Stuff that doesn't really fit in either "Examples of" thread....

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
legitimate question, why so many republican primary challengers? Most of them have to know they don't have a chance, and never will.
I don't accuse most republicans of brilliance or genius, but are they that fucking stupid?
Do they seek to set themselves up for future recognition? are they looking to fund raise off of the opportunity? Chris Christy? Seriously? Pence? Why not just write in "Bud Manstrong" from the Venture Brothers?
Are some of them expecting their republican opponents to be in jail soon, out of their way? Seems like the only reasonable hope many of them could even dream of.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
I see this as a consequence of the “pro-business” policies that have allowed avaricious employers to replace salaried employees with contract workers who get no security, less pay and for-shit bennies.

The corrosion of the social contract has not been this bad since perhaps the conditions more than a century ago — that bred revolutionary socialist movements that unsurprisingly merely hastened the fascist phase transition.

 

printer

Well-Known Member

printer

Well-Known Member
Fox: Carlson Breached Contract With Twitter Show
Fox News said former host Tucker Carlson breached his contract Tuesday when he released the first episode of his new show on Twitter, reported Axios.

"This evening we were made aware of Mr. Tucker Carlson's appearance on Twitter in a video that lasted over 10 minutes," Fox News general counsel Bernard Gugar said in a letter to Carlson's lawyers.

"Pursuant to the terms of the Agreement, Mr. Carlson's 'services shall be completely exclusive to Fox,'" it continued, quoting Carlson's contract.

Gugar also said Carlson was "prohibited from rendering services of any type whatsoever, whether 'over the internet via streaming or similar distribution, or other digital distribution whether now known or hereafter devised.'"

Carlson's legal team told Axios that any legal action by Fox would violate his First Amendment rights.

"Fox defends its very existence on freedom of speech grounds. Now they want to take Tucker Carlson's right to speak freely away from him because he took to social media to share his thoughts on current events," said Carlson's lawyer, Bryan Freedman.

Carlson's new show, "Tucker on Twitter," garnered about 80 million views by 2 p.m. Wednesday.

The former Fox News host, in a roughly 10-minute video posted Tuesday and captioned "Ep. 1," claimed that Ukraine was to blame for the destruction of a massive dam in Russian-occupied territory that caused widespread flooding.

The onetime top-rated talk show host on U.S. cable television said he hoped Twitter would be the "short-wave radio under the blankets" with "no gatekeepers."

Fox News Media and Carlson, then its top-rated host, "agreed to part ways" in late April, less than a week after parent company Fox Corp. settled a defamation lawsuit for $787.5 million.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Fox: Carlson Breached Contract With Twitter Show
Fox News said former host Tucker Carlson breached his contract Tuesday when he released the first episode of his new show on Twitter, reported Axios.

"This evening we were made aware of Mr. Tucker Carlson's appearance on Twitter in a video that lasted over 10 minutes," Fox News general counsel Bernard Gugar said in a letter to Carlson's lawyers.

"Pursuant to the terms of the Agreement, Mr. Carlson's 'services shall be completely exclusive to Fox,'" it continued, quoting Carlson's contract.

Gugar also said Carlson was "prohibited from rendering services of any type whatsoever, whether 'over the internet via streaming or similar distribution, or other digital distribution whether now known or hereafter devised.'"

Carlson's legal team told Axios that any legal action by Fox would violate his First Amendment rights.

"Fox defends its very existence on freedom of speech grounds. Now they want to take Tucker Carlson's right to speak freely away from him because he took to social media to share his thoughts on current events," said Carlson's lawyer, Bryan Freedman.

Carlson's new show, "Tucker on Twitter," garnered about 80 million views by 2 p.m. Wednesday.

The former Fox News host, in a roughly 10-minute video posted Tuesday and captioned "Ep. 1," claimed that Ukraine was to blame for the destruction of a massive dam in Russian-occupied territory that caused widespread flooding.

The onetime top-rated talk show host on U.S. cable television said he hoped Twitter would be the "short-wave radio under the blankets" with "no gatekeepers."

Fox News Media and Carlson, then its top-rated host, "agreed to part ways" in late April, less than a week after parent company Fox Corp. settled a defamation lawsuit for $787.5 million.
“You are forbidden to lie for anyone but us.”
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Interesting why the Arab countries are normalizing relations with Syria.

 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Culture war update. The tweets tell the tale.

Businesses have to quit giving a fuck about this shit. If they can't do business in redneck areas, fuck those areas, let them have unlimited liquor stores and 7-11s. They'll have to drive to the blue part of town to get a fucking thing except booze and slimjims.....know what? they'll be ok, that's 75% of the redneck diet.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Interesting why the Arab countries are normalizing relations with Syria.

remember the good old days, when we would just stage a coup and bomb a bunch of brown people? ...Peppridge farms remembers.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Businesses have to quit giving a fuck about this shit. If they can't do business in redneck areas, fuck those areas, let them have unlimited liquor stores and 7-11s. They'll have to drive to the blue part of town to get a fucking thing except booze and slimjims.....know what? they'll be ok, that's 75% of the redneck diet.
Don’t forget Mtn Dew … it’s the veg
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Archives ignites investigation of DHS inspector general following deleted texts
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) on Thursday kicked off an investigation into Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Inspector General Joseph Cuffari, bypassing the DHS watchdog by asking another agency official to examine his recordkeeping practices.
The move comes after Cuffari told lawmakers during a hearing he routinely deletes text messages from his government-issued phone because he did not consider them to be official records — a possible violation of recordkeeping laws.

“NARA requests that DHS provide NARA with the required report documenting IG Cuffari’s practices with respect to the management of electronic messages, and in particular all messages that meet the definition of a federal record,” the agency wrote in a letter to DHS Chief Information Officer Eric Hysen.

Requests to review potential violations of public records laws are often referred to inspectors general, but the NARA inquiry to another official within DHS comes after Democrats on the House Oversight Committee asked the Archives to intervene in the matter.

Cuffari has also faced calls to resign by two Democrats who argued is it “troubling, to say the least, that you have been routinely destroying or deleting official government records in violation of a law that your office is supposed to enforce.”

Cuffari answered “yes” earlier this month when Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-Md.) asked him during an appearance before the House Oversight and Accountability Committee whether he deletes text messages from his phone.

“It’s my normal practice to delete text messages,” Cuffari said, answering, “Correct,” when Ivey asked whether he does this on an ongoing basis.
The two then sparred over whether those phone records should be retained.

“I don’t use my government cellphone to conduct official business,” Cuffari said, though he pushed back when Ivey asked if the messages he deleted were related to personal business.
“I did not consider those to be federal records, and therefore, I deleted them,” Cuffari said. “It’s a clearly defined statute that places requirements on what a federal record actually is.”
Oversight Democrats’ request to NARA likewise asked for any necessary coordination with the Department of Justice.

The letter to Hysen asked for specific details about what DHS can determine about the messages.
“If the Department determines that federal records were deleted without proper disposition authority, your final report must include a complete description of the records affected [and] a statement of the exact circumstances surrounding the deletion of messages,” Archives wrote.

Cuffari is now under investigation by the Council of Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, but congressional scrutiny of his performance began long before, reaching a peak last summer when lawmakers became aware he failed to notify them of missing Secret Service text messages relating to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The texts were apparently lost in a software transition, but lawmakers pointed to a law requiring either agency of congressional notification within seven days if an inspector general believes records have been destroyed.
A bipartisan group of Senate lawmakers has also pushed Cuffari about allegations he suppressed a report about sexual harassment at DHS.
Cuffari’s office did not respond to a request for comment.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Archives ignites investigation of DHS inspector general following deleted texts
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) on Thursday kicked off an investigation into Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Inspector General Joseph Cuffari, bypassing the DHS watchdog by asking another agency official to examine his recordkeeping practices.
The move comes after Cuffari told lawmakers during a hearing he routinely deletes text messages from his government-issued phone because he did not consider them to be official records — a possible violation of recordkeeping laws.

“NARA requests that DHS provide NARA with the required report documenting IG Cuffari’s practices with respect to the management of electronic messages, and in particular all messages that meet the definition of a federal record,” the agency wrote in a letter to DHS Chief Information Officer Eric Hysen.

Requests to review potential violations of public records laws are often referred to inspectors general, but the NARA inquiry to another official within DHS comes after Democrats on the House Oversight Committee asked the Archives to intervene in the matter.

Cuffari has also faced calls to resign by two Democrats who argued is it “troubling, to say the least, that you have been routinely destroying or deleting official government records in violation of a law that your office is supposed to enforce.”

Cuffari answered “yes” earlier this month when Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-Md.) asked him during an appearance before the House Oversight and Accountability Committee whether he deletes text messages from his phone.

“It’s my normal practice to delete text messages,” Cuffari said, answering, “Correct,” when Ivey asked whether he does this on an ongoing basis.
The two then sparred over whether those phone records should be retained.

“I don’t use my government cellphone to conduct official business,” Cuffari said, though he pushed back when Ivey asked if the messages he deleted were related to personal business.
“I did not consider those to be federal records, and therefore, I deleted them,” Cuffari said. “It’s a clearly defined statute that places requirements on what a federal record actually is.”
Oversight Democrats’ request to NARA likewise asked for any necessary coordination with the Department of Justice.

The letter to Hysen asked for specific details about what DHS can determine about the messages.
“If the Department determines that federal records were deleted without proper disposition authority, your final report must include a complete description of the records affected [and] a statement of the exact circumstances surrounding the deletion of messages,” Archives wrote.

Cuffari is now under investigation by the Council of Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency, but congressional scrutiny of his performance began long before, reaching a peak last summer when lawmakers became aware he failed to notify them of missing Secret Service text messages relating to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The texts were apparently lost in a software transition, but lawmakers pointed to a law requiring either agency of congressional notification within seven days if an inspector general believes records have been destroyed.
A bipartisan group of Senate lawmakers has also pushed Cuffari about allegations he suppressed a report about sexual harassment at DHS.
Cuffari’s office did not respond to a request for comment.
just more trump trash that will have to be rooted out and disposed of properly.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
I get 6-7 phone calls a day that hang up on me, the odd ones that say Amazon has a charge on my credit card. I decided to stay on the line and ask to have my number taken off their list. I said there is no way they will get anything for me so it is just a wast of their time. To my surprise the guy did not just hang up on me, he said maybe someone opened an account with my information. He then said it was for an address in Toronto. He could help me fix it, am I on my computer, he will take me to their company's website. I said like hell I am going to give them my computer's address by visiting their site. He finally had me type in the site address, I put it in Google and it was www.anydesk.com.

I said what? You want me to give you access to my computer? "Only to stop the phone calls coming to you." "Fuck off you peace of crap." Then he finally hung up. At least he did not ask me for my credit card number like some have. Or I just did not give him enough time for that.
 
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