However, as the former Georgia election official unfolded her story that she was unjustly targeted by then-President Donald Trump and his lawyer Rudy Giuliani on Tuesday before the House election committee investigating the January 6, appeared at these public hearings. so far. Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman, worked anonymously in Fulton County until, without warning, Giuliani and Trump stumbled upon the idea that they had somehow committed acts of stealing Democratic votes in the 2020 election. . Trump called Freeman a “professional voting fraudster” and “hardliner.” Giuliani said Moss and Freeman passed around USB ports such as “cocaine or heroin vials.” (Moss told Tuesday night that her mother was giving her a “ginger mint,” not a USB drive.) After these false and racist allegations, Moss explained how people tried to break into her grandmother’s house and how Trump’s supporters had abused her and her mother. (Her mother, known as “Lady Ruby”, said she no longer liked being called that.) Moss said of the threats she had received: “Many of them were racist. Many of them were just hate. . “ “I have not gone anywhere at all,” he said in tears. Her testimony led to a strong point in the house that is often lost when we talk about who knew what and when on January 6: The lies told by the former President and his ilk had a real – and profoundly negative – impact on lives. people who were essentially innocent passers-by. The point: The life of Moss – and her mother – is changing unchanged from Trump’s reluctance to admit he lost the election. And that is a pity.