Feature
By Michael Hernandez, 4-13-24
The movie produced by attorney and former professor David Clements of New Mexico was released Dec. 15, 2023 becoming the “most censored film” in America with a new goal of becoming the most boot-legged film. “Let My People Go” is about J6 and “rigged elections.”)
To see the “Let My People Go” trailer: https://frankspeech.com/letmypeoplego.
Entire movie:
To view the entire two-hour documentary, click above or: https://rumble.com/embed/v4eiitl/?pub=c742p.
It has been one year—April 15, 2023—since “We the People” hosted former New Mexico professor David Clements and Joe Oltmann on Restoring Trust in Elections at the First Baptist Church Fernandina Beach Christian Academy Gymnasium, 1600 South 8th Street.
“Let My People Go”
This two-hour documentary film features qualified experts investigating the 2020 presidential elections that include: Dr. Walter Daugherity, computer scientist; Jeffrey Lenberg and Draza Smith, former Sandia National Labs nation-state vulnerability and security experts; Harry Haury, cyber security systems expert and co-author of the Help America Vote Act; Joe Oltmann, system architecture expert and tech ceo; Col Shawn Smith, U.A. Air Force and former senior military evaluator for space, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems, Clay Parihk, election systems testing expert and whistleblower as well as former New Mexico State Professor David Clements and his wife, professional engineer Erin Clements.
The trailer for the documentary states: “A film brought to you by slaves. Produced by the anonymous. Directed by the censored.”
“Let My People Go” conclusion is that “the machines must go” if we wish to “awake America” and explains why the 2020 presidential “election was stolen” by Dominion voting machines which are used in 50 percent of the nation’s voting precincts.
Where are we on removing voting machines?
Let’s go to Shasta County, California which has taken national center-stage on Dominion voting machines–to see what lessons can be learned and observe the drama that surfaces and persecution when elected officials and people reject voting machines.
Shasta County
Shasta County with a population of 182,000 people is a small and rural county occupying the northernmost end of the Sacramento Valley in California. Nearly 2/3 of the county voted for President Trump in the 2020 elections.
California’s Shasta County became the largest government entity in the U.S. to choose to hand-count its votes and shift from a mechanized voting system—dumping its Dominion Voting machines after a split 3-2 vote in January, 2023. Voting to remove the Dominion voting machines were Shasta County Board of Supervisors Patrick Jones, Chris Kelstrom, and Kevin Crye. Opposing this decision were the League of Women Voters and the American Civil Liberties Union and later the California Voter Foundation.
The election voting machine battle has divided Shasta County—with both sides combative of one another.
Shasta County Board of Supervisors approved in April, 2023 spending $950,000 on a new voting system. Meanwhile, Supervisor Kevin Crye said that in February, 2023 he had been in contact with Mike Lindell, My Pillow CEO, who said he planned to pay the cost of hand-counting ballots in the county.
Shasta County became the first of 40 California counties that used Dominion in the November 2022 election to drop the voting system. This action resulted in a California Assembly Bill (AB 969 introduced Feb. 14, 2023 by California Assemblywoman Gail Pellerin, a Democrat, that would require a county board of supervisors to have both a transition plan and a replacement contract with a state-certified system in place before terminating an existing voting system contract. The Assembly bill was supported by the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials.
The two other voting systems that the California Secretary of State’s office has certified: Hart and ES&S.
The Shasta County Board of Supervisors action to remove Dominion voting machines was done over the objections of Shasta County Registrar of Voters Cathy Darling Allen (a Democrat, who has served as Registrar of Voters since 2004 but is leaving office in Spring 2024) and then-County Counsel Rubin Cruse Jr.
While Shasta County previously voted to hand count only votes, a new California ruling change made this illegal and Shasta County chose to use Hart voting machines in the most recent elections.
Fast-forward to the March 2024 California primary elections in Shasta County: District 1 Supervisor Kevin Crye survived a recall: 50.3 to 49.7 percent while District 4 Supervisor Patrick Jones—the voice of dumping the Dominion election voting machines— lost his race 59.7 to 40.3 percent; voters overwhelming voted for County Board of Supervisors Term Limits: 76.9 to 23.1 percent and approved a measure making Shasta County a charter county: 55.7 to 44.3 percent (which would allow the county board of supervisors to fill an empty supervisors seat instead of the governor). Over 53,000 voted in the March primary with between 9-11,000 votes in each county supervisor race.
Add to these pollical realities: two recent resignations on the Shasta County Elections Commission.
David Clements
Former New Mexico State University business college professor David Clements was suspended with pay in August, 2021 after several students filed complaints against him for rejecting the campus mask mandates in the classroom as well as the university’s vaccine mandate.
Clements, now 45, was a Republican primary candidate for the U.S. Senate in 2014 after serving as a Republican county chair. He has been registered as a Libertarian since 2017. Clements was a lawyer who previously served as deputy district attorney in New Mexico’s 12th Judicial District. He was removed as an attorney (disbarred) after five complaints against him by the New Mexico Supreme Court for his stance as a 2020 “election denier” as well as being a pro-Trump skeptic of the 2020 elections. He advocates for audits of the 2020 presidential election and refers to President Donald Trump as “the real president.”
As Clements university and legal career got upended, he became busy scheduling public appearances across the nation including Fernandina Beach on April 15, 2023 and Regent University’s (Virginia Beach) American Election Integrity conference in spring, 2021.
An online fundraiser launched by Joe Oltmann, founder of a conservative political group FEC United (who also came to Fernandina Beach) raised more than $304,00 in donations for Clements and his wife, Erin.
Meanwhile, Clements lost political support in New Mexico when he criticized Rep. Rebecca Dow, a Republican (who ran for governor) and state House Republican whip Rod Montoya for not supporting his demands for forensic audits of the 2020 election. It should be noted that Joe Biden won New Mexico: 54 percent of the vote to Donald Trump’s 45 percent in the 2020 presidential election.
Congressional Democrats say that Clements is engaged in “election misinformation” and that his “lies seek to convince Americans that their election systems are fraudulent, corrupt, or insecure.”
“My personal life has been turned upside down because of this battle,” he wrote in a Sept. 6, 2021 social networking Telegram post. “I have been removed from the University. I have been removed from certain commercial airlines. Threats towards my family and the need for security is now a constant consideration in how we operate.
Clements was born in Seattle, grew up the child of itinerant parents who worked blue-collar jobs. “I am a child of the trailer park. My mom worked at Kmart and Lowe’s, my dad bagged groceries.
In a public appearance in Nebraska, Clements said: “The battle was won before it ever began. What a strange paradox. We rest in God’s might as we labor like never before to save our Republic,” posted Clements—a born-again Christian—who often refers to his battle as “a war of good against evil.”
“I stand before you as someone who used to be an award-winning professor an award-winning prosecutor—who is unemployed. I come to you as someone who had a future. And if we don’t fix our country, I can’t go back to the world.”
Michael Hernandez, a Shasta County., Ca resident, is co-founder of the Citizens Journal—Ventura County’s online news service. He is a former Southern California daily newspaper journalist and religion and news editor. Mr. Hernandez can be contacted at [email protected] and is editor of “America: The End and Our Hope”.