to use
law enforcement against you.
So that's and then they wonder, hey,
why do you call us fascists?
Because this is the kind of fascist
intimidation that people do that does
not belong in a democracy at all.
[00:07:32]
So let's go to graphic six here.
Just a few more details about this.
So it's unclear,
according to the Tampa Bay times, how the
Lee County voters petitions were flagged,
the Lee County Supervisor of Elections
office received a request from the state
for only one voters signed petition,
and Supervisor Tommy Doyle said it wasn't.
[00:07:53]
He wasn't sure why officers
were showing up at the voters doors.
So yeah, I mean, like, this is crazy.
I want to know
what's really going on here.
Why are why are cops showing up
at people's doorsteps and asking them
about their signed petition?
So as usual, we'll be principled here.
[00:08:09]
So I remember the loathsome
ballot measures back in 2004
against gay marriage,
and they put that in the swing states.
The Republicans did to try to drive
out voters to vote for George W Bush
and against John Kerry.
Unfortunately it worked.
[00:08:24]
In fact, that was the only popular vote
the Republicans had won at a presidential
level since the Berlin Wall came down.
So unfortunately, that worked
like a charm for the Republicans.
And they did it through driving hatred,
inequality and justice, etc.
But those were real ballot measures
that real people signed.
[00:08:42]
And if a Democrat said to me,
should we go send cops to their houses
and go, oh yeah, did you really sign it?
Maybe we should arrest you.
Oh, there's a two out of three. Okay.
I'd say no, no no no no.
If you have real evidence,
evidence of some sort of fraud,
[00:08:58]
of course I'm going to hear that out.
And we're going to use
our regular process.
But if you'd like to invent a new process
with no evidence at all
to intimidate right wing voters
because I don't agree with them.
No, the answer is hell no, because
this isn't about that particular issue.
As much as I hated that issue
back in 2004, it's about democracy.
[00:09:17]
Are we going to let people vote?
Are we going to do a real and fair
process, or are we just going to rig it
every time, depending on who's in office
through different bullying
intimidation tactics like this.
Yeah.
And Fox 13 also confirmed
that supervisors the supervisor's office
[00:09:33]
in Orange County, Florida,
said that state officials arrived
in person last week to examine signatures.
So you have, you know, officials
in specific jurisdictions within Florida
confirming that the state
had sent people down to examine
[00:09:50]
the signatures and stuff like that.
And and so, look, January 6th got a lot
of attention for understandable reasons.
Number one,
it's at the presidential level.
Two, they try to fake elector coup
to to go along with the riot.
But three,
there was a giant riot at the Capitol.
Of course, that's going
to draw a lot of attention.
But the way that most Republicans
usually cheat is before the election.
[00:10:09]
So what they'll do is they'll purge
voter rolls in Democratic areas,
but not Republican areas.
And then when you ask them,
they go, well, I mean, there's some people
who die, some people who move.
We have to purge the vote.
The rules that, yes, but there is
a normal standard way of doing that
And Brian Kemp and the Republicans
in Georgia have mastered this.
[00:10:26]
They're actually doing it again
this time around.
So they're wiping away
tons of Democratic voters.
And then when you go to vote,
they go, oh, sorry,
you got you're not on the voter roll.
You do a provisional ballot
or no ballot, etc..
And that's a way of cheating ahead of time
that Republicans have mastered.
[00:10:42]
Part of the reason they're so mad
at Trump for cheating afterwards is like,
you knucklehead, we got a perfectly
good way to cheat, and now you're making
a big spectacle out of it,
and they're going to dive into this,
and maybe they'll see
all the dirty tricks we use to get
rid of democracy and 8000 other ways.
[00:10:59]
So look, last thing is,
once the ballot measure is passed, which
is the purest form of democracy, right?
Ballot measures also have some issues
because they can be misleading.
There's tons of advertising
that goes into it, etc.
But overall popular ballot measures
are usually 9,080% of the time
[00:11:17]
progressive higher minimum wage.
Let felons who served their time vote.
Marijuana legalization,
abortion, pro-choice, etc.
We almost always win those money
out of politics, etc.
[00:11:32]
Then Republicans, they've done this in
Florida, they've done it in South Dakota.
They've done it in many states.
After you pass a ballot measure,
they go, nah, I don't think so.
You know what?
There was a two instead of a three.
There was this instead of that.
In South Dakota.
It was so brazen.
They passed a ballot measure
to stop the lawmakers from accepting
[00:11:51]
outright gifts from lobbyists.
The lawmakers then turn around,
invalidated a ballot measure
that passed overwhelmingly in a red state,
and then took a picture with lobbyist
gifts bragging about it afterwards.
They're rubbing your face in it.
This is how they destroy democracy.
[00:12:07]
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