The World of Soros: Influencing Elections

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Election fraud is no accident — it is organized, funded, and shielded from punishment. Arthur R. Thompson documents how George Soros’s network bankrolls secretaries of state, prosecutors, and judges to control not only outcomes but investigations themselves. He traces the history of election corruption in America, shows why federal “reforms” are a trap, and presses for local accountability backed by real penalties. This is not just about Soros the man, but about an organization intent on power without limits.

Description

Power always seeks to consolidate, and elections are its gateway. The World of Soros: Influencing Elections confronts the uncomfortable truth: fraud has shadowed America’s ballot box since the beginning, but in recent decades it has been weaponized by networks like those tied to George Soros. Arthur R. Thompson demonstrates how corruption thrives not merely through flawed laws, but through officials who face little to no punishment. Without accountability, fraud is not a gamble — it’s an investment.

Drawing on history, constitutional clauses, and voices from Madison to Lord Acton, Thompson situates today’s controversies inside a larger struggle over concentrated power. He shows how Soros-backed candidates quietly capture “low-profile” positions — secretaries of state, district attorneys, judges — that decide election procedures and prosecutions. Once these offices are controlled, challenges to fraud collapse from within the very courts that should provide redress.

Thompson rebuts calls for federal oversight, warning that nationalizing elections would cement corruption beyond repair. Instead, he insists reform must remain local, with penalties that sting — prison terms, heavy fines, and asset forfeiture. Anything less rewards the crime and ensures its return. He shows not just the crimes but the architecture behind them, tracing how the Soros organization amplifies corruption under the cover of “reform.”

For readers who believe in constitutional limits and clean elections, this book presses the urgency of local action. Thompson’s case is blunt: unless corruption is punished, it grows; unless power is checked, it corrupts absolutely. The World of Soros is both an indictment and a call to reclaim responsibility — before the process itself is lost. (2022ed, pb, 173pp)

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