Faces of the master race.

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
There is too much commentary, but a follow-up video was taken and starts about 3:10 that is worth scrolling to after her freakout.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member

Crazy story, turns out the judge also had something to do with the Deutsche bank-Epstein trial and the INCEL was radicalized because he snowflakes after his wife he married in Russia (doesn't state she was Russian, just were married there) left him.

https://www.boston.com/news/national-news-2/2020/07/21/roy-den-hollander
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Roy Den Hollander was a self-described “anti-feminist” lawyer who flooded the courts with seemingly frivolous lawsuits that sought to eliminate women’s studies programs and prohibit nightclubs from holding “ladies’ nights.”

In one of his most recent cases, he openly seethed against a federal judge in New Jersey, Esther Salas, whom he described in a self-published, 1,700-page book as “a lazy and incompetent Latina judge appointed by Obama.”

Den Hollander left the case, in which he challenged the male-only U.S. military draft, last summer, telling a lawyer who replaced him that he had terminal cancer.

On Sunday afternoon, Den Hollander showed up at Salas’ home in North Brunswick, New Jersey, and fired multiple gunshots, killing the judge’s son and seriously wounding her husband, who is a criminal defense lawyer, investigators said. The judge, who was in the basement at the time, was not injured.

The New York State Police found Den Hollander’s body near Liberty, New York — about a two-hour drive from the judge’s home — after he shot himself in an apparent suicide, officials said.

The startling sequence of events was a reminder of the dangers encountered by judges, who typically do not receive special security outside the courthouse unless they face specific threats. Salas worked in one of the busiest courthouses in the country, overseeing dozens of cases at a time involving a wide range of defendants and litigants.

The FBI on Monday contacted New York state’s chief judge, Janet M. DiFiore, to notify her that Den Hollander had her name and photo in his car, according to her spokesman, Lucian Chalfen. The agents did not indicate whether Den Hollander had intended to target her as well, he said.

Investigators were exploring whether Den Hollander had decided to “take out” some of his enemies, given his cancer diagnosis, before he died, according to one law enforcement official.

Den Hollander, 72, identified with a broader movement of men who in often abusive, misogynist and hateful language rail against “feminazis.” He wrote numerous online screeds, some of which exceeded 1,000 pages.

Den Hollander had a long history of filing lawsuits against programs that he believed favored women. In 2008, he told The New York Times that his anger toward feminists stemmed from his bitter divorce from a woman he married in Russia.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
As much as I hate to promote this 'I am not racist, but....' guy's video, I can't help myself.Screen Shot 2020-08-03 at 6.40.53 PM.png

It is a actually nice look at what Detroit looks like, but the shit he spews is obvious race baiting and draws racist conclusions about the stats he puts out.

A lot of these homes are abandoned and this area is becoming rural, but there is not money/legalities that stop a lot of these homes from being torn down. 'Open spaces' are the ones that have been able to be torn down. And it will be who knows how long before those open fields are large enough to redevelop or ground is cleaned enough to farm from all the basements.
 
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hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://apnews.com/8ec66a835cb5b505791c5a4d2a46095cScreen Shot 2020-08-11 at 8.48.37 AM.png
ATLANTA (AP) — A woman who’s been blasted for racist videos and adamant support for the QAnon conspiracy theory faces a neurosurgeon who campaigned on his experience to improve the health care system in Tuesday’s Republican primary runoff for an open U.S. House seat representing northwest Georgia.

The race could indicate just how far candidates are able to push the limits of political rhetoric in the age of President Donald Trump before risking backlash from voters.

Businesswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene has received national attention for a series of videos and social media posts where she expresses racist views and support for the far-right conspiracy theory QAnon. That’s led some Republican officials to condemn her campaign and raised opponent John Cowan’s profile.

Both Cowan and Greene have positioned themselves as staunch supporters of Trump, pushing anti-abortion, pro-gun and pro-border wall messages. But while Cowan has taken a more traditional approach to his campaign, Greene has found a loyal following — and controversy — online with a continuous flow of video chats and social posts.

Greene led in the initial June 9 Republican primary by a wide margin but failed to secure enough votes to win the nomination outright.

Soon after that race, a series of videos were unearthed in which Greene expresses racist, anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim views. In the videos, she complains of an “Islamic invasion” into government offices, claims Black and Hispanic men are held back by “gangs and dealing drugs,” and pushes an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that billionaire philanthropist George Soros, who is Jewish, collaborated with the Nazis.

Greene also is part of a growing list of candidates who have expressed support for QAnon, a U.S. conspiracy theory popular among some Trump supporters.

She has responded to criticism of her rhetoric by blasting “the fake news media” and “the DC swamp.”

Cowan has strongly pushed back on Greene’s comments, saying in a recent interview that she “deserves her own Youtube channel, and not a seat in Congress.”

He says he’d use his experience as a doctor to improve the health care system and he’d push to repeal the Affordable Care Act, though he supports keeping protections for preexisting conditions.

Greene has in turn attacked Cowan as not being sufficiently conservative, branding him a RINO, a derisive acronym that stands for Republican In Name Only.

Georgia’s 14th Congressional District stretches from the outskirts of metro Atlanta to the largely rural northwest corner of the state.

The winner of Tuesday’s runoff will face Democrat Kevin Van Ausdal in November. Republican Rep. Tom Graves, who did not seek reelection, last won the seat with over 76% of the vote in 2018.
Politico has this congressional candidate (Republican Georgia) 9 minute racist rant that is on par with a lot of what we have seen going on here.
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/17/house-republicans-condemn-gop-candidate-racist-videos-325579

 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

dandyrandy

Well-Known Member
I saw that guy this morning. We had a dead ash fall across this narrow road we live on. I'm down by the road with the tractor and chain dragging the pieces off into my field. I'm hooking up and I look up and this guy is setting in his truck stopped. I said hello. He said tree fall down go boom. I said yes it's a bit rotten. He drives off. He's my ageish. Probably not much of a conversationalist....
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I saw that guy this morning. We had a dead ash fall across this narrow road we live on. I'm down by the road with the tractor and chain dragging the pieces off into my field. I'm hooking up and I look up and this guy is setting in his truck stopped. I said hello. He said tree fall down go boom. I said yes it's a bit rotten. He drives off. He's my ageish. Probably not much of a conversationalist....
he's your average all around Trumper*.
 

dandyrandy

Well-Known Member
I hate to admit it but I've always had an electronic repair shop on the side. My daughter and son worked in it while growing up. If it was electronic I worked on it. I still fix my own stuff. I have a Sony upstairs that needs a cap in the power supply probably. When cool it won't always come on. It's only a couple years old. Anyway I got started fixing cb radios back in the early 70's. Truck drivers used to stop by and drop stuff off and pick it back up on the run back etc. I've met some of the oddest people. I went to a projection tv house call once in a remote part of Appalachia. Bag phone days. Even with the outside cell antenna on the van, no signal. I get the the address. Twin island Creek. Two single wide trailers are together making a double wide. Old trailers. Lots of pit bulls on chains. I knock on the door and a young lady comes and let's me in. I follow her in to the center of the trailers and see a pile of cash on the coffee table. I go to the television fix it in an hour or so. I hand the good old boy the bill. He grabs a hand full of cash and says keep the change. I got out quickly. A few weeks later he was arrested for drug charges. They never called me. Thank goodness.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
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White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway was asked Wednesday night about Rittenhouse attending the Trump rally. We’re not responsible for the private conduct of people at our rallies any more than … all the crazy people who have been involved with the Obama/Biden campaigns or other things,” she said.

A
h, the unofficial slogan of the Trump campaign: "We're not responsible!"



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dandyrandy

Well-Known Member
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White House senior adviser Kellyanne Conway was asked Wednesday night about Rittenhouse attending the Trump rally. We’re not responsible for the private conduct of people at our rallies any more than … all the crazy people who have been involved with the Obama/Biden campaigns or other things,” she said.

A
h, the unofficial slogan of the Trump campaign: "We're not responsible!"



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He'll do well in prison....
 
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