Rigged by Design
RIGGED BY DESIGN Episode 25 — Show Notes Aired: June 18, 2026 Episode 25 began with a question that emerged from a conversation between T and Zee last week: What if the tabulators aren’t where the manipulation occurs? That question became the foundation for the entire episode. Joined by T from This Will Hold [https://substack.com/profile/315023719-this-will-hold], the discussion explored a growing debate within election integrity circles about where investigators should focus their attention. While much public discussion centers on voting machines and tabulators, T argued that researchers may need to examine what happens after votes leave the precinct level and move through aggregation systems, election management software, reporting databases, and certification processes. The conversation opened by examining the difference between tabulation and aggregation. Rather than focusing exclusively on whether individual voting machines function correctly, attention shifted toward the broader chain of custody that election data follows on election night. Viewers were introduced to the concept of election reporting systems, election management systems, vendor databases, and the layers that exist between casting a ballot and final certification. One of the central themes of the episode was how research evolves when new information becomes available. T explained that her team originally believed irregularities could be explained through tabulation-level manipulation. Over time, however, their research led them toward what they describe as upstream systems. The discussion emphasized the importance of remaining willing to change conclusions when new evidence challenges previous assumptions. Rather than treating earlier findings as mistakes, the conversation framed them as part of an ongoing investigative process. A significant portion of the episode focused on the team’s analysis of what they describe as vote banks and recurring data patterns appearing across multiple states. Florida, Michigan, and Georgia were discussed as examples where researchers identified numerical patterns they believe deserve additional scrutiny. The conversation explored how researchers look for repeated variables, matching totals, and unusual relationships within election data when attempting to understand whether reported outcomes align with expected voting behavior. The discussion also highlighted the role of Election Truth Alliance (ETA) and other independent researchers. Rather than presenting competing explanations, the conversation emphasized that different groups may be examining different layers of the same election process. ETA’s statistical analyses of down-ballot anomalies and turnout patterns were discussed as important pieces of a larger puzzle, while T described her team’s focus on reporting systems, aggregation layers, and election-night data movement. That distinction naturally led into a conversation about voter fraud versus election fraud. While voter fraud generally refers to actions taken by individual voters, the discussion focused on broader questions involving election administration, reporting systems, aggregation processes, and certification. Participants noted that public debate often collapses these concepts together, making it difficult to discuss systemic questions without immediately defaulting to discussions about individual voter behavior. Attention then turned to other prominent voices in election integrity and election administration discussions. Investigative journalist Greg Palast was referenced for his long-running reporting on voter rolls, voter purges, and election administration issues. Dr. Walter Mebane’s statistical election analyses were also discussed as examples of researchers examining election data through different methodologies. T emphasized that her team’s work does not exist in a vacuum and that a growing number of journalists, statisticians, data analysts, attorneys, and citizen researchers are examining election systems from multiple perspectives. The conversation touched on the importance of bringing these discussions to larger audiences and platforms, including mainstream media outlets and public forums where broader scrutiny can occur. To help viewers understand the complexity of modern election infrastructure, the livestream walked through a visual diagram showing how vote data travels on election night. The discussion moved step-by-step from ballots and precinct tabulators through county aggregation systems, election management software, vendor databases, reporting systems, state aggregation, and ultimately certification. Questions of transparency surfaced repeatedly throughout the discussion. Participants examined which parts of election systems receive routine scrutiny, which receive comparatively little attention, and what records would be necessary to independently evaluate concerns raised by researchers. Those questions naturally led into a discussion of Pennsylvania, which continues to occupy a central place in multiple election integrity investigations. The conversation touched on chain-of-custody concerns, equipment testing questions, and legal actions filed by various organizations. Participants discussed why Pennsylvania remains at the center of ongoing election integrity investigations and public scrutiny surrounding the 2024 election cycle. As the conversation moved toward solutions, attention shifted away from federal institutions and toward state-level action. Repeated emphasis was placed on contacting state attorneys general, secretaries of state, and state legislators. Participants argued that public pressure at the state level may be more effective than relying solely on federal investigations or national media coverage. As the discussion drew to a close, it returned to a broader reflection on transparency, accountability, and public participation. Whether discussing election systems, reporting databases, certification processes, or state investigations, the central concern remained the same: How can citizens independently verify the systems they are being asked to trust? What connected the entire discussion was the idea that modern elections involve far more than ballots and voting machines alone. Between the voter and certification sits a complex chain of software, databases, reporting systems, vendors, and administrative processes. Understanding those systems, questioning them, and demanding transparency within them became the recurring theme throughout Episode 25. Thank you to everyone who joined us live, participated in the chat, submitted questions, and helped keep the discussion moving despite technical difficulties throughout the broadcast. One request before you go Substack doesn’t currently preserve the live chat when viewers watch the replay. That means many of the questions, challenges, and observations shared during the livestream disappear once the broadcast ends. If something stood out to you, if you have a question, or if you want to continue the discussion, please leave a comment below. Think of the comment section as the after-show conversation where the ideas keep moving long after we hit the “End Broadcast” button. Special thanks to T from This Will Hold [https://substack.com/profile/315023719-this-will-hold] for joining us once again and sharing her team’s research and perspective. Join Jason and me next week for another episode of Rigged by Design as we continue examining the systems, institutions, and stories that often receive less attention. Truth doesn’t come in neutral — Zorha. If this work matters to you, support it. Subscribe to Jason [https://substack.com/@jaystone4] and/or me as we continue documenting what others rush past or refuse to touch. This isn’t content for the sake of content. It’s ongoing, time-intensive work that requires digging, verifying, and staying on stories long after they fall out of the news cycle. If you’re able to support this work, consider becoming a paid subscriber. If a subscription isn’t feasible, you can still help support independent reporting with a one-time Buy Me a Coffee contribution. SOURCES & FURTHER READING: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit zorhasbsfreezone.substack.com/subscribe [https://zorhasbsfreezone.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]
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