Friday, January 5, 2024

*Book Tour & Giveaway* Election Hacks-GUEST POST

 


How I disproved the 2020 "proof" of election fraud and won $5 million.

Some say I saved democracy in America. 

Election Hacks

Lindell v. Zeidman: Exposing the $5 million election myth

by Bob Zeidman

Genre: Nonfiction, Politics, Current Affairs

Mike Lindell, the MyPillow magnate, has been inciting crowds by publicly declaring he has proof of voting machine tampering that threw the 2020 election from Donald Trump to Joe Biden. Bob Zeidman, who invented the field of software forensics, was invited by Lindell in 2021 to examine and verify the alleged proof. What he found was bogus data, manipulated results, and dangerous conspiracy theories. This is the story of Bob’s successful $5 million lawsuit against Lindell and his uncovering of a scandal leading to some of the top political leaders and advisors in America. Was the election stolen? Maybe. Maybe not. But Lindell’s bogus claims have prevented legitimate investigations into voter fraud.

Election Hacks is not just an important book about the cries of a stolen 2020 presidential election, it’s also a warning for the 2024 election and all future elections. It’s a personal story of a man who found the truth and pursued it by going up against a rich, powerful, influential businessman. It’s a technological mystery, a courtroom drama, and a character study of extremists and their enablers. It’s about human nature and how people can so easily be led astray. And it’s about standing up for the truth, even when that truth may turn out to belie your beliefs and alienate your friends.


Amazon * Bookbub * Goodreads


Bob Zeidman is an inventor, author, entrepreneur, philanthropist, and high-stakes poker player. He created the field of software forensics and founded Software Analysis and Forensic Engineering Corporation to develop and sell software forensics tools. He is the founder of Zeidman Consulting, an engineering consulting company that has worked on over 260 major litigations involving billions of dollars of disputed intellectual property. His cases have included ConnectU v. Facebook, on which the Oscar-winning movie The Social Network is based, and Oracle v. Google that went up to the U.S. Supreme Court. He is the inventor of the famous Silicon Valley Napkin on display at the Computer History Museum. He is also a high-stakes poker player, and his latest tech venture is Good Beat Poker, a new way to play and watch poker online.

Bob writes about politics, society, and business for national magazines. His latest book is Election Hacks

, the true story of how he challenged his own beliefs about voting machine hacking in the 2020 presidential election and made international news and $5 million.

Bob has a master's degree from Stanford University and two bachelor's degrees from Cornell University.


Website * Swiss Creek Publications * Facebook * X * Instagram * Bookbub * Amazon * Goodreads


GUEST POST

What book do you think everyone should read?

Animal Farm by George Orwell is probably my favorite book of all time. It is so short and

simple and yet holds an incredibly important message. During the pandemic, I wrote

Animal Lab, an update of Animal Farm that applies that message more closely to

problems in today’s society.

I also recommend The Blue Knight or almost any book by Joseph Wambaugh. His books

are among the most gritty yet profound stories about how human beings react under

intense pressure.

Do you have any advice to offer for new authors?

I’ve gotten into heated discussions with other authors, but my best advice to new authors

is to outline every chapter before you begin to write any chapter. I got a writing

scholarship to the Vermont Studio Center some years ago to finish my novel, Horror Flick.

So many writers just put pen to paper to see where the story would take them. Many

were excellent short story writers, but their novels meandered aimlessly and, to be blunt,

were boring. When I suggested outlining first, they said it robbed them of their creativity.

But writing an outline is just as creative as writing the prose. You can always change the

outline as you go if you decide it’s not going in the direction you want. But if you have a

plan, your book will be better. You can do foreshadowing. You can leave clues. You can

take detours as long as you get back on the main road eventually.

If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?

I once had the idea for a story about a man who travels back in time to meet his younger

self. He tries to impress the young man with all the things he’d accomplished in his life,

but as he does so, he realizes that his accomplishments were shallow and meaningless. I

never figured out the ending, so I never got very far with it. It represented my greatest

fear, that I would pass without having made a difference in the world. I still don’t know. I

think I’ve done some important things, but will any of them matter when I’m gone? Will I

have made the world a better place? Most of us will never know. Maybe we’re George

Bailey, maybe we’re Mr. Potter, or maybe we’re just one of the extras in the background.

Do you believe in writer’s block?

There were times when I was younger that I had a hard time finding topics about which to

write. I think it was mostly frustration that my stories would remain tucked away in some

dusty drawer, so what was the point of putting in the effort? Sometimes I now wish I had

writer’s block. My mind is constantly filling with ideas that I have no time or desire to put

on paper. To distract myself, I play poker.

Follow the tour HERE for special content and a giveaway!

$20 Amazon


3 comments:

  1. Thox should be an entertaining to say the least.

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  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. The sounds like a good book. The cover looks great.

    ReplyDelete