TheSCIF's x posts
The shadow players of the global election fraud cartel are tied to Korea's National Election Commission (NEC) and its founded Association of World Election Bodies (A-WEB), funding and executing election fraud operations through exported electronic voting systems globally. A-WEB, funded by Korean taxes since 2013 with heavy U.S. USAID connections, promotes these technologies in developing nations, but they've sparked controversies wherever deployed. A key player is Miru Systems, who secures massive contracts, often leading to rigged outcomes, protests, and overturned results. In countries like Iraq, DR Congo, and Kyrgyzstan, Korean-made tabulators and servers triggered riots, warehouse explosions, and massive fraud allegations. For instance, Iraq's 2018 election saw a warehouse blast and flipped winners post-recount, while Congo's $160M deal fueled deadly unrest and bribery probes. Similar patterns emerged in Kyrgyzstan's 2020 vote, invalidating results amid corruption claims. Domestically, Korea's 2020 election mirrors these issues with anomalous stats, hackable tech, and evidence tampering suspicions. This same technique is happening in over 100 countries around the world, including the U.S., with systems from Dominion, Smartmatic, ES&S, Hart InterCivic, Clarity, Scytl, along with many others. Critics demand international probes, highlighting NEC-A-WEB ties and foreign influences, urging scrutiny of these "democracy exporters" turned potential fraud enablers.