My innuendos, as you call them, aren't coming from thin air. I have a degree in Political Science, and have studied politics for more than 40 years. I'm fascinated as to why people choose the leadership they do.
American politics, as are all free societies, is driven primarily by cash. The saying...voting with your wallet...is most often true. People vote for their best financial interests, at least as they perceive them to be.
There are 2 things that can alter this voting pattern. The first is cause. When enough of the electorate is sufficiently stirred behind a cause, they will vote based on a desire to right a wrong.
The other thing that can alter the pattern of voting for personal gain is corruption. Americans have historically had little tolerance for unscrupulous leaders.
Because of the venue of this post, I have only given a basic premise and no evidence for the premise I have posited. I'll be glad to do so if you like. But a basic review of presidential elections in America bears this out...until very recently. From the 1970's to the 2012 election, I picked every winner of presidential elections based on the earlier premise I espoused.
According to my political theory, Obama should have lost in 2012. The cause on which he was elected he only exacerbated. And the economy never recovered from the 2008 bank failures.
Also, according to my political theory, Trump should have won the last election. Nearly every group in American society benefitted from the Trump presidency.
Something changed. Either the reasons Americans vote for candidates changed, or something else changed.
Now I will grant you that what I have laid out before you is simple in form, and elections are more complex than described here. But there has been plenty of evidence laid out on this site by
@ZNP, @PennEd,
@mailmandan, and others of voter fraud and irregularities to open national investigations into the matter. 2020 was not the most secure election ever, and not by a long shot. Should the matter be investigated. Certainly. Should I trust your evaluation. No. But not because I don't think you are truthful. I do. But you are hardly as skeptical as you should be. But mostly I don't accept your assessments because you don't have access to all the information. You believe your limited research is all there is. It would take an unhindered investigation by a neutral party interested only in truth, and who gains access to all pertinent records and testimony. This isn't likely to happen.