Shasta Becomes First California County to Kick Dominion Voting Machines to the Curb

Allegations that Dominion Voting machines were used to steal the 2020 election are going mainstream, causing many counties to rethink their voting machine contracts. On January 24, a Shasta County Board of Supervisors voted to terminate its contract with Dominion Voting Systems after next month’s special election in Shasta Lake. This makes Shasta the first of the 40 California counties that used Dominion machines to drop the company.

There is no official word regarding what Shasta County plans to use in place of Dominion machines, but it is not the first county to turn its back on Dominion. Last year, Williamson County, Tennessee, switched from Dominion machines to Electronic Systems & Software machines. And the year before, Lander County, Nevada, did the same thing.

Hacking democracy: A group of computer and election security experts is urging Georgia election officials to immediately stop using Dominion Voting Systems touchscreen machines. MyPillow ceo Mike Lindell is urging the entire nation to do the same. President Donald Trump has gone a step further by promising to end election crimes by returning America to same-day voting, voter identification and paper ballots if he is reelected president in 2024.

These are necessary steps to restore free and fair elections in America because any voting machine can be hacked. So while even liberal politicians like senators Amy Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden and Rep. Mark Pocan have pointed to the fact that Dominion Voting Systems is particularly scandal-plagued, any electronic voting machine company poses a threat to America’s constitutional republic.

War against the machines: When Barack Obama was running for president in 2008, he answered a question about how to prevent election fraud, saying: “Well, I tell you what: It helps in Ohio that we have Democrats in charge of the machines.” He was implying that Republicans would use those machines to rig the vote, so he was quite familiar with how voting machines can be manipulated. But now he insists that voting machines are trustworthy.

In “Ready for War,” Trumpet editor in chief Gerald Flurry noted: “[I]f you don’t get rid of the machines Democrats used to steal the 2020 election, you won’t win another election. … America’s power structures are terminally ill, top to bottom. The government agents are sick; the legislators are sick; the judges are sick; the media moguls are sick; the officials counting our votes are sick. Why did it take officials in Clark County, Nevada, nearly a week to count 50,000 mail-in ballots when it should take less than a day? They were looking for various ways to pad the vote!”

Learn more: Why do Dominion Voting Systems need to be investigated? Reference our infographic “The Tangled Web of E-Voting” and read our article “Voting Machines Back in the Spotlight” to find out.