I Believed in Scott Presler


Posted:

Category:

Ada Nestor | My Reflections from the Edge

Back in 2021, I didn’t just like what Scott Presler was doing—I wore that brand on my sleeve, literally. I bought his Persistence T-shirt, handed it out as gifts, and wore it proudly at campaign events. I believed in the energy, the message, the hustle.

But Then, the Information Arrived

Things started shifting once new facts hit the table. A headline from Brian Ference put the numbers in perspective:

“Scott Presler’s PAC raised $9.1 million over two years.”

Read Brian’s post here.

At the same time, a Substack article spelled out what I was trying to expose, further:

“Follow the money: that’s key.”

Read the full piece here.

This wasn’t just grassroots activism anymore, it was a cash-flow operation dressed up as a movement.

Realization Hit Hard

I supported an activist backed by millions. I cheered what looked like movement-building but turned out to be narrative-spinning funded by donor money. I looked like a fan, but the facts forced me to rethink everything.

That’s when my view changed. Not because I was told to, but because I saw the receipts.

What Responsibility Looks Like

Belief isn’t blind loyalty. It means:

  • Digging past slogans

  • Questioning numbers

  • Holding leaders accountable, even ones you once supported

If I could change my perspective when the evidence demanded it, others can too.

Our Rallying Cry

The truth is simple: mail-in ballots opened the door to fraud, chaos, and distrust. We’ve seen it play out. The establishment wants you to normalize it because it keeps them in control.

Our answer? Vote in person. Show up on Election Day. Stand in line. Cast your ballot directly. That’s how you protect your voice.

President Trump stands with us on this. He has said it loud and clear: the path forward is not to surrender to a broken system, but to fight it by overwhelming it with in-person votes they cannot manipulate away.

For the Skeptics

And for the skeptics, the ones who say they’re “done with me,” let’s be honest. You were never with me to begin with. You never knew me, my work, or my heart.

If your loyalty is to personalities and PACs instead of truth and accountability, then we were never walking the same road. My fight is for election integrity, for honesty, and for our country, not for protecting anyone’s brand.

I’ll keep showing up. I’ll keep asking the hard questions. And I’ll keep rallying people to do the one thing that actually matters: show up in person and vote.


I’ve said it before and I’ll keep saying it: I don’t write to please personalities, PACs, or parties. I write to tell the truth as I see it, and to push for accountability where it’s missing. If that costs me “followers,” so be it.

If you value independent voices willing to call it straight, subscribe and share this with others. Every person who commits to voting in person and demanding transparency moves us closer to restoring trust in our elections.

Stay loud. Stay clear. Stay unshaken.

Subscribe to keep following my Reflections from the Edge.

This post was originally published on this site