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

  1. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Erik Finman was born on October 26 1998 to Paul and Lorna Finman. Paul and Lorna had met whilst at university, and had began their own company, manufacturing the signal jammers used by US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Good god of almighty. Aren't those the same signal jammers that didn't work?

    Not only did they start the war, they got rich as war profiteers, selling snake oil to the soldiers fighting it.
  2. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by aldra https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjC9CRQ1iAg
    https://www.helix-life.com/


    I'm not sure that Larry is a fed, possibly just insane/a grifter

    Holy fucking shit I feel ill right now.

    $3,000 for "bio plates"
  3. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Seems like selling dumb shit to morons is apparently the path to riches.
  4. aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    The BioArray creates a localized, balancing photon environment that neutralizes “dirty energy”
  5. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Stormy Daniels loved my "dirty energy".

    But what a fucking scam.

    They even quote legitimate scientists on that site, saying things that actually have nothing to do with what they are selling. In a way it's actually scarily like those media articles sti quotes - stuff that when you look at it carefully, doesn't actually say what you might at first glance think it says.
  6. Originally posted by Donald Trump Seems like selling dumb shit to morons is apparently the path to riches.

    why do you think NFTs are all the rage these days.
  7. Originally posted by Donald Trump Stormy Daniels loved my "dirty energy".

    But what a fucking scam.

    They even quote legitimate scientists on that site, saying things that actually have nothing to do with what they are selling. In a way it's actually scarily like those media articles sti quotes - stuff that when you look at it carefully, doesn't actually say what you might at first glance think it says.

    facebook is full of these thjngs if you look.
  8. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny why do you think NFTs are all the rage these days.

    I want to start selling NFTs.

    First my personality, then my genitals, then my media profile. In ascending order of value.

    I'll make billions.
  9. Originally posted by Donald Trump I want to start selling NFTs.

    First my personality, then my genitals, then my media profile. In ascending order of value.

    I'll make billions.

    so am i.

    just too lazy to duckduck how to.
  10. Donald Trump Black Hole
    Originally posted by vindicktive vinny so am i.

    just too lazy to duckduck how to.

    We should start a startup doing NFTs.

    We don't need to actually do any work. We'll just start the startup and make loads of noise and milk the investors.
  11. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    The Washington Post
    ‘A propaganda tool’ for Trump: A second federal judge castigates attorneys who filed a lawsuit challenging the 2020 results
    Rosalind Helderman


    Just before Christmas, two Colorado lawyers filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of 160 million American voters, alleging a vast conspiracy to steal the 2020 presidential election by the voting equipment manufacturer Dominion Voting Systems, Facebook, its founder Mark Zuckerberg, his wife Priscilla Chan and elected officials in four states — and asking for $160 billion in damages.

    The case was dismissed in April, but now a federal judge is considering disciplining the lawyers for filing a frivolous claim — sharply questioning the duo in a Friday hearing about whether they had allowed themselves to be used as “a propaganda tool” of former president Donald Trump.

    “Did that ever occur to you? That, possibly, [you’re] just repeating stuff the president is lying about?” Federal Magistrate Judge N. Reid Neureiter asked the two lawyers, Gary D. Fielder and Ernest John Walker, during a hearing to consider sanctioning them.

    The two lawyers argued they had a good-faith belief that the election was stolen and did not trust government officials and others who affirmed that it was secure and that there was not widespread fraud.

    It was the second time this week that a judge dressed down lawyers who filed cases alleging fraud in the 2020 election, as the legal system grapples with how to hold accountable those who used the court system to spread falsehoods about the vote.

    On Monday, a federal judge in Michigan spent nearly six hours skeptically questioning a group of nine lawyers, including pro-Trump attorneys Sidney Powell and L. Lin Wood, in a similar hearing to determine whether to discipline the group for filing a lawsuit that sought to overturn President Biden’s win in that state.

    Sanctions hearings are pending in other states as well, including Wisconsin, where Gov. Tony Evers (D) has asked a judge to order Trump and his lawyers to pay the state’s legal fees stemming from post-election litigation.

    Meanwhile, a committee of judges in New York suspended the law license of former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, arguing that Trump’s personal lawyer had “communicated demonstrably false and misleading statements” that amounted to an ongoing threat to the public. Giuliani’s lawyers have said they are confident his license will be restored after a hearing.

    Legal rules require that attorneys be truthful in court and not clog up the court system with frivolous motions. Lawyers who violate the rules can be required to pay their opponents’ legal fees or can be assessed additional monetary penalties. Judges can also refer them for grievance procedures that can result in disbarment.

    In the Colorado hearing on Friday, the judge repeatedly questioned Fielder and Walker about how much independent investigation they conducted before filing a lawsuit filled with unproven allegations about a wide range of individuals.

    He noted that at the time, top officials such as Attorney General William P. Barr and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency had publicly stated that there was no evidence of widespread fraud or election-machine hacking that affected the outcome of the election. Those findings, Neureiter suggested, should have been a “red light for you, at least a flashing yellow light” that more investigation was needed before filing the claim.

    Both attorneys said they continued to question the legitimacy of the election and would file the case again.

    Walker told the judge that it was “ludicrous” to suggest he and Fielder had done no original research before filing. “It’s offensive to me and my co-counsel,” he said. “We took this case seriously.”

    Fielder said the two had a “good faith” belief that the election was stolen, citing theories put forward by various other lawyers and Trump allies — including, he said, MyPillow chief executive Mike Lindell. “These are serious allegations, made by serious people,” he explained.

    Referring to the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, Fielder argued that he and Walker “saw the potential for insurrection” before it took place and filed the lawsuit to offer people who believed they had been wronged in the election a place to have their complaints addressed.

    “We’re peaceful people. We wanted to come to court and resolve it in a peaceful way,” he said. “What happened on January 6 was exactly what we predicted in the complaint.”

    But the judge questioned whether, as officers of the court, the lawyers could file a lawsuit based on mere belief of problems. He noted the they had presented “not one iota” of evidence to support claims, for instance, that Dominion’s machines were hacked or that Facebook had manipulated the election via grants donated by Zuckerberg and routed to local officials through a nonprofit group.

    Instead, he noted, they provided only sworn statements from people who believed the election was rigged — a belief fueled by Trump’s repeated false claims.

    “Many people have been influenced by the outgoing officeholder saying the election was stolen. They sincerely believe everything that is stated by the outgoing officeholder,” Neureiter said. “Of course they’re going to think and feel and have genuine emotions about this. . . . How does that a federal lawsuit make, the fact that the people felt aggrieved somehow?”

    Neureiter also questioned a website the lawyers set up to raise money to finance the suit, appearing to probe whether the lawsuit was filed to spur donations. The website is similar to fundraising efforts by other individuals and nonprofits that have said they are pursuing challenges to the election.

    Fielder told the judge that 2,100 people had donated $95,000 in response to their requests for money and that all but $7,000 had been spent to prepare and file legal motions. “I haven’t tried to make money,” he said.

    According to his biography, Neureiter, who was appointed a magistrate by other judges in 2018, previously served for a time on a committee that investigated alleged ethical violations by lawyers who practice in Colorado’s federal courts.

    Lawyers for the various entities and individuals named in the suit urged Neureiter to impose penalties as a way of deterring other attorneys from continuing to press false claims about the election or using the courts in similar fashion in the future.

    Joshua Matz, a lawyer representing the nonprofit Center for Tech and Civic Life, which made grants to local election offices attacked by Trump allies, said the Colorado lawyers had used the courts “as soap box to spread despicable and dangerous lies — lies that have imperiled election officials . . . That nearly destroyed the Capitol and that still undermine our democracy.”

    “A law license does not confer unbounded prerogative to file objectively legally frivolous lawsuits, built on . . . a conspiracy theory derived largely from a pillow salesman, aimed at undermining a legitimate presidential election,” he argued during Friday’s hearing.

    Neureiter said he would take the matter under advisement and issue a ruling soon.
  12. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
    bla bla bla commie
  13. NIS NFT's

    rapre peepee

    The following users say it would be alright if the author of this post didn't die in a fire!
  14. aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    the eyes aren't diamond
  15. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    Business Insider
    Former Trump official says the GOP is the 'number 1 national security threat' to the US, bigger than ISIS or Russia
    insider@insider.com (John Haltiwanger)


    An ex-Trump official said the GOP is the top national security threat to the US.

    "Unless my Party reforms, its extremist elements represent the leading threat to our democracy," he said.

    Democracy scholars have issued similar warnings about the GOP, particularly since January 6.

    A former Trump administration official on Thursday said the Republican party is the top national security threat to the US, as the party's rank-and-file lawmakers continue to support former President Donald Trump's baseless claims of election fraud that incited the Jan. 6 insurrection and use it as a rationale to impose voting restrictions.

    "I've spent my whole career not as a political operative. I've never worked on a campaign in my life other than campaigning against Trump. I'm a national security guy. I've worked in national security against ISIS, al Qaeda and Russia," Miles Taylor, a former Homeland Security official, said in an appearance on MSNBC's "The Reid Out."

    "And the number one national security threat I've ever seen in my life to this country's democracy is the party that I'm in - the Republican Party. It is the number one security national security threat to the United States of America," Taylor added.

    The former Homeland Security official has been an outspoken critic of Trump and his influence in the GOP. Taylor launched an anti-Trump GOP group and endorsed President Joe Biden during the 2020 campaign season, and in October was revealed as the anonymous author of a 2018 New York Times op-ed article that said there was a "resistance" in the Trump administration.

    Though Trump is no longer in the White House, he continues to wield unparalleled authority in the Republican party. Taylor on Thursday warned Americans that they should be concerned for the future of the country if this trend continues.

    "If [House Minority Leader] Kevin McCarthy continues to pay homage to a twice-impeached presidential loser, I think should give all Americans pause and make them worry about the future of this country and national security," Taylor said.

    Taylor doubled-down on his remarks in a tweet on Friday.

    "I stand by my statement. Unless my Party reforms, its extremist elements represent the leading threat to our democracy," he said.

    Scholars on democracy have issued stark warnings following the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol, as the GOP vies to whitewash the fatal attack and Republican-led legislatures nationwide take extraordinary steps to restrict voting.

    "With Trump gone, I hoped the Republican party might recalibrate, moving away from his illiberal, anti-democratic and irrational behavior and embracing a conservative, but firmly reality-based and small 'd' democratic politics," Sheri Berman, a professor of political science at Barnard College and author of "Democracy and Dictatorship in Europe: From the Ancien Régime to the Present Day," told Insider last month.

    "That the Republican party has proven to be a greater threat than Trump - a single individual - bodes poorly for the health of American democracy," Berman added.
  16. Judge N. Reid Neureiter was the defense lawyer representing Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma City Bombing FBI false flag attack. Small world, isn't it?
  17. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    " Mr. Neureiter moved to Colorado in 1996 from Washington, D.C. to be on the defense team for one of the defendants in the Oklahoma City Bombing death penalty case. He served as court-appointed counsel in that capacity for two years"
  18. POLECAT POLECAT is a motherfucking ferret [my presentably immunised ammonification]
    SORRY GUYS FOR NOT KEEPING UP IN MY THREAD BUT i BEEN BUSY OVER ON THE U TUBE FIGHTING TO GET THE WORD TO MORE RECEPTABLE BEINGS THAN URSELVES.

    ANYWAYS HAVE A TRUMPASOURIS DAY MY NIGGA'S

    DEATH TO COMMIES!!!

    MERICA FIRST SECOND AND LAST
  19. stl1 Cum Lickin' Fagit
    AUGUST, MOTHERFUCKER ! ! !
  20. Originally posted by Donald Trump We should start a startup doing NFTs.

    We don't need to actually do any work. We'll just start the startup and make loads of noise and milk the investors.

    startup alone isnt enough we also need SPAC.
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