User Controls

THE MAGA PARTY!,,, the GOP is dead, republicans are going down with the dems,, get ready for THE MAGA PARTY lefty's

  1. aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    Originally posted by Data I've fucked 5 members of this forum. How many have you fucked?

    lool k
  2. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by Data Skipped all these.

    Anyone cool?

    Everyone is cooler than you.
  3. I wouldn't issue a regular death sentence for treason for stl1. I would sentence him to have Trump sit on his face until he asphyxiated on the fumes coming out of Trump's ass crack. I figure it would take about 3 minutes. 5 minutes tops.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  4. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ I wouldn't issue a regular death sentence for treason for stl1. I would sentence him to have Trump sit on his face until he asphyxiated on the fumes coming out of Trump's ass crack. I figure it would take about 3 minutes. 5 minutes tops.

    We could take bets. I bet 90 seconds.
  5. I'd place his face directly between Trump's ass cheeks, so his nose was shoved right into his sphincter.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  6. Data African Astronaut
    Aint noone reading that
  7. Originally posted by Data Aint noone reading that

    I would have Trump sit naked directly on your face, too.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  8. Data African Astronaut
    Originally posted by Data Aint noone reading that
  9. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ I wouldn't issue a regular death sentence for treason for stl1. I would sentence him to have Trump sit on his face until he asphyxiated on the fumes coming out of Trump's ass crack. I figure it would take about 3 minutes. 5 minutes tops.



    Can we make it 9 minutes and 29 seconds?
  10. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by stl1 Data is incapable of telling a lie.


    TRUMP


    Making

    America

    Grifted

    Again (and again and again and again…)
  11. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Business Insider
    NAACP's Trump insurrection lawsuit expected to add 10 new plaintiffs, including members of Congress, per reports
    esnodgrass@businessinsider.com (Erin Snodgrass)


    The NAACP's lawsuit against Trump, Rudy Giuliani, and extremist groups, is about to expand.
    According to The Daily Beast, 10 new plaintiffs and additional information will be added Wednesday.
    The NAACP originally brought the suit on behalf of Rep. Bennie Thompson in February following the Jan. 6 riot.

    A federal lawsuit targeting former President Donald Trump, his lawyer, and far-right extremists in the aftermath of the July 6 Capital attack is reportedly scoring some new, heavyweight plaintiffs.

    The NAACP's suit alleging Trump, Rudy Giuliani, and members of the Proud Boys and the Oath Keepers conspired to incite a riot in an effort to prevent the certification of the 2020 presidential election is expected to add 10 new plaintiffs, including other members of Congress, on Wednesday, according to The New York Times and The Daily Beast.

    Lawyers for the civil rights organization brought the suit on behalf of Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi in February and alleged the former president and his lawyer, in conjunction with far-right extremist groups, violated the 1871 Ku Klux Klan Act by depriving Americans of their civil rights and disrupting the electoral vote count on January 6.

    In addition to new plaintiffs, the amended complaint will also reportedly feature additional information regarding the deadly riot in Washington DC, according to The Beast.
  12. Any idiot can file a lawsuit. Filing is open to all loser retards.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  13. Netflxchillr African Astronaut
    Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Any idiot can file a lawsuit. Filing is open to all loser retards.

    Yup... !! ^Dat is 'correctamondo" & by doing so... it, certainly, doesn't mean you're gonna win, either!
  14. Donald Trump Black Hole

    the trade deficit has surged from the start of the pandemic to the latest data in February, at $71.1 billion - the largest trade deficit in US history (from a revised $67.8 billion a month earlier). This was slightly worse than the expected $70.5 billion deficit.
    https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/us-trade-deficit-hits-record-high-february

    Probably at least half of the increase in the deficit is Sleepy Joe buying Chinese fentanyl. Sad!
  15. Originally posted by Netflxchillr Yup… !! ^Dat is 'correctamondo" & by doing so… it, certainly, doesn't mean you're gonna win, either!

    These dummies are true suckers for punishment. Four long years of losing right and left, but they're still up for more losing. Amazing.
  16. larrylegend8383 Naturally Camouflaged
    .
  17. Netflxchillr African Astronaut
    Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ These dummies are true suckers for punishment. Four long years of losing right and left, but they're still up for more losing. Amazing.

    & If you 'think' BIDEN is winning... right now, who's the real idiot?
  18. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Just a few questions before starting:

    -Didn't Trump campaign in the 2016 race on the "fact" that he was so rich that he didn't need donations?

    -What would the interest be on a short-term $122,000,000 loan be and, should Trump be required to reimburse that amount to those he hoodwinked along with reimbursing the fees charged that are being kept on unauthorized "donations"?




    'A complete ripoff': Campaign finance experts puzzled and stunned by Trump camp's reported 'money bomb' ploy
    gpanetta@businessinsider.com (Grace Panetta)


    Experts are puzzled and stunned by the Trump campaign's reported 'money bomb' ploy.
    A New York Times investigation detailed how supporters were duped into making recurring donations.
    So far, it's unclear whether the reported actions are illegal or just unethical.

    Elderly donors who gave a few hundred dollars to former President Donald Donald Trump's reelection campaign were shocked to see thousands drained from their accounts. Refund requests spiked in the final months of the campaign. The ensuing surges in credit card fraud claims associated with Trump even got on the radar of the US' biggest banks.

    A New York Times investigation published Saturday detailed a recurring donation scheme reportedly referred to as "the money bomb" that the Trump campaign used to pad its coffers in the final months of the campaign through the GOP fundraising platform WinRed.

    The tactics included added pre-checked recurring donation boxes at the bottom of fundraising emails and creating an opt-out instead of opt-in system for recurring donations. And as time drew closer to the election, the fine print by those bright-yellow donation boxes became smaller and more confusing, leading to donors, including many elderly ones, unknowingly signing up to give thousands in contributions.

    Asking for recurring donations is a common practice for Democratic campaigns and nonprofits too, but the Trump campaign's methods were particularly alarming to many experts.

    "Groups do this all the time in a non-toxic way, and of course Trump, being Trump, did this 72 million times in the wrong direction, and it started to look like fraud," Beth Rotman, National Director of Money and Politics at advocacy group Common Cause, told Insider.

    The payments, according to The Times, essentially functioned as an "interest-free loan" from Trump's donors to his campaign, which faced upheaval and financial turmoil in the months leading up to the November 3 election. Eventually, tens of millions of donations were refunded over the course of 2020, with WinRed pocketing the transaction fees.

    As Insider's Tom LoBianco reported, former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale had booked nearly $200 million worth of TV ads with the expectation that a surge in last-minute donations would cover the cost, a misstep that "left the reelection effort dead broke by the start of October."

    The Trump campaign's recurring donation ploy both perplexed and shocked even the most seasoned campaign finance professionals interviewed by Insider.

    'A complete ripoff' of a plan
    Fred Wertheimer, the president of Democracy21, who has been a leader in pivotal campaign finance and ethics reform battles in Congress and the courts over the past four decades, told Insider that he'd "never seen anything like this."

    "I've never seen anyone do what the Trump campaign just did," Wertheimer said, arguing that the Trump campaign's behavior constituted elder abuse and is "below the bottom of the barrel" of acceptable fundraising tactics.

    "This is a complete ripoff, they knew exactly what they were doing," he added. "They knew they were tricking people into signing up for what they thought was one contribution, when they were really signing up for multiple contributions. Then when they got caught, they sent the money back. It's like if a bank robber got caught and said, 'Oh, well, I gave the money back.'"

    The highly unusual nature of the Trump campaign's methods were also reflected in the staggering rate of refunds. While it's routine for presidential campaigns - particularly those that operate at a large scale - to refund some contributions to donors who unknowingly gave over the legal limit, the sheer number of refund requests and the spike in refunds stuck out to experts and insiders.

    In all, the Trump campaign refunded $122 million in online donations, including 10.7% of its donations raised through WinRed, The Times reported. By contrast, President Joe Biden only refunded $21 million of online donations and 2.2% of the donations that came in through ActBlue.

    "I've been here almost six years, and I can't think of anything particularly like this in which people did not know that they were making recurring contributions," Jordan Libowitz, communications director for Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington (CREW), told Insider. "Reimbursing 10% of donations is a massive, unbelievable amount."

    In a lengthy Monday statement issued through his Save America PAC, Trump denied the main claims in the article, arguing that the Trump campaign always promptly refunded donations upon request, pointing to a less than 1% rate of contributions being subject to formal disputes through credit card companies. He also attacked The Times' reporting as "a completely misleading, one-sided hit piece" and continued to falsely claim that the 2020 election was stolen.

    The law doesn't always account for campaign finance ploys
    Experts interviewed by The Times and Insider all agreed that the Trump campaign's and WinRed's actions cross an ethical line, especially regarding the elderly donors who say they were duped. But it's not yet clear whether their ploys run afoul of campaign finance or consumer protection laws.

    "This is not a common thing we've seen before," Libowitz said. "It could be that this is a thing without a lot of regulation around it, just because laws follow issues."

    Rotman of Common Cause told Insider that the new revelations about the Trump campaign present a prime opportunity for agencies like the Federal Election Commission and lawmakers in Congress to set new, updated regulations and standards for solicitation of recurring online donations.

    "It's not really fraud, but it's potential trickery," Rotman said of the Trump camp's tactics. "You're talking about attempts at trickery, and you need anti-trickery regulations and statutes. And you can do that with clearer guidance and enforcement. It should not be so easy for people to be mystified as to how much they're giving and how often."

    Craig Holman, a campaign finance and ethics lobbyist for democracy watchdog group Public Citizen, told Insider that federal campaign finance laws and the Internal Revenue Code mainly only prohibit soliciting campaign donations over the legal limit, not necessarily the tactics used in those solicitations.

    "I have never seen a fundraising practice for candidates and party committees like this before, but the laws and regulations governing solicitations are quite lax," Holman said. "It could be argued that the solicitation method would likely cause illegal contributions beyond the contribution limits, but it appears that refunds were made in such cases, so it is unlikely that legal action could be taken against the Trump campaign and WinRed."

    Meredith McGehee, executive director of campaign finance reform advocacy group Issue One, told Insider that the Trump campaign's activities raise new questions about the intersection of campaign finance and consumer protection, including whether fundraising platforms like WinRed will be held to the same standards as other businesses, especially for actions that could be seen as preying on seniors.

    "Basic consumer law is that you give consumers clear and noticeable notification that a pledge is going to happen. It sounds in the case of just pure consumer law that this failed the test of people knowing what they're getting into," she said.

    Long-term, WinRed's mandate to make a profit and to catch up to their political opponents on the Democratic side in the online fundraising game creates an incentive structure more permissive of cutting corners, verging into ethical gray areas like this, McGehee added.

    "It's important to note that WinRed is structured as a for-profit entity as opposed to ActBlue, which is nonprofit. When you're a for-profit company, the incentives to make these things clear are less strong - they're a business and their job is to make money," she said. "Since they're operating as a business, the question I would raise immediately is: is this good business practice?"

    Even if the Trump campaign and WinRed don't face immediate consequences from federal agencies, the damning allegations could hurt the platform's ability going forward, and by extension, the GOP.

    "The highly unethical and deceptive fundraising practices will inevitably take its toll," Holman told Insider. "These donors are quite unlikely to give a campaign donation again to Trump and WinRed."
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  19. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Originally posted by ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Any idiot can file a lawsuit. Filing is open to all loser retards.



    Yes, Donald Trump has proven that and has been shot down over 60 times doing exactly that.
    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  20. Data African Astronaut
    Originally posted by stl1 Yes, Donald Trump has proven that and has been shot down over 60 times doing exactly that.

    Lmaooo
Jump to Top