
Trump’s Executive Order on Election Integrity: A First Step, Not the Endgame
This is yet another story we’ve covered and have been mocked for, seemingly by fine folks who don’t even read the articles. Perhaps because so many trusted “conservative” voices wouldn’t touch it and that’s who they chose to believe?
This story today is the latest in the warning we gave yesterday about popular “conservative” voices. If they weren’t being censored or shadow-banned, why do you think that is? This battlefield doesn’t involve only two tribes of media voices, and today’s topic of election interference–and more–is much more adequate in cautioning about this.
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We never wavered. Elections are rigged, if not fake altogether. And if those voices for four years were legitimizing Joe Biden as President of the United States, even if they disagreed with him on every front, they are part of the problem. They are part of the trick.
Donald Trump “winning” in November doesn’t change any of that. Even he is saying it, and more than anyone, he has zero to gain from presenting this reality and this battle to the American people.
Trump’s latest Executive Order on Election Integrity has lit up the political battlefield. The directive is bold, direct, and—to anyone paying attention—completely unsurprising. For years, Trump has called out the fraud, manipulation, and outright theft embedded in America’s electoral system. Now, with this executive order, he’s throwing down the gauntlet.
Trump’s order states a lot, and we invite you to read it in full. Here is the opening section:
Section 1. Purpose and Policy. Despite pioneering self-government, the United States now fails to enforce basic and necessary election protections employed by modern, developed nations, as well as those still developing. India and Brazil, for example, are tying voter identification to a biometric database, while the United States largely relies on self-attestation for citizenship. In tabulating votes, Germany and Canada require use of paper ballots, counted in public by local officials, which substantially reduces the number of disputes as compared to the American patchwork of voting methods that can lead to basic chain-of-custody problems. Further, while countries like Denmark and Sweden sensibly limit mail-in voting to those unable to vote in person and do not count late-arriving votes regardless of the date of postmark, many American elections now feature mass voting by mail, with many officials accepting ballots without postmarks or those received well after Election Day.
Free, fair, and honest elections unmarred by fraud, errors, or suspicion are fundamental to maintaining our constitutional Republic. The right of American citizens to have their votes properly counted and tabulated, without illegal dilution, is vital to determining the rightful winner of an election.
Under the Constitution, State governments must safeguard American elections in compliance with Federal laws that protect Americans’ voting rights and guard against dilution by illegal voting, discrimination, fraud, and other forms of malfeasance and error. Yet the United States has not adequately enforced Federal election requirements that, for example, prohibit States from counting ballots received after Election Day or prohibit non-citizens from registering to vote.
The words are strong and they get even stronger and more detailed as the document progresses. The intention is clear. But the execution? Is any of this enough? This is where things get complicated. And that doesn’t mean Trump doesn’t know that already, because I would bet the house that he does.
Remember, though, Americans are slow to do the work. Trump is challenging us to do that on other fronts, and it is likely he will be doing the same here. This Executive Order is not the end-all fix.
The Illusion of Sacred Voting
For decades, Americans have been conditioned to believe that voting is the single most sacred right in a democracy, or in (the term never used) “constitutional Republic.” “If you don’t vote, you can’t complain,” people will say. The State demands your reverence for the process, as if casting a ballot is some kind of sacrament in their civic religion. Heck, I even took that side in the debate among Catholics before this past election, even if the words were “choosing the lesser of two evils.”
There are Catholics who didn’t partake in the voting system not because it is a sham necessarily, but for other reasons I may not agree with that ultimately provided the same action I’m floating today.
The notion of not even partaking.
Think about it. What have these people actually done with the power that voting affords them?
Have they secured the border?
Have they saved our children from trafficking and Satanic rituals?
Have they stopped foreign wars?
Have they preserved the rights and freedoms of the people even during events like COVID-19?
Or have they systematically stripped away sovereignty, imported chaos, advanced a debt-slave financial system, all while amassing more power and more wealth for themselves?
Don’t let your answer be based on recency bias. The past matters.
When we compare the religious reverence for voting with the actual results of voting, it becomes clear: the ruling class isn’t interested in democracy or a constitutional republic. They’re interested in maintaining their illusion of legitimacy while keeping the people distracted. They want the people to believe they have say in all of this when in reality they have zero of it.
Zero.
The real question isn’t “How do we clean up voter rolls?” The real question is “Are voter registries themselves the problem?”
North Dakota operates without voter registration. You show up, prove your identity, and vote. No bloated registries, no phantom voters, no loopholes for ballot manipulation. So why hasn’t this been adopted nationwide, if the people we voted for care so much for us?
Because election fraud thrives where bureaucracy grows.
Trump himself has said it plainly: “We have fake elections.”
Read that again. He said it, not after he “lost” (didn’t lose). He’s said it after his “victory” and he keeps on saying it.
He’s said it now in the form of an executive order.
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Not “flawed” elections. Not “problematic” elections. Fake.
Not real.
How does a nation function under a system where its own leader acknowledges the process is fake, an illusion? If the elections are fake, then the people in power were not actually elected. And if they weren’t actually elected, then the entire system is illegitimate.
Nothing being done by them is legal or binding.
How far does this go back? Should we really be looking to state-installed officials to “fix” a system–a slave system–they were installed precisely to maintain?
Trump’s executive order is a great first step, but only in the sense that it injects onto the narrative battlefield the realization that the conspiracy theorists were right again. “Oh, Trump said it. We can believe it now and act like we were saying it all along.”
No executive order will “fix” elections at the state and local level. That work falls on the people themselves–just like the work needed to learn who JFK’s killer(s) were.
Trump said that too.
The Real Election Battlefield
The most encouraging part of Trump’s announcement is this: “Plenty of other items will be addressed in the coming weeks to end fake elections.”
This isn’t the final play, in other words. It’s the beginning of a larger push to expose and dismantle the fraud. And we must be a part of that process. Because ultimately, despite what the State religion tells us, elections are not the primary influence on the lives of Americans. Elections don’t shape reality—God does.
And when the people wake up to what’s really happening, no number of executive orders, bureaucratic roadblocks, or media gaslighting will be able to stop them. The influence and power will be felt–in the very mechanism that initially sent us to sleep on all of this in the first place–our gadgets. Namely, the internet. The weight of the people is being felt already in the digital battlespace and it will only intensify the more truth Trump dribbles out.
Moreover, there’s another layer to this—one that many still don’t want to face. It’s not just about ballot harvesting, mail-in fraud, or rigged machines. It’s about the external, unseen hands controlling the internal system itself. Read this November 2023 article for more:
“If I understand what you’re saying, that satellite can send the codes and change elections…”
That chilling statement suggests a truth so staggering that most Americans refuse to believe it. That’s where people like me all of a sudden become the conspiracy theorist again when we actually agree that the 2020 election was rigged.
Of course, a lot of you are onboard with all of this. You understand that such technologies are perfectly in the realm of possibility, of likelihood.
But the distrust is understandable. Cognitive dissonance is a powerful weapon our enemies use to divide us. The question so hard to handle is this: If military-grade cyber warfare is capable of altering election outcomes, then what does that say about every major election in recent history?
2024? Think down ballot. No one cared about that when Trump won. But do we realize how much one or two seats here and there matter?
2022?
2020?
2016?
Or just American history in general. Is any of this real?
It would force us to admit things similar to what the woke left has been saying about our history, and even though those two perspectives are completely different and come from two completely different motives, it’s just too much for some people. Our minds can’t go there. We refuse to even come close to saying the same things as the woke left. We like our tribes, our teams. We like knowing so many people agree with us and will agree with us forever…
Or until 2028 when it’s time to do this all again. Or 2026.
It is an uncomfortable possibility: If the levers of power are being pulled by people who were never on the ballot, then voting is nothing more than a stage play. And so much we have based our lives on, our conversations on, our family mythologies on–all a fraud (at least in our minds).
See, I don’t think it makes us fraudulent. I think it makes us human. I think it verifies exactly what Christ taught about how deceptive the enemy is and our intrinsic need for a Savior. I’ve learned to embrace the uncertainty and invite you to do the same. It actually confirms and bolsters my faith.
I’m too dumb for all of this. I need Jesus Christ to show me the way.
If America felt the same way, I believe we’d actually experience real change. That brings us back to a more core issue, perhaps even touches on the root issue of which Christ warns: What are we really being distracted from?
The Annunciation and the Restoration of Obedience
At the heart of this moment—beneath the noise of politics and deception—there is a deeper, more fundamental truth. The Feast of the Annunciation was yesterday, and we are currently inside the octave, a religious understanding and celebration lost on most all unto itself.
The world of Christ’s birth was corrupt, filled with wickedness and oppression. But God’s plan was not dependent on human rulers. He did not wait for Rome to “fix itself.” He did not demand that the Sanhedrin “clean up its electoral process.”
Instead, He chose a young Jewish girl in Nazareth.
“The great Roman world, we are told, was at peace. But the peace of the Roman world, what did it mean? It did not mean that sin was subdued, that passion was not raging, that lust, and anger, and hatred, and greed were not tearing the hearts of men and hounding them on against their fellows.”
“In the cottage at Nazareth the chosen maid was waiting, unconscious of the divine purpose, but prepared by the most wonderful graces to make the blessed answer on which the salvation of the world hung.”
The world at the end of Old Testament times did not need a political awakening. It was a misconception even Christ’s apostles took with them after his resurrection–a full three years after they met. That’s how engrained political, State mythologies can be. They were his best friends, and yet they still didn’t understand, not fully.
What the world needed was redemption of a different kind. It needed the Incarnation.
And now, in this modern world of deception, fake elections, and power-hungry elites, the answer remains the same: The world needs the Incarnation.
Truth is not determined by elections. Truth does not change based on the party in power. Truth does not bend to the corruption of men. And the Annunciation is the moment where Truth entered history in the flesh. It is the definitive answer to the lies of the world.
And just as Naaman had to humble himself—choosing the muddy Jordan instead of his own preferred waters—America, too, must choose humility. Not the false humility of bowing to corrupt rulers who fake their agreement with us in stories of boys in girls’ restrooms and the plummeting price of eggs, but the true humility of obedience to God and the Redeemer he chose to send.
If we want restoration in America, it will not come through executive orders alone.
If we want justice, it will not come from politicians, not even Trump ultimately. He’s 78, folks!
If we want real sovereignty, it must begin with obedience to Truth, capital ‘T’, not some fraudulent truth we celebrate because our guy or gal happens to show up on the electronic screen with a higher number on election day. We have to do it his way.
Trump’s executive order is a step—but the real battle is much larger. And it begins not in Washington, but in the hearts and minds of the American people. That is one all-important thing this octave of the Annunciation and this entire season of Lent can help us live.
LEJEUNE RECENT
May everyone named directly or referenced indirectly ask forgiveness and do penance for their sins against America and God. I fight this information war in the spirit of justice and love for the innocent, but I have been reminded of the need for mercy and prayers for our enemies. I am a sinner in need of redemption as well after all, for my sins are many. In the words of Jesus Christ himself, Lord forgive us all, for we know not what we do.