@agropecuariadasgr: S700 na colheita #soja #agro #johndeere #colheitadeira #agrobrasil

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agropecuariadasgracas
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Thursday 12 February 2026 21:10:13 GMT
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cesar.severo10
Cesar Severo :
nós operadores quando estamos dentro de máquina boa e soja limpa precisamos só de Deus
2026-02-24 09:07:48
3
castilho581
castilho :
agro é top D+ .parabéns
2026-02-15 01:07:16
2
diomardealmeida44
diomardealmeida44 :
Deus me deu a oportunidade de transportar algumas dessas...
2026-03-22 22:24:56
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pedrosilvaal22
PH STIVEM 🚜🚜🚜 :
top top 👏👏👏👏👏👏
2026-02-14 09:24:03
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thanielysouza1
Thaniely Souza :
👏🏾😍💚🇧🇷
2026-02-15 10:23:57
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vilmarvieira2350
Vilmar Vieira235 :
💯🙏
2026-02-12 21:13:17
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silvanogomes4495
Silvano Gomes :
💪💪💪
2026-02-13 00:04:00
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enzo.ferreiraa
Enzo Ferreira :
👏🏽👏🏽
2026-02-12 21:11:05
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sandrinha2429
sandrinha :
👏👏👏👏
2026-03-14 17:17:20
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fabianoimmich16
Fabiano immich :
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
2026-03-29 08:42:12
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.tayson29
.Tayson :
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2026-03-23 09:32:12
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thiaguinhodoagro5
thiaguinhodoagro :
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2026-02-13 09:48:23
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QR codes are at the center of the latest conspiracy theory in Georgia’s elections. And it’s largely thanks to Garland Favorito, a man who has spent decades trying to get people to listen to his conspiracy theories about insecure voting machines being used to rig elections in Georgia. When Georgia became the epicenter of election denial conspiracy theories in 2020, Favorito became an overnight superstar in the election denial community, and an integral part of the vast network of groups across the country that sprang up to promote the baseless claim that US elections are rigged. In Georgia, he claimed that the use of QR codes on ballots could rig elections. In 2024, the state legislature approved a bill banning their use. Now, with six months to go to the midterms elections, lawmakers in Georgia have failed to approve a system to replace the QR codes. Favorito and his allies are using this opportunity to push for the removal of voting machines entirely, a key demand of election conspiracy theorists who have long claimed that nefarious forces have used the machines to rig elections against President Donald Trump. These conspiracy theories go back many years. In 2019, Georgia introduced a new election system, spending $107 million on new Dominion voting machines. The new system had voters use a touchscreen to make their selections rather than hand-marking their ballots. Once completed, the machine spits out a paper ballot that includes both a human-readable summary of their selections and a QR code that encodes the same information. Voters can check that their selections have been recorded accurately before feeding the ballot into a tabulator, which reads the QR code to count the votes. Critics of the use of QR codes—which include everyone from election deniers to computer scientists—claim that because humans cannot read the digital code, there is no way of knowing that the results encoded in it are the same as those printed on the ballot. While most critics admit there is no evidence that they have been used successfully to rig elections, Favorito has claimed otherwise. Tap the 🔗 in bio to read the full story.
QR codes are at the center of the latest conspiracy theory in Georgia’s elections. And it’s largely thanks to Garland Favorito, a man who has spent decades trying to get people to listen to his conspiracy theories about insecure voting machines being used to rig elections in Georgia. When Georgia became the epicenter of election denial conspiracy theories in 2020, Favorito became an overnight superstar in the election denial community, and an integral part of the vast network of groups across the country that sprang up to promote the baseless claim that US elections are rigged. In Georgia, he claimed that the use of QR codes on ballots could rig elections. In 2024, the state legislature approved a bill banning their use. Now, with six months to go to the midterms elections, lawmakers in Georgia have failed to approve a system to replace the QR codes. Favorito and his allies are using this opportunity to push for the removal of voting machines entirely, a key demand of election conspiracy theorists who have long claimed that nefarious forces have used the machines to rig elections against President Donald Trump. These conspiracy theories go back many years. In 2019, Georgia introduced a new election system, spending $107 million on new Dominion voting machines. The new system had voters use a touchscreen to make their selections rather than hand-marking their ballots. Once completed, the machine spits out a paper ballot that includes both a human-readable summary of their selections and a QR code that encodes the same information. Voters can check that their selections have been recorded accurately before feeding the ballot into a tabulator, which reads the QR code to count the votes. Critics of the use of QR codes—which include everyone from election deniers to computer scientists—claim that because humans cannot read the digital code, there is no way of knowing that the results encoded in it are the same as those printed on the ballot. While most critics admit there is no evidence that they have been used successfully to rig elections, Favorito has claimed otherwise. Tap the 🔗 in bio to read the full story.

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