He and his band of silly online whatever boy army, spread misinformation about voting in order to suppress Democratic votes and keep people from voting. It had nothing to do with Hillary Clinton.
But, please, go on with lying that it wasn't tampering with elections.
Sell this trash on Twit Town. It's a Nazifest, and #Elon will be sure to let you say whatever you want. Just pay that small man his money first so you can speak freely. ? ? ?
@GGMcBG what I find compelling is how they cannot prove memes prevented or intimidated persons from voting, but then again how would one go about proving that exactly? ?
@GGMcBG hey let's back this up a bit, nowhere did anyone promote confusing language, an article with varying degrees of interest was shared, again demonstrating that internet memes contributed to voter intimidation or suppression is the hurdle they can't seem to clear, as far as the trail is concerned it would seem that it starts exactly where it ends
I appreciate your honest reply after the ridiculous obfuscation language you chose to promote.
From Page 9 of the judge's decision:
"According to the Complaint, at least 4,900 people texted the number. (Id. at 'I 36.) Many of the unique telephone numbers to do so "belong[ed] to individuals located in the Eastern District of New York."