Jack Posobiec of Human Events and his wife Tanya Posobiec discussed the recent revelation that Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel has criminally charged 16 senior citizens for alleged alternative elector efforts in the wake of the 2020 presidential election.
The 16 individuals face eight felony charges, including election law forgery, conspiracy, and uttering and publishing.
Posobiec named the individuals involved, adding that “every single one of them [is] a senior citizen who has just been charged with election fraud, forgery, [and] conspiracy to commit uttering, conspiracy to commit election forgery, five-year felonies, 14-year felonies, alleging fraud, submitting alternate ballots, alternate electors in 2020.”
“This is a legal strategy that has been used by multiple campaigns in the past, actually used in the 1960 election. Democrats have used this, Democrats like John Podesta and the election integrity project have discussed doing this.”
Posobiec asked his wife, Tanya, who was born in the Soviet Union, if this sounded “like something you would hear in the United States of America?”
“When I first got here, I would never [have] imagined that certain crimes of this level would be attributed to the senior citizens,” Tanya said. “When I look at the list, I see American patriots, I see somebody’s grandfather. I see somebody’s grandmother, mom, sister. You see those people being put through this turmoil in the sunset of their lives, if I may say so. It’s very heartbreaking.”
Posobiec questioned where the “democracy” and “freedom” was for these citizens. “They wanted to take part in an electoral challenge, a constitutional challenge, a legal challenge, and they’re being criminalized for that challenge.”
“You don’t have a right to ask questions. You don’t have a right to say you disagree. You don’t have a right to redress your government with grievances.”