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aubiefifty

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Everything posted by aubiefifty

  1. he was convicted in a court of law.................did they change it? and the man has a turrible temper. trump used up what little trust i have in him. he is a huge liar. did you even read what she said in her testimony? see you want people convicted if they are guilty and he was. now you are craw fishing just because they are the best of friends. ok with that. just like you guy all swaer trump is not racist but he and his dad went to court over not allowing blacks in any of their rentals..............
  2. no sir you would be wrong. go ask titan. hell i go googl stuff when i know folks are just trying to wear me out googling. i want a link this side is for name calling and unless i am wrong links to prove what you said are indeed required when asked. unless you want to admit you were fudging?
  3. let me say trumps ex took him to court on rape charges and won. this is fact. now unless you are one of those crazies that do not think a man can rape a wife.
  4. maybe i am confused but i believe it was way before then. but the court papers were there with several pages.
  5. i will need a link. i am a dem and i am not a criminal..............just cray cray......
  6. i think his mouth is going to get him in serious trouble. his first rape accuser was a child. she took it to court and dropped the charges after someone walked up to the family by their car in a parking lot and told them to drop it or they would all be eliminated. this used to be on snopes. you could exactly what the little girl said. it might still be.
  7. most of those women were paid to show up and testify. hotels eats and maybe spending money like per diem? there were accusations made about that and i have googled it in the past and could never find anything on it. this is why i have my doubts. and maybe that is normal i have no idea
  8. i am not dissing our new wr coach ok? but i wish freeze had hired cornbread as an up yours to harsin. it would show what a fool he was and repair cornbreads image. now i base this on folks saying cornbread did nothing wrong. but it is not a perfect world.
  9. if bill is guilty of rape then get him. i am sick of all pols getting away with serious crap. i thought i have been clear on this. i think bill might have been set up. but again i am remembering the name some now but not enough to say one way or another.
  10. hell do not give me that crap you guys are fine with jim jordan.
  11. you are so wrong jj. my sister was raped repeatedly at the age of nine and ten. i am not familiar with her. but i think all rapists should have their genitals removed and i am not being funny. and i will not tell ANY rape victim to take a number. damn you are so callous today. that is my job.
  12. coach made me support the team................lol
  13. i am sure jesus disapproves of me but i am also sure he wants people to stand up for injustice. it is hard to do for me seeing all the people they hurt in their blindness.
  14. or help me legitimize all this hate in my heart. or i will find someone who will..............you are too nice bro.
  15. Open in app or online Wednesday was a very bad day for Donald Trump. boo ******* hoo Donald Trump has now been smacked by judges more times than he has been smacked by Melania Jeff Tiedrich Apr 27 Share part one Donald Trump is a stupid ******* moron. Lewis Kaplan is a federal district judge with a low tolerance for stupid ******* morons. these two men are on a collision course. Lewis Kaplan is presiding over the E. Jean Carroll trial. Donald Trump is, of course, the defendant. Upgrade to paid Judges do not like to be ****** with. I have been in jury selection pools and I have seen what happens to people who exasperate a judge. it’s not pretty. Lewis Kaplan is one ******* exasperated judge right now. strike one: Trump’s legal team has been making multiple attempts to learn the names of the jurors — so Trump can dox them and send his deranged goons after them. Judge Kaplan didn’t take kindly to any of this bull****. “Mr. Trump’s quite recent reaction to what he perceived as an imminent threat of indictment by a grand jury sitting virtually next door to this Court was to encourage ‘protest’ and to urge people to ‘take our country back.’ That reaction reportedly has been perceived by some as incitement to violence,” Kaplan wrote in an order Thursday. “And it bears mention that Mr. Trump repeatedly has attacked courts, judges, various law enforcement officials and other public officials, and even individual jurors in other matters,” the judge added. strike two: Trump wouldn’t commit to attending or not attending the trial. Before trial, [Trump’s attorney] Tacopina didn’t tip his hand in legal filings about whether his client would attend court on any date, but he asked the judge to instruct the jury that he may skip trial to spare New Yorkers the logistical burdens that come with a visit from a former president. again, judges hate being ****** with. Last week, Senior U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected that request. “Mr. Trump is free to attend, to testify, or both. He is free also to do none of those things,” Kaplan wrote in a one-page order at the time. spoiler alert: Trump didn’t show — a dumb as **** move because now all the jurors get to stare at a chicken**** coward’s empty chair, day after day. for a guy obsessed with optics, weird move. strike three: Donald Trump melts the way **** down on his crappy app — while court is in session. holy ****, dude. shut the **** up. what do you imagine you’re accomplishing here? look, I get it. Donald Trump is his own worst enemy. he can’t keep out of his own way. saddled with an increasingly-deteriorating brain and the impulse control of a coked-up squirrel, Trump always manages to makes things worse for himself. but jeez, this is basic ‘right now is a good time to keep your stupid mouth shut’ stuff. Judge Kaplan was not a happy camper. Judge Kaplan warned Trump’s attorney Joe Tacopina that the statement and any further statements about the case could open Trump up to “a new source of potential liability.” Tacopina said he would ask his client to refrain from any further comments about the case. “a new source of potential liability,” is that a bad thing? it sure doesn’t sound like a good thing. keep ******* around, Donny. the finding out is going to be spec****ingtacular. part two later in the day, Donald Trump got some more bad news. Trump has been trying to keep Mike Pence from testifying before a federal grand jury about January 6, citing imaginary executive privilege. free clue, my man: you are not an executive and you have no privilege. but don’t take my word for it. listen to the DC Circuit Court, who pretty much just said the same thing. Mike Pence must testify. bad day all around, Donny. go cram a burger into your face and maybe call that dude who plays you show tunes to help calm you down. everyone is entitled to my own opinion is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. yes my beloved haters i rejoice at stuff like this. trump will never change his ways until he gets knocked down a few pegs. i love to see someone that hurts people as often as he does get it handed back to him. he has no decency.
  16. rollingstone.com Jack Teixiera Case Highlights the Military's Extremism Problem Adam Rawnsley 11–14 minutes Skip to main content The Online Racists Stealing Military Secrets Jack Teixiera's turn from online racist to alleged classified-document leaker shouldn't be surprising Air National Guardsman Jack Teixiera, 21, seen here in an undated photo, faces two criminal charges after posting classified Pentagon documents on social media. © Air National Guard/ZUMA Jack Teixiera’s odyssey from online racist to alleged classified-information shitposter to federal inmate shocked many — but it shouldn’t. In recent years, the Defense and Justice departments have investigated a number of servicemembers for involvement in far-right groups — and found they also appear to enjoy sharing the government’s most closely held secrets with their bros. While Republicans in Congress have played down the risk of extremists in the military, experts who follow the issue say they’re not surprised to see extremist beliefs and leaks of classified information coincide. In a 2021 hearing on extremism in the armed forces, Republican members of Congress wondered aloud whether the issue had really “proven itself to be a major problem” or whether the issue was merely “political theater” for Democrats to enforce a partisan ideological discipline on the armed services. Republicans in the House and Senate have blasted Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin’s training efforts to root out extremism and voted against legislation to track “white-supremacist and neo-Nazi activity in the uniformed services.” “I don’t think we should be surprised at all,” says Don Christensen, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel who served as the Air Force’s chief prosecutor. “It’s clear that we at least have a subculture of racism and antisemitism within the military, and that there are people who are willing to act out by sharing classified information or making terroristic threats against those minorities or Jewish people.” The military is one of the nation’s most diverse organizations, and only a small percentage of servicemembers are racist. But when it comes to leaks, even a handful of white nationalists can do a lot of damage. Teixeira’s racism appears to have been more casual, rather than organized and violent, like other racist members of the military who have recently faced charges. A video of him at a shooting range obtained by The Washington Post showed the Air National Guardsman yelling racist and antisemitic slurs while popping off rounds at a shooting range. And on his Discord servers, users regularly posted similar memes. In a detention memo filed late Wednesday, prosecutors alleged that local police had denied him a gun permit because of violent, racist threats he made in high school remarks and had discussed building an “assassination van and an urge to “kill a [expletive] ton of people.” It’s unclear what made Teixeira post volumes of sensitive documents on social media. He embraced right-wing conspiracy theories. including a false claim that the white supremacist massacre at a Buffalo grocery store was part of a secret government plot. But he mostly appeared keen to share classified documents in order to revel in the awe of the young teenagers who looked up to the 21-year-old in his small Discord server. Other far-right members of the armed services have been more aggressive and extreme. Take Ethan Melzer, for example. Melzer, a 21-year-old Army private, received a security clearance and a posting to Vicenza, Italy, where he regularly browsed jihadist propaganda from the Islamic State and chatted with neo-Nazi friends in the obscure, Satanic “Order of the Nine Angles” neo-Nazi cult on social media, according to court documents. In 2020, the Army informed Melzer’s unit they’d be shipping out to guard Incirlik Air Base Turkey, a U.S. military base which is home to American tactical nuclear weapons. After receiving the orders, Melzer messaged fellow online racists with the sensitive information about his unit’s deployment time, location, and security vulnerabilities at the base where they were headed in hopes that they would carry out a mass-casualty terrorist attack on American troops and spark “another 10-year war in the Middle East,” according to court documents. For his efforts, the government charged Melzer with illegal transmission of national defense information, in addition to a host of other charges related to the attempt to organize a terrorist attack on U.S. forces. A federal judge sentenced Melzer to 45 years in prison in March for his terrorist plotting. Liam Collins, a low-ranked 20-year-old rifleman with 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, landed in similar trouble following the leak of chats from the neo-Nazi forum Iron March. In November 2019, the independent investigative news site Bellingcat noted a data dump from the defunct neo-Nazi and white-supremacist message board. The screen names, IP addresses, and direct messages from the forum — including messages from Collins — were published anonymously. After reporters publicly identified Collins as an active-duty Marine and participant in the neo-Nazi forum, prosecutors charged Collins and three associates with conspiring to carry out a terrorist attack on an electricity substation in North Carolina as part of a larger goal to create a white-supremacist homeland within the United States. Collins hasn’t been charged with mishandling or retaining classified information, but there are signs that federal law enforcement found what it believed to be classified material on one of his devices. In early 2021, the Justice Department warned that it had recovered information from “one of the devices seized in October 2020 which appeared to be classified material” and “that evidence existed which indicated the defendants engaged in substantial sharing of other information.” Judge Richard E. Myers announced afterward that attorneys in the case “should be ready to discuss the Classified Information Procedures Act and its potential impact on discovery and trial in these matters.” The Justice Department declined to elaborate further about the issue of classified information in the case. An attorney for Collins did not respond to questions from Rolling Stone. Even in cases where extremists aren’t accused of sending their friends secret documents, a number of them have still managed to obtain security clearances. Federal prosecutors charged Killian Mackeith Ryan — a soldier in the 82nd Airborne who the FBI allegedly caught telling friends he joined the military to get “more proficient in killing n—-rs” — with lying on his security-clearance application. Michael Miselis, a missile engineer defense contractor for Northrop Grumman, received a top-secret security clearance from the Pentagon while a member of the neo-Nazi “Rise Above Movement. Miselis and three other members of the group later pleaded guilty to conspiracy to riot after federal law enforcement identified them as participants in the white-nationalist riot at the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Brad Moss, a Washington attorney who specializes in matters of national security, tells Rolling Stone that the process of security clearances is “not designed to identify the personal politics or ideology of an applicant. Whether someone is an ardent liberal, a defiant conservative, or a run-of-the-mill libertarian is supposed to be completely irrelevant to the security vetting process.” There’s an exception, Moss explains: “Unless, of course, those political views resulted in conduct that implicates another security concern, such as engaging in criminal conduct like the Summer 2020 riots or the Jan. 6 riots, or associating with foreign nationals of a particular political persuasion in a manner that puts the person at risk of exploitation.” But the issue of far-right extremists creating intelligence community concerns is not a new one. Following the 1985 arrest of John A. Walker Jr., a Navy chief warrant officer who spent 20 years passing some of America’s most closely held secrets to the Soviet Union, reporters discovered that Walker had once applied to become a member of the Klu Klux Klan and joined the far-right John Birch Society. “I think the starting point is to accept that this is happening and to find out to what degree it’s happening. I still think there’s a lot of denial that there’s a problem. I’ve seen retired generals and admirals pushing back on the idea that we have an extremist problem,” says Christensen. “I think it’s pretty clear we do. It’s just a question about how big of a problem it is.” you boys wanna get back with me on that racism thing?
  17. tell me iam. how many mass killing have we had in our country where a lone person with a knife kills a bunch of people. and how far can a man throw a knife if he is up in a building and wanting to kill people at a concert below him?
  18. i am sad anyone gets hurt or killed but i think you already know the answer to that.................
  19. Bringing children into anything is low class and teh fact he would do this tells me he does not care about children.
  20. New Auburn assistant Corey Williams 'checks a lot of boxes' for Bruce Pearl Published: Apr. 27, 2023, 9:38 a.m. 5–6 minutes Texas Tech assistant couch Corey Williams on the sideline against Texas Southern during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game Thursday, Nov. 10, 2022, in Lubbock, Texas. (AP Photo/Justin Rex)AP Bruce Pearl’s coaching staff has been remarkably stable since the 2018-19 season, just before the start of Auburn’s historic Final Four run that year. So, when Pearl finally saw some turnover within his program this offseason, he wanted to make sure he nailed the hire. Pearl believes he did precisely that with the addition of Corey Williams, who last week was named the Tigers’ newest assistant coach. Williams comes to Auburn after spending the last two seasons as an assistant at Texas Tech, where he also served as the program’s interim coach in the Big 12 Tournament, and before that was an assistant under Eric Musselman at Arkansas. Read more Auburn basketball: Bruce Pearl dishes on Denver Jones, Chaney Johnson and Auburn’s fluid roster makeover Four Auburn players among NBA Draft’s early entrants Allen Flanigan still weighing Auburn future with decision looming “Really, really excited about Corey,” Pearl said Tuesday evening in Atlanta before the first stop on the AMBUSH tour. “I like to say that if you want to judge me, judge me by the company I keep. Sometimes that can get me in trouble, but I’m very excited about Corey.” Williams fills the vacancy on staff left by the departure of Wes Flanigan, who spent five seasons back at his alma mater before leaving earlier this month for a role on Chris Beard’s inaugural coaching staff at Ole Miss. Flanigan previously worked with Beard at Arkansas-Little Rock during the 2015-16 season. Ole Miss has yet to announce Flanigan’s hire. “I just think everybody’s got to do what’s best for themselves and what’s best for their families,” Pearl said. “We appreciated Wes’ time at Auburn.” Pearl didn’t waste much time in filling that position on his staff heading into Year 10 with Auburn. Between working to reconstruct the Tigers’ roster following a second straight NCAA Tournament appearance and second-round exit, Pearl tapped Williams for the role less than two weeks after Flanigan’s departure. The 53-year-old Macon, Georgia, native brings more than two decades of coaching experience with him to Auburn’s staff. That includes his most recent stop at Texas Tech, where he was part of a Red Raiders program that advanced to the Sweet 16 two years ago while finishing 12th in the final AP poll, going 18-0 at home that season and ranking first in adjusted defensive efficiency, according to KenPom. Prior to his time at Texas Tech, Williams worked on Musselman’s inaugural staff at Arkansas. The Razorbacks went 20-12 in that first year before the postseason was canceled due to the pandemic, and in Year 2 they went 25-7 overall and advanced to the Elite Eight before losing to eventual-champion Baylor. A former standout point guard at Oklahoma State, where he played for legendary coach Eddie Sutton, Williams was selected by the Chicago Bulls in the second round of the 1992 NBA Draft. As a rookie, he was part of the Bulls’ first threepeat team with Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen under coach Phil Jackson. “He was a great student-athlete,” Pearl said. “Such a great athlete that he got drafted both by the Chicago Bulls and the Kansas City Chiefs. He played alongside Michael Jordan, carried his bags for a couple of years for the Bulls, got himself a ring. Played with one of my former players at Iowa, BJ Armstrong.” Williams was a student assistant at Oklahoma State in 1994 when the program advanced to the Final Four, but his coaching career began in earnest in 2000 as an assistant at Oral Roberts. In 2007 he joined Leonard Hamilton’s staff at Florida State, and then was named head coach at Stetson in 2013, serving in that role for six seasons before joining Musselman at Arkansas. “Just (look at) the people he worked for,” Pearl said. “When you’ve got Eddie Sutton and Leonard Hamilton and Bill Self and that family tree on your resume, it speaks volumes. And he’s a better person, so very excited about him and his family. His family and his wife’s family are from Macon, Georgia, so this is an opportunity for him to come closer to home. It just checks a lot of boxes for us.” Tom Green is an Auburn beat reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on Twitter @Tomas_Verde. If you purchase a product or register for an account through one of the links on our site, we may receive compensation.
  21. Why do so many of you seem to like santos? i know little about him but if he is vindictive enough to threaten or consider building a prison right next to Disneyland? that is pretty bad.low class. and anyone with children should worry about him. good grief.
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