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Posts by stl1
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2021-12-05 at 8:41 PM UTC in I'm sad guys.
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2021-12-05 at 8:30 PM UTC in 20 years old
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2021-12-05 at 8:22 PM UTC in THE MAGA PARTY!,,, the GOP is dead, republicans are going down with the dems,, get ready for THE MAGA PARTY lefty'sGo smoke some more pot, whackadoodle, because that is the only world in which that is going to happen...inside your tiny little shriveled up excuse for a brain.
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2021-12-04 at 11:52 PM UTC in holy fuck guys I dont know what I am doing nowKill yourself, pervert.
Quit wanting to permanently psychologically damage a child.
If there is a Hell, you better hydrate. -
2021-12-04 at 11:41 PM UTC in The Absolute Best Thread Of The Year Guaranteed! You WILL laugh!Did he require a tetanus shot?
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2021-12-04 at 11:40 PM UTC in The Absolute Best Thread Of The Year Guaranteed! You WILL laugh!What an asshole.
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2021-12-04 at 9:48 PM UTC in The Absolute Best Thread Of The Year Guaranteed! You WILL laugh!"slipped and fell" his ass!
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2021-12-04 at 9:46 PM UTC in The Absolute Best Thread Of The Year Guaranteed! You WILL laugh!INSIDER
Bomb squad called to ER after a patient turned up with a WWII artillery shell lodged in his rectum, police say
jzitser@businessinsider.com (Joshua Zitser)
A man presented at an emergency room in Gloucester, England, with a "munition in his rectum," police say.
Doctors removed the World War II artillery shell from inside of him.
Bomb disposal experts confirmed that the shell was "not live," per a police statement.
Bomb disposal experts were called to a hospital in Gloucester, England after a man told doctors that there was a World War II anti-tank shell lodged inside of him, authorities said.
The Explosive Ordnance Disposal team (EOD) arrived at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital on Wednesday morning after hearing that "a patient had presented with a munition in his rectum," a spokesperson for Gloucestershire Constabulary told Insider.
The item had already been removed by doctors by the time the bomb squad arrived, the spokesperson added, and the EOD confirmed that the shell was "not live" and "therefore not a danger to the public."
The Sun was first to report that the unnamed patient told doctors at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital that he "slipped and fell" on the two-inch-wide artillery shell.
The media outlet reported that the shell was part of his military memorabilia collection.
In a statement sent to Insider, Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said: "As with any incident involving munitions, the relevant safety protocols were followed to ensure that there was no risk to patients, staff, or visitors at any time."
The British newspaper Metro reported that procedures to remove objects from patients' rectums cost the National Health Service (NHS) around £340,000 ($450,000) a year. -
2021-12-04 at 2:46 PM UTC in How do I catch a squirrel in a heater?Just make a nameplate for him and attach it to the front of the furnace because, after all, it was his home first.
Why else would your furnace use a squirrel cage blower?
Amirite? -
2021-12-03 at 10:48 PM UTC in holz fuck this 16zo looks amaying and mazbe is
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2021-12-03 at 10:34 PM UTC in How did that work out for you?
Originally posted by stl1 Rump trampled the Constitution and attempted to destroy democracy.
How many of Rump's people violated the Hatch Act right under his nose and most assuredly with his urgings and blessings?
13 senior Trump administration officials violated Hatch Act, report finds
By Chandelis Duster, CNN
November 10, 2021
(CNN)Thirteen senior Trump administration officials violated the Hatch Act, according to a report from the US Office of Special Counsel that was released on Tuesday.
Eleven of those senior Trump officials allegedly violated the Hatch Act by "campaigning on behalf of President Trump's reelection" during 18 official interviews or media appearances, and two of them committed violations related to 2020 Republican National Convention, the report said. The agency, which is charged with investigating Hatch Act violations, also found that some Trump administration officials "intentionally ignored the law's requirements and tacitly or expressly approved of senior administration officials violating the law."
The agency said it began investigating the officials after many complaints were submitted during and after the convention.
The eleven former senior officials who allegedly committed media-related violations are: White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, Trump senior adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, national security adviser Robert O'Brien, Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, White House adviser Stephen Miller, White House deputy press secretary Brian Morgenstern, then-Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff Marc Short, White House communications director Alyssa Farah and US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman.
Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was found in violation of the Hatch Act when he addressed the 2020 Republican convention in a pre-recorded video, even after charging employees to "not improperly engage the Department of State in the political process," a move where he used "his official authority while giving that speech to promote President (Donald) Trump's candidacy," according to the report.
"Secretary Pompeo's approval of the change to State Department policy is a similar manipulation of government business to benefit a particular candidate," the report also said.
A source close to Short called the violations "a publicity stunt," adding: "Neither Marc nor OVP counsel had prior notice of these alleged OSC findings."
Though Farah told CNN that "live television or press briefings, when you're asked off the cuff questions, make it challenging," she said Hatch Act violations are inexcusable.
"We all need to hold ourselves to the highest standards (of) political impartiality when working for the American taxpayer," she said.
The report comes after a number of Trump administration officials were cited for allegedly violating the Hatch Act while Trump was in office but did not receive consequences.
CNN previously reported that a source familiar with the situation said Trump asked Pompeo to speak, and he considered it a high honor to have been asked. The speech was cleared through Pompeo's personal lawyers, State Department and White House lawyers, and RNC lawyers, the source said at the time. They called it "completely lawful and completely appropriate."
Former Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf's violation stemmed from a naturalization ceremony where he issued an oath to five people and aired during the RNC. He previously said he was unaware footage of the ceremony would be aired during the convention and the Office of Special Counsel also said in the report he told them he had no knowledge that it would be played at the convention.
As President, Trump turned a blind eye before to potential violations of the Hatch Act, which limits the political activities of federal employees while on duty. Conway remained an adviser to the President despite the Office of Special Counsel recommending her removal for violating the act on several occasions.
While the President and vice president are exempt from the Hatch Act, a federal law that generally forbids the use of government property for political activities -- some previous officeholders have sought to limit political activity in the White House, for instance, by holding political events elsewhere or in the residential spaces of the presidential mansion. -
2021-12-03 at 10:23 PM UTC in Need new phone...any suggestions
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2021-12-03 at 10:22 PM UTC in what's the last thing you bought?Here's Jiggle Booty's favorite...SPOTTED DICK!
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2021-12-03 at 6:49 PM UTC in Need new phone...any suggestionsHere, this may help:
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2021-12-03 at 6:35 PM UTC in holy fuck guys the 16 yr oldOr...better yet...let her daddy kill you slowly by cutting off your package and stomping on the pieces as you bleed out, pedo.
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2021-12-03 at 6:30 PM UTC in Sex details emerge at Maxwell trialYeah, where are the dead baby pizzas?
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2021-12-03 at 6:22 PM UTC in 2021 Young Congress woman of the year award
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2021-12-03 at 6:09 PM UTC in Sex details emerge at Maxwell trial
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2021-12-03 at 6:02 PM UTC in 2021 Young Congress woman of the year award
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2021-12-03 at 9:16 AM UTC in THE MAGA PARTY!,,, the GOP is dead, republicans are going down with the dems,, get ready for THE MAGA PARTY lefty'sReuters
Pro-Trump lawyers ordered to pay $175,000 for 'frivolous' election lawsuit
By Jan Wolfe
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Thursday ordered Sidney Powell and other lawyers who sued in Michigan to overturn Democratic President Joe Biden's election victory to pay a $175,000 penalty, reiterating an earlier finding that the lawsuit was frivolous.
U.S. District Judge Linda Parker in Detroit ruled in August that Powell, Lin Wood, and other lawyers aligned with former President Donald Trump were to be sanctioned, but had not determined the dollar amount.
Thursday's order set the amount at approximately $175,000. Parker said the money should be awarded to Michigan and the City of Detroit to compensate for time government lawyers spent defending against the case.
"Plaintiffs’ attorneys filed this lawsuit without conducting the required degree of diligence as to the truth of the allegations made or the merits of the legal claims asserted," Parker said in Thursday's order.
In her August ruling, Parker formally requested that disciplinary bodies investigate whether the law licenses of the pro-Trump lawyers should be revoked. The judge also ordered the lawyers to attend classes on the ethical and legal requirements for filing legal claims.
Donald Campbell, a lawyer for Powell and her co-counsel, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Powell represented Trump's campaign when he tried to overturn last Nov. 3's presidential election in the courts. His campaign distanced itself from Powell after she claimed without evidence at a Nov. 19 news conference that electronic voting systems had switched millions of ballots to Biden.
In a written decision last December, Parker said Powell's voter fraud claims were "nothing but speculation and conjecture" and that, in any event, the Texas-based lawyer waited too long to file her lawsuit.
Powell has argued in court filings that her conduct was reasonable, saying she had vetted her election fraud claims before suing.
Starting in January 2020, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and other government lawyers asked the judge to discipline the pro-Trump lawyers, saying they had filed a frivolous lawsuit full of typos and factual errors and should be held accountable.