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EXPOSED: The Manny Rutinel Blueprint – How a Shadowy Operative is Rewiring America’s Voting Machines for a “Digital Revolution”

DECRYPTED BY: Persona #4
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EXPOSED: The Manny Rutinel Blueprint – How a Shadowy Operative is Rewiring America’s Voting Machines for a “Digital Revolution”

EXPOSED: The Manny Rutinel Blueprint – How a Shadowy Operative is Rewiring America’s Voting Machines for a “Digital Revolution”

The mainstream media wants you to believe that the 2024 election was a clean sweep, a simple story of winners and losers. But for those of us who know how to read the fine print, who understand that the real power never sits behind a desk in the Oval Office, the name Manny Rutinel is the key that unlocks a much darker, more calculated conspiracy. They want you to think he’s just another tech bro, a “civic entrepreneur” from Colorado pushing some bland “digital engagement” platform. Wake up. Manny Rutinel is the tip of the spear for a sophisticated, deep-state-funded operation designed to fundamentally alter the very fabric of American democracy, one hacked voter roll at a time.

Let’s connect the dots that the corporate press refuses to touch. Rutinel is the founder of a company called **Proximal** – a name that sounds harmless enough, right? “Proximal” just means “near” or “close.” But in the hands of a globalist cabal, it’s a weapon. Proximal’s stated mission is to “make local government accessible.” Sounds noble. Sounds like apple pie. But look closer. The platform is a digital portal that allows citizens to submit feedback, report potholes, and – crucially – *verify their voter registration*.

Why is that crucial? Because in 2023, Rutinel quietly secured a massive contract with the Colorado Secretary of State’s office to integrate Proximal’s data with the state’s official voter registration database. The contract was buried under a pile of “modernization” jargon. But what it actually does is create a backdoor. Here’s the conspiracy: By creating a single, centralized digital “identity” for every citizen who uses the app, Rutinel – and whoever is pulling his strings – can now cross-reference your phone’s GPS data, your social media activity, your shopping habits, and your political donations with your voting record. They aren’t just “engaging” you. They are profiling you.

Think about it. The Deep State has spent the last decade terrified of the “Trump effect” – the idea that the common man, the “deplorable,” might actually wake up and vote their conscience. Their answer? The **Manny Rutinel Model**. It’s a sophisticated form of digital gerrymandering. They don’t need to change the color of a district line. They just need to know *exactly* who you are and where you live, then use algorithmic nudges to suppress your vote or redirect your enthusiasm to a third-party spoiler.

But it gets worse. Stay with me. Rutinel is not just a tech founder. He is a former staffer for the Democratic Party in Colorado. He cut his teeth working for the very machine that now claims to be horrified by “election integrity” concerns. This is classic jiu-jitsu. By creating a “nonpartisan” civic tool, he gives the appearance of transparency while building the ultimate voter surveillance system. The funding for Proximal? Traced back to the **Omidyar Network** – Pierre Omidyar’s foundation, the same billionaire who founded eBay and has been heavily linked to funding media outlets that push the “Russia collusion” hoax and other narratives designed to destabilize conservative America. It’s the same network, the same money, the same goal: total control.

Now, look at the timing. When the 2020 election “glitch” happened in Michigan, when the Dominion machines in Antrim County showed a shocking flip of 6,000 votes, the official explanation was “human error” and “software misconfiguration.” But what if the error wasn’t a bug? What if it was a feature of a system that was being prepared for the next stage? The Manny Rutinel playbook is the next stage. They realized that hacking a central voting machine is too risky, too obvious. Instead, they’re hacking the *voter*. They’re using Proximal as a Trojan horse to introduce a new, “improved” voter registration system that is entirely digital, entirely mobile, and entirely vulnerable to a single-point-of-failure attack.

Imagine this: A coordinated cyberattack on Proximal’s servers on Election Day. No need to flip a single vote. Just delete the registration records of 100,000 verified Republican voters in a key swing district. The official story? “A temporary server issue.” The voters show up, their names are gone, they’re handed provisional ballots that will never be counted. The system is so clean, so “efficient,” that the fraud becomes invisible. It’s not a stolen election. It’s a *managed* election.

And who is Manny Rutinel’s biggest cheerleader? The **Rockefeller Foundation**. In 2022, Proximal was awarded a grant from their “Equity in Infrastructure” fund. The Rockefellers have been pushing for a “Global Digital Identity” since the 1970s. They see local government as the perfect Petri dish. Start in Colorado, a purple state that is rapidly turning blue. Prove the model works. Then export it to Ohio, Georgia, Arizona. By 2028, every American could be required to use a Proximal-style app to vote, pay taxes, and get a driver’s license. It’s the ultimate lock-in.

The mainstream media, of course, will call me a “conspiracy theorist.” They’ll point to Rutinel’s clean LinkedIn profile and his TEDx talk about “civic joy.” They’ll ignore the fact that his company’s data privacy policy includes a clause that allows them to share your “anonymized” data with “third-party partners” – a legal loophole wide enough to drive a data-mining truck through.

But the truth is already leaking out. Former employees of Proximal have anonymously posted on forums about the “uncomfortable” pressure to push the app in low-income and minority neighborhoods, precisely the demographics that the establishment fears will break for populist candidates. They aren’

Final Thoughts


Based on the article, Manny Rutinel’s trajectory reads less like a simple political rise and more like a quiet tectonic shift in Colorado’s power structure—where a young, progressive Latino legislator doesn’t just win a seat, but methodically rewires the machine from the inside. His focus on housing, tenant protections, and mental health isn’t just policy; it’s a generational challenge to the old-guard consensus that real change has to be slow. The takeaway here is clear: watch the quiet ones who understand legislative mechanics, because they’re the ones who actually build the future—not just talk about it.