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Texas Voter Says Level of Fraud Denial Is ‘Almost Comical’

Pair Sentenced for Nebraska Pharmacy Fire Bomb Plot

ALEXANDRIA鈥擜 Nebraska pharmacist was sentenced Friday to nine years in prison and a Maryland drug dealer to 14 years for a convoluted plot to firebomb a competing pharmacy so they could divert more prescription narcotics to the black market. William Burgamy, 33, of Hanover, Maryland, and Hyrum Wilson, 41 of Auburn, Nebraska, each pleaded guilty to their respective roles in the conspiracy earlier this year in federal court in Virginia. Federal agents arrested Burgamy in April and charged him with running a website on the internet black market called NeverPressedRx that sold hundreds of thousands dollars’ worth of illicit drugs. After his arrest, authorities discovered the firebomb plot to destroy the rival pharmacy so Wilson’s operation, Hyrum鈥檚 Family Value Pharmacy, could increase its business. The pair figured the increased volume…

Texas Voter Says Level of Fraud Denial Is ‘Almost Comical’

AUSTIN鈥擲ue and her husband have been passing out copies of the Constitution at rallies protesting election fraud recently.

“We can’t vote without this,” she said at a Stop the Steal rally in Austin, Texas on Nov. 21, 2020. “We recently just bought another thousand because we ran out.”

“I want everybody to have a copy of the Constitution and read it and value it,” she said.

Sue is glad to see people protesting for their rights at these rallies across the nation. She believes every election has some level of fraud, but the difference is this time it was widespread, blatant, and demands redress.

“It was amazing that there was so much propaganda out instantly that ‘there was no fraud,’” she said. “There’s never been an election without fraud! Voting the graveyard is not a new term, they cheated when Jefferson ran.”

“It is almost comical how many lies are being said by the mainline media, just come on,” she said. “To tell me there’s no voter fraud? You must be lying.”

“With the electronic technology we have now, stealing is easier and easier,” she added, saying there should be stricter security with identification.

Sue added that she supports President Donald Trump because she is pro-life, and believes most Americans voted for the president because the push for socialism ultimately will not be successful in America. Many have tried, she said, but it doesn’t work. She often meets people from other countries who have already experienced socialism and communism, and they spread the word, with clarity, of its failures.

“Here last week there were people from South Vietnam,” she said. She met one man who “was a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, he loves America, because Americans freed him.”

“The foreign countries know that communism doesn’t work, it’s like universal healthcare, it doesn’t give you better healthcare, it just degrades healthcare. It may be cheap, but so is a five cent cigar, but I wouldn’t smoke it,” she said.

Sue has done a lot of traveling to neighboring states recently, especially cities that supposedly voted for Joe Biden by wide margins, but she says she sees many Trump signs there, and hardly any signage for Biden.

She also said there was a need to protect the electoral college, because big cities that are out of touch with the majority of the country shouldn’t be running the elections. She’ll hear politicians say: Why should the farmers have to work? “Gee, I wonder what she had for breakfast,” she said.

“Keep optimistic, God is in control.”

Focus News: Texas Voter Says Level of Fraud Denial Is ‘Almost Comical’

Irvine-Based Taco Bell Foundation Awarding $7.5 Million in Annual Scholarships

The Taco Bell Foundation, based in Irvine, California, has started accepting applications for its annual Live Más Scholarship program for students enrolling in higher education. The foundation is offering more than $7.5 million to youth from 16 to 26 years old, with $2 million reserved for Taco Bell employees. This is the sixth year the organization has offered the scholarships to students. To apply, students must submit two-minute videos that describe their passions and how they plan to pursue them. The foundation website asks applicants, “How do you plan to use your passion to uniquely make a positive change in your community or the world? How will your education help enable you to pursue your passion and make a change?” The applicants must be legal residents of the United States,…