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isbadawi | 5 years ago

These aren't accusations of voter (or election) fraud in the same sense as was being claimed for 2020. From your second link:

> During the tour's stop Friday in Seattle, Clinton pointed to FBI Director Christopher Wray's warning last month that Russia continues to pose a "very significant counterintelligence threat" and that efforts to influence U.S. elections with "social media, fake news" and "propaganda" has "continued pretty much unabated."

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walkedaway|5 years ago

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isbadawi|5 years ago

It's fine to take issue with charged language like the word "stolen", which can be interpreted in different ways; maybe you interpret that as "I won the vote count but the votes were changed", but it could also be reasonably interpreted as "I lost the vote count but I'm concerned people were influenced to vote that way through nefarious means".

I think there is a reasonable distinction between that statement and the specific claims of fraud we have been seeing for the last few months.