🇺🇸RealRobert🇺🇸@Real_RobN
Well, here it is:
It turns out that Democrats are not only conspiring with NGOs on illegal immigration, but they are also conspiring with NGOs to sabotage elections:
Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson says voter data is a state secret—yet not only is she giving the data to NGOs, she is also paying them. All at the taxpayers’ expense.
Once ERIC gets the voter data, it sends it out to another nonprofit called the Center for Election Innovation & Research, or CEIR.
The link between ERIC and CEIR is David Becker, a liberal racketeer and their founder.
It gets worse—much worse:
In 2020, Becker’s CEIR bribes Jocelyn Benson through her own nonprofit with $12 million on the eve of the election.
The rest is history: welcome to November 3, 2020—the day your government was overthrown.
So you see, non-governmental organizations are effectively government-funded terrorist organizations—a racket empire the U.S. Congress has created.
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Now, David Becker is the Executive Director and Founder of the Center for Election Innovation & Research (CEIR), while Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, funneled a $400 million grant to CEIR in 2020 to effectively overthrow the U.S. government.
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In 2020 Jocelyn Benson’s Nonprofit Was Broke, Then Came the Zuckerbucks
Jocelyn Benson’s election nonprofit, the Michigan Center for Election Law and Administration, rarely raised much money—often under $50,000, requiring only a simple IRS postcard.
That changed in 2020, when the nonprofit received a $12 million bribe from the Center for Election Innovation and Research—funded by Mark Zuckerberg—to “fortify the 2020 election” with mass mail-in voting while they kept a fucking vegetable in a basement.
Founded in 2010 while Benson was running for Michigan Secretary of State, the nonprofit largely existed to boost her reputation as an “election expert.” She lost the 2010 race, but by 2018 was elected Secretary of State, leaving the nonprofit behind.
In 2020, the nonprofit and Benson teamed up again—this time with Benson in government—receiving little scrutiny for potential conflicts of interest. Michigan Public Radio described the effort as a “statewide non-partisan initiative” to help voters safely cast their ballots during the pandemic.
The $12 million grant was part of broader “Zuckerbucks” funding. Through other nonprofits, millions more were routed to local election officials for supplies, staffing, and absentee ballot outreach. Time Magazine later described it as essential for overhauling election infrastructure amid a pandemic, and NPR claimed the donations had “saved” the 2020 election.
Attempts to stop private funding or ban Zuckerbucks in Michigan went nowhere. Now, as Benson runs for governor in 2026—an election she will oversee as Secretary of State—the nonprofit remains dormant, ready to spring back with another bribe, effectively overthrowing the state government of Michigan.