
Disclaimer: This article may contain the personal views and opinions of the author.
Arizona has been doing its best by taking action for election integrity. Surprisingly, Michigan may follow suit. Despite all their desperate attempts, Democrat Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson’s efforts to get a lawsuit dismissed was denied on Thursday.
The Public Interest Legal Foundation (PILF) filed a suit in November against Benson’s office for not removing deceased registrants from the voter rolls. The PILF claimed that their analysis found 25, 975 dead Michiganders registered to vote.
The First Light reported:
Beckering wrote: “PILF has alleged that over 25,000 deceased registrants remain on Michigan’s [Qualified Voter File] and that thousands of these registrants have remained on the active rolls for decades.”
She added that they gave this information to Secretary Benson, who, for over one year, ‘did nothing about it,’ regardless of the mandates of the NVRA and Michigan’s Election Law. The actual allegations, accepted as true, reasonably give rise to an entitlement to relief under the NVRA.
According to PILF’s claim, Michigan violated Section 8 of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993. The Act required officials to conduct a general program that would make reasonable efforts to remove ineligible voters’ names.
Speaking of ineligible voters in Michigan, conservative comedian and commentator Steven Crowder has made plenty of comments regarding his former home in Michigan.
In a previous Raging Patriots post:
“Okay, Big Tech wants to play?” Crowder posted Tuesday before the stream. “Today I present dozens of non-existent voter addresses that I’ve verified MYSELF. From Michigan to Nevada. Empty lots etc. I’ll include pictures and a current newspaper as confirmation. It goes down today.”
“DOZENS of voter names, addresses, and pictures proving they don’t exist. Period,” he said in a follow-up post.
This set of tweets led to Crowder’s one of many suspensions regarding Big Tech. His most recent suspension was from Youtube.
Youtube told Crowder:
“Content that advances false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches changed the outcome of the U.S. 2020 presidential election is not allowed on YouTube.”

Crowder wasn’t even the one who mentioned voter fraud. It was because of his interview with Kari Lake, the future Governor of Arizona, for suggesting that she wants election integrity in her own state. She indicated that there were voter discrepancies in a primary she won. According to Youtube, that was misinformation, even though it’s coming from the election’s victor.
But talking about election fraud in 2016 is a different story.
Unfortunately, Big Tech is coming out in full force due to the midterms. Meta even stated:
“We’re focused on preventing voter interference, connecting people with reliable information, and providing industry-leading transparency for ads about social issues, elections, and politics.”
High Inflation, gas prices, and the IRS having special agents are a few things that will be censored, all in the special interest of keeping the population informed.
While it is nice to see that Michigan is moving in the right direction, the war against Big Tech censorship is the bigger problem.

