Sen. Raphael Warnock Wins Georgia Runoff Election
Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock beat Republican challenger Herschel Walker in Georgia’s runoff election on December 6, giving Democrats a majority in the Senate when the 118th Congress convenes in January.
After a large batch of ballots for Senator Warnock was dropped off late on November 8, the Georgia election was ruled “too close to call.” Warnock and Walker faced off again on December 6, and Warnock won with an almost 3 percent margin.
Radical candidate: Warnock’s win is a great victory for the radical left in America as he used to be a pastor who controversially defended Black Liberation theology preacher Jeremiah Wright. Wright was Barack Obama’s friend and longtime pastor, who famously accused the U.S. government of lying about or planting weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, intentionally infecting black men with syphilis, inventing hiv to kill black people, allowing the attack on Pearl Harbor, lying at its founding that “all men are created equal,” and repeatedly shouted, “God d—n America”—all in one sermon.
Warnock was also mentored by the late James Hal Cone, a black theologian who labeled white Christians racist and white Christianity as “the antichrist.” But apparently, he is a popular senatorial candidate in Georgia.
Bitter affliction: Many people believe the 2020 presidential election in Georgia was fraudulent. Data scientists from the Data Integrity Group found at least 30,593 votes were digitally removed from President Donald Trump and another 12,173 votes were switched to Democratic candidate Joe Biden. Georgia still uses Dominion voting machines, so these serious allegations of voter fraud have not been cleared up. In his article “Ready for War,” Trumpet editor in chief Gerald Flurry noted that “if you don’t get rid of the machines Democrats used to steal the 2020 election, you won’t win another election.” Until something dramatic changes in Georgia, its people can expect radicals like Warnock to keep winning.