Funny events in anti-woke world

BrawlMan

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96 year old Nazi collaborator went on the run in Germany, right after claiming they were too old and frail to appear in court. 🤦

A true coward to the end. Spoken like a true Nazi (collaborator).
 
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bluegate

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96 year old Nazi collaborator went on the run in Germany, right after claiming they were too old and frail to appear in court. 🤦

Good on Germany for still prosecuting these pieces of human trash.

Meanwhile in the US...
 

Trunkage

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How many insect fragments you want with that?
Well, I'd point out that you cant get rid of 100% of insect fragments. Of course, you can think the US levels of acceptability is way too high especially compared to other countries

No, it makes you like the regular Republicans not getting vaccinated right now. Imagine you waited on a vaccine that you thought was rushed and you didn't trust the source, exactly what you did in reality. Then imagine that while you were still unvaccinated, Donald Trump made a mandate that you have to vaccinated or you lose your job (I understand you aren't in America, just roll with the imaginary situation please). Would Trump mandating the vaccine he's pushing at you make you more or less hesitant to get vaccinated?

This is the sort of thing policy makers should be thinking about when they make policies. Not what lets them say "we did the right thing, nobody can blame us", but the thing that actual gets the public response they should want.
Its not that I didnt trust the source. Well actually, I didnt trust the source for a very different reason. The companies have a profit motive that could lead disaster. I was specifically waited for a wide suite of people saying it was. But then, there is a possibility of a vaccine mandate coming to my country soon which is done by some whose nickname is 'Scotty from marketing'.... because he's THAT trustworthy. The mandate WAS a factor in getting vaccinated. ScoMo trustworthiness (or lack there of) wasn't that big of an issue because I never relied on one single source for trust. For example, if Trump and the CDC AND institutions similar to the CDC from at least 10 countries said it was safe, I would believe it was safe.

But then, these guys have the reserve problem. They've limited the number of people they trust to one and cant trust any one else.

As to policy, I'm going to be bringing up these exact points whenever the GOP makes rules liberals don't like and see how much water that state holds. Because I think it hold none.
 

XsjadoBlayde

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Stuff like this only highlights how even when the world will be literally burning, the GOP will still veto and shut down government out of spiteful stubbornness if the other side bothers to introduce any radical changes to actually protect our future generations from the continual damage they're so happy to continue profiting off.


With only hours to spare, Congress passed legislation that would avoid a partial federal shutdown and keep the government funded through Dec. 3, and sent the bill to President Joe Biden.

The back-to-back votes by the Senate and then the House will help avert one crisis, but just delay another as the political parties dig in on a dispute over how to raise the government’s borrowing cap before the United States risks a potentially catastrophic default.

The House approved the short-term funding measure by a 254-175 vote not long after Senate passage in a 65-35 vote. A large majority of Republicans in both chambers voted against it. The legislation was needed to keep the government running once the current budget year ended at midnight Thursday. Passage will buy lawmakers more time to craft the spending measures that will fund federal agencies and the programs they administer.

The work to keep the government open and running served as the backdrop during a chaotic day for Democrats as they struggled to get Biden’s top domestic priorities over the finish line, including a bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure bill at risk of stalling in the House.

With their energy focused on Biden’s agenda, Democrats backed down from a showdown over the debt limit in the government funding bill, deciding to uncouple the borrowing ceiling at the insistence of Republicans. If that cap is not raised by Oct. 18, the U.S. probably will face a financial crisis and economic recession, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said.


Republicans say Democrats have the votes to raise the debt limit on their own, and Republican leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is insisting they do so.

The short-term spending legislation will also provide about $28.6 billion in disaster relief for those recovering from Hurricane Ida and other natural disasters, and help support Afghanistan evacuees from the 20-year war between the U.S. and the Taliban.

“This is a good outcome, one I’m happy we are getting done,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said. “With so many things to take care of in Washington, the last thing the American people need is for the government to grind to a halt.”

Once the government is funded, albeit temporarily, Democrats will turn their full attention to the need to raise the limit on federal borrowing, which now stands at $28.4 trillion.

The U.S. has never defaulted on its debts in the modern era and historically, both parties have voted to raise the limit. Democrats joined the Republican Senate majority in doing so three times during Donald Trump’s presidency. This time Democrats wanted to take care of both priorities in one bill, but Senate Republicans blocked that effort Monday.

Raising or suspending the debt limit allows the federal government to pay obligations already incurred. It does not authorize new spending. McConnell has argued that Democrats should pass a debt limit extension with the same budgetary tools they are using to try to pass a $3.5 trillion effort to expand social safety net programs and tackle climate change. He reiterated that warning as the Senate opened on Thursday, even as Democrats have labeled that option a “nonstarter.”

“We’re able to fund the government today because the majority accepted reality. The same thing will need to happen on the debt limit next week,” McConnell said.

House Democrats pushed through a stand-alone bill late Wednesday that would suspend the debt limit until December 2022. Schumer said he would bring the measure to the Senate floor, but the bill is almost certain to be blocked by a Republican filibuster.


The arguments made in both chambers about the debt ceiling have followed similar themes.

“You are more interested in punishing Democrats than preserving our credit and that is something I’m having a real tough time getting my head around,” House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., told Republicans. “The idea of not paying bills just because we don’t like (Biden’s) policies is the wrong way to go.”

Undaunted, Republicans argued that Democrats have chosen to ram through their political priorities on their own and thus are responsible for raising the debt limit on their own.

“So long as the Democratic majority continues to insist on spending money hand over fist, Republicans will refuse to help them lift the debt ceiling,” said Rep. Tom Cole, R-Okla.

The Treasury has taken steps to preserve cash, but once it runs out, it will be forced to rely on incoming revenue to pay its obligations. That would likely mean delays in payments to Social Security recipients, veterans and government workers, including military personnel. The Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank, projects that the federal government would be unable to meet about 40% of payments due in the several weeks that follow.
Another existential panic to drink myself heavily to sleep with.
 

Agema

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Stuff like this only highlights how even when the world will be literally burning, the GOP will still veto and shut down government out of spiteful stubbornness if the other side bothers to introduce any radical changes to actually protect our future generations from the continual damage they're so happy to continue profiting off.
Ah, that sort of brinksmanship is just the usual rough and tumble game.

They're only serious about something or being total pricks when they force a shutdown longer than a week.
 
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XsjadoBlayde

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Ah, that sort of brinksmanship is just the usual rough and tumble game.

They're only serious about something or being total pricks when they force a shutdown longer than a week.
Well if that's what passes for hope, I'll take it!
 

The Rogue Wolf

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Ah, that sort of brinksmanship is just the usual rough and tumble game.

They're only serious about something or being total pricks when they force a shutdown longer than a week.
I don't think that's the case anymore. The Republican party has been hijacked by idiots who will happily burn this country to the ground so long as they get to be the only ones who play in the ashes.
 

tstorm823

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To be clear, both parties are doing their normal posturing here. If you follow left wing news, all you know is that the GOP is trying to stop the government from functioning. If you follow right wing news, all you know is that the Democrats are sneaking things like adding women to the draft into a budget proposal. Neither group is attempting to pass anything, Republicans want any excuse to blame Democrats just as much as Democrats actively poison pill their bills, they're all just positioning themselves to blame the other side for the problems they don't actually know how to fix.
 

Trunkage

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To be clear, both parties are doing their normal posturing here. If you follow left wing news, all you know is that the GOP is trying to stop the government from functioning. If you follow right wing news, all you know is that the Democrats are sneaking things like adding women to the draft into a budget proposal. Neither group is attempting to pass anything, Republicans want any excuse to blame Democrats just as much as Democrats actively poison pill their bills, they're all just positioning themselves to blame the other side for the problems they don't actually know how to fix.
While I don't disagree with you here, I wanna add that the Dems passed ceiling limit rises 3 times under Trump without as much fanfare combined as this one. Also, much of this is internal Dems infighting. The GOP can just sit back and watch them destroy each other
 

tstorm823

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While I don't disagree with you here, I wanna add that the Dems passed ceiling limit rises 3 times under Trump without as much fanfare combined as this one. Also, much of this is internal Dems infighting. The GOP can just sit back and watch them destroy each other
And 5 times under Obama, and 7 times under Bush, and 8 times under Clinton... And there's always a debate, and they always pass it anyway.

This time is not exceptional in any way. Democrats are trying to package things Republicans don't like onto bills they ultimately have to pass. Republicans aren't budging. Democrats will eventually back off the things that aren't even actually related, and they'll pass a bill to raise the debt ceiling without the pork attached. Trump tried the same thing, attaching the wall spending to a budget proposal, and Democrats let the government shutdown before agreeing to it, and then Trump agreed to sign a budget without the wall and everything went on as normal. There is nothing unusual going on here. Just the seasonal partisan headlines to try and make you think disaster is coming (regardless of who you support). You just happen to get your information from sources that run cover for the Dems, and don't mention that they're trying to tie nonsense to all the bills Republicans won't agree to.
 

XsjadoBlayde

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Hah



Alex Jones, the right-wing conspiracy theorist and founder of Infowars, is responsible for all damages in two lawsuits stemming from his false claims that the Sandy Hook school shooting was a “giant hoax,” a judge ruled this week.

District Judge Maya Guerra Gamble of Travis County, Tex., issued default judgments Monday against Jones and Infowars after he did not comply with court orders to give information in a pair of 2018 lawsuits brought against him by families of two children killed in the 2012 massacre. Jones repeatedly failed to hand over documents and evidence to the court supporting his damaging and erroneous claims that the school shooting in Newtown, Conn., which killed 26 people, 20 of whom were young children, was a “false flag” operation carried out by “crisis actors.”

Gamble’s ruling, which was unsealed Thursday, lambasted Jones and his website’s parent company, Free Speech Systems, for having “intentionally disobeyed” the court’s requests and showing “flagrant bad faith and callous disregard” in not turning over documents related to this and other lawsuits filed against him. Jones has already lost several defamation lawsuits related to his Sandy Hook falsehoods and was previously ordered to pay tens of thousands of dollars in legal fees to families who have sued him. Nine families have sued him over the years.

“An escalating series of judicial admonishments, monetary penalties, and non-dispositive sanctions have all been ineffective at deterring the abuse,” Gamble wrote.

The default judgments were first reported by HuffPost.

Mark Bankston, an attorney for the parents filing the two lawsuits, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. Bankston said in a statement to CNN that Gamble’s rulings gave the two families “the closure they deserve.”

“Mr. Jones was given ample opportunity to take these lawsuits seriously and obey the rule of law,” Bankston said. “He chose not to do so, and now he will face the consequences for that decision.”

Brad Reeves, Jones’s attorney, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A statement issued by Jones and Norm Pattis, an attorney for Infowars, described the judge’s rulings as “stunning.”

“It takes no account of the tens of thousands of documents produced by the defendants, the hours spent sitting for depositions and the various sworn statements filed in these cases,” Jones and Pattis said, according to the statement. “We are distressed by what we regard as a blatant abuse of discretion by the trial court. We are determined to see that these cases are heard on the merits.”

The judge’s rulings are the latest legal troubles for Jones, who has been banned from major platforms such as Facebook, YouTube and Spotify for violating their hate speech policies.

The Washington Post reported in February that the Justice Department and FBI are investigating whether high-profile right-wing figures — including Jones — may have played a role in the Jan. 6 Capitol breach. The probe is part of a broader look into the mind-set of those who committed violence and their apparent paths to radicalization.

Jones and Roger Stone, a longtime confidant to former president Donald Trump, promoted the extremist groups Proud Boys and Oath Keepers. They also had preexisting business or personal ties with members the government has charged with coordinating and planning certain parts of the breach, or who have been linked to violence at an earlier Trump rally, according to The Post.
Would've been easier to post the words from the Guardian link, but gotta admit there's a twisted satisfaction from bypassing news paywalls like a knock-off Robin Hood with only despair to share instead of riches.
 

BrawlMan

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Hah





Would've been easier to post the words from the Guardian link, but gotta admit there's a twisted satisfaction from bypassing news paywalls like a knock-off Robin Hood with only despair to share instead of riches.
It's been nothing but a constant downward spiral for that douchebag. Excellent đź‘Ś.
 
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Samtemdo8

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It's been nothing but a constant downward spiral for that douchebag. Excellent đź‘Ś.
Still a hollow victory because we still have a lot of people picking up his legacy in the end.

Ben Shapiro is still around for one.
 

BrawlMan

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Ben Shapiro is still around for one.
Guess what, even hardcore Republicans high up top of the food chain don't like him. They consider him a complete joke. Benny boy might as well not even exist in my eyes. I'll still keep a watchful eye of course, but not someone I'm that concerned about at the moment.

And while there are others that pick up his "legacy", that in itself is a hollow victory as far as I'm concerned. A legacy of douchebaggery. The same thing will happen to them at some point. Alex Jones Lost I consider a big victory, as he's done nothing but try to pass off blame and act like a chicken shit whenever he gets called out on it. I take my blessings each day at a time, and I'm not even close to upset or disappointed right now.