AWEB Holy Bell
3.2K posts






@BryanUm68731 WOOL-BO 가 아니었을까 싶네요. 눈이 퉁퉁 부었어요. 왜일까요?....

여러분! 2-5친구들이 “부정선거 AWEB(에이웹)” “한미공조 수사해!!!” 로 구호를 알려줘서 열심히 외치다 왔어요! 다들 어떻게 생각하세요?!🇰🇷🇺🇸

U.S. taxpayer dollars, USAID, A-WEB, and Smartmatic's push into South Korea's elections are funding a web of global election fraud. This blueprint mocks the CIA's Project Gladio but targets elections for regime change operations worldwide. In 2014, Smartmatic showcased its touchscreen voting machines, electronic ballots, voter authentication tools, and tallying devices at the Association of World Election Bodies (A-WEB) event in Seoul, South Korea. Attendees from over 32 countries, including China, Iraq, and Russia, witnessed the demo timed with South Korea's June 4 local elections. Smartmatic boasted "end-to-end" automation successes in the Philippines and Venezuela. But this was no innocent expo. It connects South Korea, Venezuela, China, U.S. taxpayer funds via USAID, A-WEB, and shady firms like Dominion and Miru Systems. This exposes how American money fuels regime change and stolen elections worldwide. Smartmatic's fraud legacy started in Venezuela, supplying electronic voting systems since 2004. It powered Hugo Chávez's 2004 recall referendum amid fraud accusations. In 2017, Smartmatic admitted Venezuela's election turnout was inflated by at least a million votes under Nicolás Maduro. They publicly condemned the manipulation and "exited," but their software reappeared in later votes. U.S. investigations revealed Smartmatic bribed Venezuela's top election official with a luxury home for contracts. This rigging blueprint has been exported globally. A-WEB, founded in 2013 and headquartered in Songdo, South Korea, claims to promote election integrity. Yet, Smartmatic's 2014 presentation attracted authoritarian regimes like China and Russia, turning it into a hub for fraud and corruption. South Korea's Miru Systems, faces controversies abroad. It caused tech failures in Iraq's elections, smudged voter IDs and missing names in Congo's $1B poll (sparking riots and fraud claims), and irregularities in the Philippines despite red flags. Zambia eyes Miru for 2026 despite its tainted history. China's influence is global. Reports link Chinese ties to Smartmatic and Dominion via Venezuela, with allegations of hardware or software backdoors for meddling with server connections worldwide. China's attendance at the 2014 A-WEB event aligns with its export of surveillance tech, voting systems are the target. South Korea's proximity and trade ties amplify risks of foreign interference, echoing U.S. 2020 fraud claims. U.S. taxpayers fund this via USAID, with over $35B in FY2024 funding for global "election assistance," legislation, voter education, and tech support. This is a slush fund for regime change, influencing outcomes and propping up pliable governments. USAID links to Smartmatic-style projects, with funds flowing to A-WEB and similar groups under the guise of "exporting democracy." In Venezuela, USAID's push overlaps with Smartmatic's bribery scandals. In the Philippines, Smartmatic faced charges (a co-founder indicted, fled to the U.S., became a fugitive), yet convinced a Texas county to use its equipment, flipping it from red to blue. Dominion Voting Systems, Smartmatic's "sibling," faced similar scrutiny in the 2020 U.S. election over Venezuelan-Chinese links and vote-flipping via Smartmatic software, stealing the election from President Trump. Whistleblowers testified to direct connections. Both firms endured U.S. bribery probes. Smartmatic sued networks over fraud allegations. The big picture? A global fraud cartel, Smartmatic, Dominion, Miru, enabled by A-WEB, USAID, and global communists, spans Venezuela's rigged referendums to Congo's chaos. This is twisting "democracy" into infiltration. Taxpayers foot the bill for their own demise. Demand change before the next election disaster. This isn't innovation, it's infiltration in order to install communist regimes worldwide. Period.























