Funny events in anti-woke world

Agema

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Um...OOPS. For clarification, the logo on the left was the proposed new logo for East Side Elementary School, which is located in Georgia.
Honestly, I don't think this is a problem.

Take a look at the Great Seal of the USA: that's a very similar design scheme to the Nazi eagle too. It's a common design full stop. It's reasonable to have an eagle, and there are only so many ways to draw an eagle. Some other identifier has to go somewhere, and that sort of area (centre, centre-bottom under the head) is the obvious place. After that, there are clear differences in style.

Nothingburger, move on.
 

XsjadoBlaydette

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Steve Bannon, a longtime ally of former President Donald Trump was convicted on Friday of contempt charges for defying a congressional subpoena from the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Bannon, 68, was convicted after a four-day trial in federal court in Washington on two counts: one for refusing to appear for a deposition and the other for refusing to provide documents in response to the committee’s subpoena. The jury of 8 men and 4 women deliberated just under three hours.

He faces up to two years in federal prison when he’s sentenced on Oct. 21. Each count carries a minimum sentence of 30 days in jail.

The committee sought Bannon’s testimony over his involvement in Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Bannon had initially argued that his testimony was protected by Trump’s claim of executive privilege. But the House panel and the Justice Department contend such a claim is dubious because Trump had fired Bannon from the White House in 2017 and Bannon was thus a private citizen when he was consulting with the then-president in the run-up to the riot on Jan. 6, 2021.

Bannon’s lawyers tried to argue during the trial that he didn’t refuse to cooperate and that the dates “were in flux.” They pointed to the fact that Bannon had reversed course shortly before the trial kicked off — after Trump waived his objection — and had offered to testify before the committee.


In closing arguments Friday morning, both sides re-emphasized their primary positions from the trial. The prosecution maintained that Bannon willfully ignored clear and explicit deadlines, and the defense claimed Bannon believed those deadlines were flexible and subject to negotiation.

Bannon was served with a subpoena on Sept. 23 last year ordering him to provide requested documents to the committee by Oct. 7 and appear in person by Oct. 14. Bannon was indicted in November on two counts of criminal contempt of Congress, a month after the Justice Department received the House panel’s referral.

Bannon’s attorney Evan Corcoran told jurors Friday in his closing arguments that those deadlines were mere “placeholders” while lawyers on each side negotiated terms.

Corcoran said the committee “rushed to judgment” because it “wanted to make an example of Steve Bannon.”

Corcoran also hinted that the government’s main witness, Jan. 6 committee chief counsel Kristin Amerling, was personally biased. Amerling admitted on the stand that she is a lifelong Democrat and has been friends with one of the prosecutors for years. Corcoran also vaguely hinted that the signature of Jan. 6 committee chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss) looked different on the subpoena than on other letters but dropped that topic when the prosecution objected.

Prosecutors focused on the series of letters exchanged between the Jan. 6 committee and Bannon’s lawyers. The correspondence shows Thompson immediately dismissing Bannon’s claim that he was exempted by Trump’s claim of executive privilege and explicitly threatening Bannon with criminal prosecution.

“The defense wants to make this hard, difficult and confusing,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Amanda Vaughn in her closing statement. “This is not difficult. This is not hard. There were only two witnesses because it’s as simple as it seems.”

The defense Thursday motioned for an acquittal, saying the prosecution had not proved it’s case. In making his motion for acquittal before U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols, Bannon attorney Evan Corcoran said that “no reasonable juror could conclude that Mr. Bannon refused to comply.”

Once the motion was made the defense rested its case without putting on any witnesses, telling Nichols that Bannon saw no point in testifying since the judge’s previous rulings had gutted his planned avenues of defense. Among other things, Bannon’s team was barred from calling as witnesses House Speaker Nancy Pelosi or members of the House panel. David Schoen said Bannon “understands that he would be barred from telling the true facts.”
 

Gergar12

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The catholic church is full of it on social issues.

 

XsjadoBlaydette

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Inconceivably kunty behaviour emerging from the cesspool, never too soon to meet consequences. As if the parents haven't had enough shit already.

A gun-loving California grocer allegedly bombarded the father of a school shooting victim with hundreds of emails, calling his late teen a “slut,” a “****,” and “human waste,” accusing her dad of molesting her, and signing off his most recent missive: “God Bless President Trump. Fuck joe biden.”

Fresno resident James Catalano, 61, is charged with one count of cyberstalking, following a months-long harassment campaign that targeted prominent gun safety advocate Fred Guttenberg, according to a federal complaint first obtained by The Daily Beast. Guttenberg’s daughter Jaime, 14, was one of 17 people gunned down in 2018 by a fellow student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.

The shooter, Nikolas Cruz, pleaded guilty in October to 17 counts of murder and 17 counts of attempted murder. He is now in the penalty phase of his trial, and a jury continues to deliberate as to whether or not he will receive the death penalty.

Last December, Guttenberg—who is identified only as “F.G.” in the complaint—“began receiving a slew of harassing messages submitted to him through the contact page of his website,” the filing states. “Many of these messages referred to his daughter, the manner of her death, her pain and suffering as she was murdered, and his advocacy against gun violence.”


Guttenberg on Friday confirmed to The Daily Beast that he was the “F.G.” named in the filing, but declined to comment further on the case.

The messages—more than 200 in all—were automatically forwarded from Guttenberg’s website, FredGuttenberg.com, to his personal email, the complaint explains.

One, which Guttenberg received on February 4, read, “fat-ass [Guttenberg], the victim with the dead daughter who is rotting in hell, still cannot commen [sic] on whoopi goldberg,” according to the complaint. “why? because she has black skin and a vagina. therefore, [Guttenberg] is scared. and that’s good. we want [Guttenberg] to be scared and not sleeping at night. fuck off [Guttenberg]. fuck joe biden.”

Another, which Guttenberg got in March, read, “The f*****s, queers, pansexuals, bisexuals and degenerates in the Brandon administration (basically Disney employees) want us to focus on Ukraine,” the complaint states. “But the real war is taking place at our Mexico border. But, as we heard in the famous line from A Few Good Men, you can’t handle the truth, fat fuck [Guttenberg]. Here’s the truth: [Jaime] was SLAUGHTERED; bled from her **** and head; never came home; you’ll never be the same; you’ll never be happy; you’ll die a useless, angry, ugly fuck. CELEBRATE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”

On April 4, Guttenberg got a message reading, “We are having a party every night of this Parkland trial,” according to the complaint. “So glad to celebrate blood and death.”

The next day, “fat fuck [Guttenberg] is dreaming every night of that bloody corpse that never came home from school 4 years ago. orange ribbons up your ass, you molester.”

The deluge continued, unabated, according to the feds. In June, prosecutors say, the messages escalated.

On June 17, the complaint says Guttenberg received an email through his website, requesting “rape kit results” to “confirm that [Jaime’s] vagina did not contain any DNA from a family member on the day her brains were splattered all over the school hallway.”

On the evening of June 21, Guttenberg tweeted, “Three weeks after the Parkland shooting, & on the day that gun safety legislation was passed in Florida, I stood with @marcorubio & asked him to support what was about to happen in Florida. He refused. He was a waste then and he is a waste now. Florida will elect @valdemings.”

“Less than two hours later, [Guttenberg] received a message through the contact page [of his website] stating, “actually, your daughter was the human waste. An [sic] now, she’s buried just like a piece of shit.”

On June 24, the complaint says, Guttenberg received another email through his website, reading, “Just got my concealed carry permit. Wish [Jaime] was alive so I could show it to her. But damn…..she got slaughtered and is now in hell. CELEBRATE”

Five days later, the feds say Guttenberg got the following note via the site: “Celebrate [Jaime] being slaughtered. Decapitated. Silenced. Dancing no more. God Bless President Trump. Fuck joe biden.”

But Catalano apparently didn’t know he was being watched from afar. In February, Guttenberg's webmaster had added a ReCaptcha widget to the site, logging the IP address of everyone who submitted a comment, the complaint states.

The messages had come in from three different IP addresses, and the feds subpoenaed Comcast for the associated data. They traced one of the IP addresses to Catalano’s home in Fresno. The second one was traced to J-C Markets, Inc. Catalano’s store. The results of the third are still pending, but investigators strongly believe that IP address is also linked to Catalano’s business, according to the complaint.

On Wednesday, FBI agents showed up at Catalano’s door. They showed him printouts of some of the messages sent from the IP addresses allegedly connected to Catalano, who admitted he was behind them, the complaint says.

“Catalano… stated that he believes [Guttenberg] was using his dead daughter to push his political agenda, that Catalano did not like that [Guttenberg] was doing that, and that Catalano was trying to put [Guttenberg] in check by sending him the messages,” according to the complaint.

Catalano remains detained following a Friday afternoon hearing, his lawyer, Jeff Hammerschmidt, told The Daily Beast. A magistrate judge in Fresno ordered Catalano released, but granted the prosecution a 48-hour stay so they could appeal the release order to a federal judge in Miami, Hammerschmidt said. If the Miami judge does not issue a contrary order, Catalano will be released on bail Tuesday at 3 p.m.

Hammerschmidt, who will continue representing Catalano alongside an attorney based in South Florida, where the complaint originated, said he expects federal prosecutors in Miami to seek a grand jury indictment prior to Catalano’s next scheduled court appearance on July 29.

There was no answer on Friday at a phone number listed for Catalano’s J-C Markets.

If convicted, Catalano faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
 
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Godzillarich(aka tf2godz)

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Next up Banning 7 ft tall people (but mainly the black ones) from basketball.

They're not even trying with the dog whistles anymore. All they need is transphobia and people will go along with their racism.
 
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TheMysteriousGX

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Next up Banning 7 ft tall people (but mainly the black ones) from basketball.

They're not even trying with the dog whistles anymore. All they need is transphobia and people will go along with their racism.
They're all hot and bothered to do surgery on infants that they'd deny people who can talk, too, it's really fucking ghoulish

 

Dwarvenhobble

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Next up Banning 7 ft tall people (but mainly the black ones) from basketball.

They're not even trying with the dog whistles anymore. All they need is transphobia and people will go along with their racism.
Or they are you know actually rare genetically different people who are rather rare that due to said genetics have advantages no normal women athlete can hope to match (even other black women athletes).
 

TheMysteriousGX

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Or they are you know actually rare genetically different people who are rather rare that due to said genetics have advantages no normal women athlete can hope to match (even other black women athletes).
Suck it up, sports aren't fair, and you don't see calls to gender ID Katie Ledecky for some "unknown" reason
 

XsjadoBlaydette

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Some low-stakes drama to counter the existential horrors mayhaps? The JFK Jr cult is still alive and travelling, albeit with some awkward schisms between the members surfacing;






 
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XsjadoBlaydette

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A wealthy paranoid politician built a paranoid wealthy house that attracted paranoid ex soldier who killed his daughter while trying to take paranoid bunker for himself which is all turned into more paranoid conspiracies by the wealthy paranoid father. A Shakespearean tragedy for a clown world.

RICHMOND, Ky. — The doorbell rang in the night, waking C. Wesley Morgan. He rolled out of bed and walked into the foyer, looking through the arched glass entryway into the dark. Nobody. These phantom rings had been happening lately; most likely there was a short somewhere in the system. The rain didn’t help. He went back to bed.

Minutes later, he awoke to the sound of a crash, then the rattle of gunfire. It was coming from upstairs, where his daughter Jordan was sleeping. Mr. Morgan rushed to the French doors leading out of his bedroom, opening them to see a man in a mask and carrying an AR-15 walking down the stairway.

The man looked blankly at Mr. Morgan, who had time to shout one word: “Why?”

What could drive a man to try to kill a family he had never met? The explanation Mr. Morgan had been given for the attack on that early February morning — mental illness — he found almost insultingly weak. He was certain that it had to have been a deliberate part of some larger plot. For more than a decade, he had been vigilant about such dangers, convinced that the country was hurtling toward civil war. He put millions of dollars behind his fears, building a fortress in the countryside. He knew that some thought he was paranoid.

A dozen years later, a sense of impending breakdown has spread beyond the fringes, taking hold across a country that can at times feel dangerously unhinged. Pandemic, lockdowns, fire and flood, ubiquitous rage and shocking violence: A deadly rampage can suddenly break out in the big-city suburbs or in a remote little town, at work, at the grocery store, at school or even at home. Mr. Morgan thought he had prepared for whatever catastrophes might come, diligently constructing a place that could guarantee his family’s safety. Now he wonders if he had invited the catastrophe that followed.

On a warm evening at a public campground in central Kentucky, Mr. Morgan, 71, sat in a folding chair, watching his wife, Lindsey, and 14-year-old daughter, Sydney, take a walk among the campers and R.V.s. He was spending his nights in agony over Jordan’s death, he said. She had been shot at least 11 times in her bed. Just thinking about it, he said, was like being strangled.

His days were spent overseeing repairs to his bullet-riddled house and talking to potential buyers.

He had built the house in the Obama years, when he was convinced society was on the verge of collapse. Here his family could live in secluded comfort, and if the social fabric truly tore apart, as he expected it would, they could wait out the chaos in an abundantly stocked underground bunker. Now he couldn’t wait to be rid of it.

“Our life hasn’t been right since I started construction on that son of a *****.”

A $6.5 million estate was a far cry from Mr. Morgan’s childhood. He grew up in the mountains of eastern Kentucky, where his father drove a small-town taxi and where, he said, he spent his early years without indoor plumbing.

He left the state as a young man to work as a federal investigator, uncovering illicit gun markets and underground gambling rings. But his father pressed him to come back home and put down roots.

So in 1982, he took out a loan to buy a liquor store in Richmond, a small city about a half-hour southeast of Lexington. Southern Kentucky in the 1980s and 1990s was still a desert of dry counties, and Richmond was the closest oasis for miles. Mr. Morgan eventually opened Liquor World, a giant alcohol emporium in Richmond, where, he said, “we were doing over a million a month.”

He married and had a daughter, Jordan. He divorced, married again, and Sydney was born. He went to Ireland to watch horse races, took the family to Paris, bought a boat. And in 2009, he got to work on the house.

“My vision was that I was building a place I was going to die in,” he said. “The finest everything. I spared no expense.”



On 200 acres of Kentucky meadow just outside of Richmond, his vision became a 14,300-square-foot reality. Nine bedrooms, three kitchens, a six-car garage, a steam room, a saltwater pool — the front entryway alone cost $75,000.

“My feelings were that we were going to have civil unrest because there was so much going on with Obama,” Mr. Morgan said. He believed that people were going to rise up against the attempts to overhaul health care and restrict guns, and that societal collapse would soon follow. He envisioned “roving bands of gangs” hunting for food and necessities in the aftermath. He bought riot gear, bulletproof vests and a small arsenal of firearms, so that “if you had to engage a band of marauders, you would have a chance to save your family.”


The keystone of his survival plan was what lay underneath: a shelter 26 feet underground, beneath a 39-inch solid ceiling. It contains 2,000 square feet of bedrooms and common space along with a stocked food pantry, an air filtration system and two escape tunnels, one of them 100 feet long. The company that installed the shelter suggested that Mr. Morgan keep quiet about it, because “if anything ever happened, there’d be people that try to take the bunker.”


But even as he built his fortified sanctuary, politics in Kentucky were shifting, becoming more favorable for those with the kind of hard-right convictions that Mr. Morgan held. Jordan, who had become an ambitious and outspoken conservative herself, landed a job out of law school in the new gubernatorial administration of Matt Bevin, the firebrand Republican. Mr. Morgan decided to run for the Kentucky House of Representatives and in 2016 became the first Republican in decades to win his district.

Within days of taking office, he had become a lightning rod for criticism and derision. Good government groups expressed shock when Mr. Morgan proposed a slew of bills that would help the retail liquor business. Democratic lawmakers lambasted his measures allowing teachers to carry guns and granting immunity to motorists who unintentionally hit protesters blocking traffic.

But Mr. Morgan’s bitterest ire from his time in politics was reserved for his fellow Republicans. He blamed them for his negative press coverage, complained that the party did little to support his legislative proposals and publicly blasted Republican leaders who were implicated in scandal. When Mr. Morgan ran for re-election, another Republican challenged him in the primary, and won.

The whole experience convinced Mr. Morgan that he was the target of a corrupt power structure. Lauding the “patriots” of QAnon in Facebook posts, he mounted a quixotic primary campaign against Senator Mitch McConnell, whom he condemned as a “deep-state traitor.” When the primary was over, Mr. Morgan was done with Kentucky.

He listed his house on Zillow — “perfect for grand scale entertaining and family living,” the listing read, with “the highlight of the property” being “a $3 Million, 2,000 sq. ft. Nuclear/Biological/Chemical Fallout Shelter.” He assumed the listing would be seen only by buyers interested in a $6.5 million property. But it went viral.


“A cult compound,” one commenter wrote online; “getting mole people vibes,” added another. Strangers drove out to the house to gawk, and articles were written about it on real estate websites and in the state papers.


Jordan, 32, told her father she had come to feel unsafe at the house. In February of this year, she was hired by a law firm in Lexington and planned to move as soon as possible to an apartment in the city. “She must have sensed that she was being watched,” he said.

Someone had been watching, marking the house’s entry points and taking detailed notes on the family’s movements. Early on the morning of Feb. 22, prosecutors say, the watcher, Shannon V. Gilday, a 23-year-old former soldier who lived in the Cincinnati suburbs, climbed up to a second-floor balcony and began his attack.

“He stood and looked at me without any emotions, like he was programmed,” Mr. Morgan said of the moment he first encountered Mr. Gilday in the foyer. At that point, Jordan was dead.

Now Mr. Morgan was the target.

Bleeding from his arms, Mr. Morgan crawled across the bedroom carpet, dragging himself around to the other side of his bed. His wife was gone, having rushed into Sydney’s bedroom next door. Mr. Morgan took a loaded pistol out the drawer of his nightstand. When the French doors opened, he emptied the gun.

“I shot 12 times,” he said. “I was out of bullets. But that did something to him. He turned and shot twice through Sydney’s door, and then he went into the bathroom.”

Mr. Morgan quickly considered his other guns — another pistol in the drawer, the 12-gauge shotgun in the closet, the AR-15 in the guest bedroom — but saw his cellphone on the nightstand. He grabbed it and called the police.


“See, that’s another thing I hate myself for,” he said. If he had just gotten another gun, he could have killed the intruder there and then.

Instead the attacker hurried out into the night. The authorities arrived soon after and Mr. Morgan found himself in an ambulance unaware of what had happened to Jordan, Sydney, Lindsey or the man who had tried to kill them all.


A few days later, the police found Mr. Gilday, walking before dawn along an Interstate exit a couple of miles from the Morgan home. Detective Cameron Allen of the Kentucky State Police interviewed him for three hours following the arrest; Mr. Gilday, he said, confessed. The police already had an idea of his motive. According to a search warrant application, Mr. Gilday had researched a number of houses in Kentucky before settling on the Morgans’. All of them shared one feature: a bunker.

“His belief at the time,” Detective Allen said at a March hearing, “was that given the current political environment in our country, as well as in the world at this time, and given events that had taken place throughout the world, he wanted to access this bunker, so that he could secure it for himself and his family and friends.”

In the weeks after the shooting, news about Mr. Gilday trickled out. A friend told the police that he had “a history of psychotic problems.” Neighbors described strange recent encounters in which he talked about the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Mr. Gilday’s mother said in a statement on Facebook that her son had “not been of sound mind the last couple of weeks, distraught with the certainty a nuclear war is imminent.”

“He spoke of building a bunker and the C.I.A. following him,” she continued. “I tried to get him psychiatric help but to no avail.”

Mr. Gilday, who is being held in the local detention center, was charged with murder and attempted murder for the attack on the Morgans. In May, his lawyer tried to enter a plea of guilty but mentally ill. A hearing is scheduled for Friday.

Mr. Morgan did not buy any of this. The attack was so meticulously planned. How could that be the work of an insane person? he asked.

He instead speculated about political forces that might have it in for him and his family. He talked about hired assassins and past C.I.A. experiments with brainwashing, and suggested that a violent attack on the home of a Second Amendment champion like himself had all the signs of an operation to justify more gun control.

“I just think that I was chosen to be a false flag,” he said.

This made a lot more sense to him than murdering a family to get to their bunker.

Still, he could not shake the thought that his decision to enter politics had been his fatal error. If he had kept out of public life, neither his politics nor his bunker would have been so widely known. The grief and the guilt were almost unbearable. Parents have one duty above all, he said, and that was to keep their children safe.

“I’m the one who should have died, not Jordan,” he said. “I’m the one who made the mistakes. Jordan didn’t make them. My baby has paid for the sins of her father.”


As the dusk settled over the campground, Mr. Morgan got up from his chair and walked over to a luxury black-and-gold motor coach parked at the campsite. This was the family home now. Their future lay on the road, home-schooling Sydney on their travels, avoiding crowded areas, never putting down roots.


“I just can’t do this anymore,” Mr. Morgan said. When he began building the bunker, Jordan was around 20, with a bright future ahead of her, and Sydney was a toddler. Now Sydney is a teenager and Jordan is dead. With all the heartache he was carrying, he was not sure how many more years he would be around himself.

“We may take this bus and go to Florida and then a tsunami comes in there and drowns us all,” he said. “I can’t worry about this anymore.”

The next day, the family left for Tennessee.
 
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Trunkage

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Or they are you know actually rare genetically different people who are rather rare that due to said genetics have advantages no normal women athlete can hope to match (even other black women athletes).
Being physically genetically different that gives you advantages over normal people is THE definition of athlete

...Irrelevant of gender/sex
 

Agema

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A wealthy paranoid politician built a paranoid wealthy house that attracted paranoid ex soldier who killed his daughter while trying to take paranoid bunker for himself which is all turned into more paranoid conspiracies by the wealthy paranoid father. A Shakespearean tragedy for a clown world.
I think there is something interesting about this. These people believe in a dog-eat-dog world. The tragic occurrence here is really a guy who doesn't think beyond protecting him and his, who ends up attacked by another guy who doesn't think beyond protecting him and his, because the latter (mental health notwithstanding) thinks he must take what he needs. When we wonder about threats to society in all this, I might suggest it's people who don't think beyond protecting them and theirs, because they are the people who help atomise society and induce fear and suspicion of one's fellow humans.

I would gently suggest that something like socialised healthcare is in fact not a signal of end times, it's a signal to people in a country that government, society, and by extension their fellow citizens feel some duty of care towards them, and these are the sorts of things that should bind a society in closer harmony. But then, if you believe in dog eat dog, tax for the general good is just people out to steal your money, because they have a mental block when it comes to sharing and caring.
 

Dwarvenhobble

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Being physically genetically different that gives you advantages over normal people is THE definition of athlete

...Irrelevant of gender/sex
So now think of it in terms of how rare and how insane a thing it must be to be so genetically different to other athletes that you get such an advantage over them. It would be like a swimmer having webbed toes or something
 

Dwarvenhobble

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But... that case is widely recognised as a hoax. Nobody is denying it. He's literally been charged.
Now nobody is, after a trial and all the evidence came out such that it was basically undeniable.

Before any-one questioning his claims was labelled a racist bigot spreading fake news and conspiracy theories