Burke County, Florida held over six million votes on election night. Problem: there is no Burke County in Florida. Never has been. Florida has 67 counties and Burke isn’t one of them.
T runs a 60-person team called the Common Coalition—veterans, intelligence analysts, data scientists—and her Substack “This Will Hold” has been dissecting election anomalies since November. What they found in DDHQ’s data feed, the same feed that powers every network’s election night dashboard, should end careers: five counties that don’t exist in their claimed states, each holding votes like digital piggy banks.
Stafford County in Pennsylvania. Allen County in North Carolina. Oklahoma County in Michigan. Hamilton County in Georgia. All real county names—just not in those states. Familiar enough that nobody questions them in real-time. Invisible unless you’re looking.
T’s team documented Harris votes evaporating on election night: 989,000 gone in Michigan within 60 seconds. 795,000 in Wisconsin within three minutes. Where do vanishing votes go? Her theory: these phantom counties are vote banks. Storage containers. You subtract from one candidate, add to another, stay just above the recount threshold, and nobody audits what they can’t see.
Tuesday gave them fresh data. Tennessee’s 7th District hit 99.4% reporting—148,853 votes counted—and DDHQ called the race. Then 31,000 more votes appeared. Math check: 0.6% of 148,000 is roughly 900, not 31,000. T isn’t claiming the Republican didn’t win. She’s saying these numbers are forensically impossible.
DDHQ’s majority owner Scott Tranter ran data science for Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign. T isn’t accusing the company directly—bad actors could be piping through their systems. But Elon Musk’s fingerprints keep showing up. His low-orbit satellite network went live the week before the election under hurricane emergency authorization. At Mar-a-Lago on election night, he reportedly pulled out his phone hours before results, said “we won,” and walked out. Nobody’s seen him there since.
Meanwhile Admiral Frank Bradley sat behind closed doors on Capitol Hill today answering questions about the September boat strike that killed survivors in the water. Rep. Jim Himes emerged and called it “one of the most troubling things I’ve seen in my time in public service.” T served in the military. Her read: “We’re not at war. So it’s murder. Even if we were at war, it’s still murder. The Geneva Convention is very clear.”
Pete Hegseth’s response was posting memes of a cartoon turtle blowing people out of the water. Eighty-three dead and the Secretary of Defense is making jokes. The Wall Street Journal confirmed he told Admiral Holsey before pushing him out: “You’re either on the team or you’re not. When you get an order, you move out fast and don’t ask questions.”
An administration that treats votes as movable data and survivors as target practice isn’t governing. It’s consolidating.
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