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In 2020, the Covid pandemic burst upon the scene and kicked off a series of state and federal guidelines that would change the United States forever. Whether it was mask mandates or vaccination requirements, perhaps the most critical change that took place four years ago was the implementation of widespread mail-in voting.
Voting by mail was considered a “safe” alternative to voting at the polls during the presidential election of 2020, but critics of the practice have widely claimed that it facilitated widespread voting problems.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, for example, has openly criticized mail-in ballots as “completely unreliable” because of how difficult it is to track the source behind them.
He explained to Tucker Carlson last fall, “I know that mail-in ballots are completely unreliable…when they say you can’t prove voter fraud, they are right…when you change it to mailing it out to everybody – we have no idea – we have no idea who’s voting.”
In the wake of the Covid pandemic, Americans are warier and wiser, and they don’t trust their election processes anymore. At least 56 percent of Americans believe that cheating is likely to affect the outcome of the 2024 presidential election, and 31 percent think it’s “very likely,” according to recent data from Rasmussen.
Amidst these sobering statistics, it can be little wonder that news of another potentially deadly “pandemic” may stir up suspicions among Americans who have lived through the mass media hysteria surrounding Covid-19.
According to Politico, a strain of avian influenza has cropped up in American dairy cattle, sparking fear that it could mutate and spread to humans. The federal government has responded to this alleged risk by announcing that they will spend millions of dollars to “contain” the outbreak by doling out money to farms to assist in developing biosecurity parameters and effective contaminated milk disposal.
And, in an echo of Covid-era protocol, the FDA and CDC will also direct funds toward “testing and tracing efforts among workers and others exposed to the virus.”
According to CBS News, 70 workers between two Colorado dairy farms were recently exposed to the virus, but no signs of infection have been reported at this time.



