All nations, empires, and kingdoms have struggled with this process. Finally, ‘we the people’ discovered that an orderly transfer of power from one group, person, or party to another depends upon a trust that has only appeared after the concept of one person, one vote. Only the fledging democracy developed in America fixed that concept into law, a law that has served us well and made the United States the most admired type of government in the world. But the concept of an orderly transfer of power through the ballot box demands a trust that all votes will be fairly counted, not usually, but every time. Since our struggle for independence and the creation of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, we have trusted the rule-of-law and the ballot box.
These two guiding concepts are intertwined. They cannot be separated. In the past decade, we have let the rule-of-law be ignored by personalities and organizations in the name of ‘forgiveness.’ ‘No real harm has been done’ and ‘everyone deserves a second chance’. The result has been that many of us believe there are really two systems of law: One for the rich and powerful and one for the rest of us.
Now we have a situation where the greatest crime in our history has been committed by one political party in what looks like a massive fraudulent election to give the radical left movement in America control of our nation. This crime either occurred or it did not.That is what lawful investigations are for. They determined if there was a crime. Then the courts and legislatures can restore the trust of the people in the election process. There is no other option.








