The request came in at 2:00 AM on a Tuesday. It was from the campaign manager of Arthur Sterling, a billionaire industrialist flirting with a late-entry presidential run. Sterling had posted a provocative poll on Twitter: "Should I disrupt the status quo and run for the White House?"
In the glass-and-steel canyons of midtown Manhattan, Julian Vane was known as a "reputation architect," a polite term for a digital mercenary. His office didn’t have a sign, only a heavy oak door and a silent receptionist. Julian didn't sell ad space or PR junkets; he sold the illusion of consensus. buy twitter poll votes
Buying Twitter poll votes was a delicate art of thermal dynamics. If you dumped 100,000 votes in ten minutes, the platform’s integrity algorithms would spike, the poll would be flagged, and the account might be suspended. Julian set the rhythm to mimic a viral surge. The request came in at 2:00 AM on a Tuesday