This article by Miles Mathis, published on July 10, 2024, discusses the passage of the SAVE Act by the House of Representatives and its subsequent move to the Senate. The act requires voters to prove their citizenship, a seemingly basic requirement that the author finds astonishing is only now being debated 250 years after the United States’ founding. Mathis argues that the 14th Amendment already establishes that only citizens can vote, and the debate is merely about the necessity of proving citizenship. He criticizes the Democrats’ argument that requiring proof of citizenship is inconvenient and could suppress voting, contrasting it with the rigorous identity checks required for air travel and jury duty. The author contends that the government already possesses extensive data on individuals, making the idea that voter rolls are not connected to these systems absurd. Mathis suggests that this debate is a distraction, a form of “voting theater,” designed to facilitate election fraud by claiming accidental counting of non-citizen votes. He believes this debate highlights the dishonesty of those in power and that elections are being and will continue to be stolen, regardless of a candidate’s approval rating, referencing a quote attributed to George Bush I. The author concludes by making a veiled, potentially antisemitic, remark about “Phoenicians” and “pyromania.”

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