In
2021,
a
federal
judge
in
Michigan
sanctioned
Sidney
Powell
and
her
merry
band
of
dipshit
lawyers
for
docketing
bogus
evidence
that
they
had
not
bothered
to
verify
in
their
desperate
effort
to
overturn
the
results
of
the
presidential
election.
“It
is
one
thing
to
take
on
the
charge
of
vindicating
rights
associated
with
an
allegedly
fraudulent
election,”
Judge
Linda
Parker
seethed.
“It
is
another
to
take
on
the
charge
of
deceiving
a
federal
court
and
the
American
people
into
believing
that
rights
were
infringed,
without
regard
to
whether
any
laws
or
rights
were
in
fact
violated.
This
is
what
happened
here.”
Powell
and
her
team
got
dinged
for
spamming
the
docket
with
gobbledygook
“evidence”
of
fraud,
such
as
an
affidavit
about
an
unusually
cheerful
couple
handing
packages
to
the
UPS
guy
and
accounts
of
voters
casting
in-person
ballots
after
voting
by
mail
—
something
which
was
entirely
legal.
Republicans
are
now
gearing
up
to
do exactly
the
same
thing,
with
vigilantes
aiming
to
DO
UR
OWN
RESEARCH
their
way
into
proving
that
there
are
millions
of
illegal
votes
being
cast.
Here’s
Elon
Musk’s
pro-Trump
PAC
setting
up
an
online
repository
for
GOTCHAS.
And
one
of
the
first
entrants
in
this
game
is
a
guy
named
Cliff
Maloney,
who
left
a
group
called
Young
Americans
for
Liberty
under
dubious
circumstances
three
years
ago.
Maloney
is
now
running
something
called
“The
Pennsylvania
Chase,”
door-knocking
to
turnout
Republicans.
And
last
week
he
posted
what
he
figured
was
big
news:
a
convent
with
53
registered
voters!
When
it
was
pointed
out
to
him
that
convents
tend
to
have
multiple
individuals
residing
at
the
same
address,
he
insisted
that
no,
it
was
the
children
who
are
confused.
“Now
the
commies
are
coming
in
claiming
that
‘nuns
live
there’
or
‘you
idiot
just
google
it’
WRONG,”
he
huffed.
“Our
team
leader
spoke
to
the
one
person
there
and
they
claimed
‘NO
ONE
LIVES
HERE.’”
The
Benedictine
Sisters
of
Erie,
who
do
indeed
have
a
robust
online
presence,
responded
that
they
“take
no
issue
with
knocking
on
doors
to
increase
citizen
participation
in
elections”
but,
they
do
object
to
“claiming
false
information
as
true
in
an
effort
to
discredit
differing
views
or
affiliations.”
“We
want
to
call
Cliff
Maloney
to
account
for
his
blatantly
false
post
that
accuses
our
sisters
of
fraud.
We
do
live
at
Mount
Saint
Benedict
Monastery
and
a
simple
web
search
would
alert
him
to
our
active
presence
in
a
number
of
ministries
in
Erie,”
Sister
Stephanie
Schmidt,
prioress,
said
in
a
statement
published
online.
“We
also
want
to
alert
those
who
subscribe
to
X
and
other
social
media
platforms
to
be
vigilant
and
seek
additional
information
before
accepting
these
posts
as
truth.”
And
then,
when
reporters
from
the
Washington
Post
knocked
on
the
door,
the
prioress
invited
them
in
to
take
pictures
of
the
sisters
—
who
really
do
live
there!
—
at
chapel.
The
nuns
insist
that
no
such
interaction
with
a
door
knocker
ever
took
place,
but
Maloney
is
still
unwilling
to
back
down.
“If
the
53
people
registered
at
this
address
are
legal
voters…
then
I
encourage
them
to
participate
in
their
right
to
vote,”
he
sulked
last
night.
“Right
now,
we’ve
got
our
team
continuing
to
analyze
the
situation.”
All
of
which
is
hilarious,
or
would
be
if
millions
of
people
hadn’t
seen
Maloney’s
original
post
and
believed
it.
These
nitwits
are
already
trying
to
convince
their
supporters
that
there
are
millions
of
“illegal”
voters,
if
only
they
can
ferret
them
out.
And
no
matter
what
these
women
do
to
“prove”
that
they
actually
exist,
it
will
never
be
enough
for
Maloney
and
his
ilk
to
concede
that
they
got
it
wrong.
Odds
that
the
nuns
from
Erie
wind
up
in
an
affidavit
filed
by
some
Kraken-addled
idiot
in
Pennsylvania
court:
100
percent.
A
GOP
operative
accused
a
monastery
of
voter
fraud.
Nuns
fought
back.
[WaPo]
Liz
Dye lives
in
Baltimore
where
she
produces
the
Law
and
Chaos substack and podcast.