Professor Sam Woodstock has just retired from teaching at Lincoln High after the traumatic death of his wife. In an attempt to overcome the loss, he gets involved in the political campaign of
his son, Ott--and soon realizes that he may have gotten more than he bargained for. Finding himself thrust into a group of fanatical idealists, each with their own agenda, Sam discovers that
these ��yber-rebel vanguards��have figured out how to fix the outcome of the elections. By secretly tampering with voting machines, ballots, and e-votes and surreptitiously tinkering with
computer hard drives, the group will virtually stop at nothing to ensure that Ott gets elected for the benefit of American society. Torn between wanting his son to win the elections and this
twenty-first-century threat to democracy, Sam comes to an intriguing but frightening personal understanding: Ballot tampering may be the best way to change an endangered America. Fraud
pays--but does it pay enough?