Arizona Republican busted for paying $10 to underaged boys ‘at least 10 times’ for sex The Arizona House Ethics Committee on Friday released shocking documents from an investigation into former Republican Rep. David Stringer, who abruptly resigned on Wednesday. The Arizona Republic reports the documents include a 1983 police report from Maryland. “The police report states police arrested Stringer in September 1983, after a boy told officers that Stringer had met him and a friend in a park a year earlier, and asked them to come back to his apartment to have ‘some sex,'” the Republic reported. “Stringer paid the boys $10 after he performed oral sex on them, and they performed the same act on him, the police report states.” One of the boys reportedly had a developmental disability. “One of the boys told police he had been back to see Stringer at least 10 times to perform oral sex or penetrative sex,” the Republican noted.
Trump’s extremist ‘conspiracy-laden’ rhetoric made this man a domestic terrorist. An alleged domestic terrorist appears to have been inspired by President Donald Trump’s rhetoric — including his the conspiracy theories he references. The Intercept reported Saturday that people who know Michael Hari, a man who drove a getaway car after two other accomplices allegedly bombed a Minnesota mosque, say Trump’s rants changed him. “I don’t think Trump’s rhetoric is getting people to commit violence,” a man from the same religious community as Hari told the website. “It’s not like he’s saying, ‘Go bomb a mosque!’ I think it’s subtler. I think he’s flipping the switch in certain people. And I think he flipped that switch in Michael Hari.” The report noted that his story “shows how our increasingly divisive, conspiracy-laden culture is pushing troubled people toward extremism and violence.” A member of the right-wing White Rabbit Three Percent Illinois Patriot Freedom Fighters Militia, Hari wrote a manifesto that he sold on Amazon claiming he “wanted to return the United States to a simpler, less progressive era through bombings and armed resistance,” The Intercept noted. Though his extremist Christian beliefs began as far back as 2001, he was reportedly at a low point in his life after repeated failed attempts at building a right-wing utopia when he encountered Trump’s message. “If you go back to 2016, think about where he was in life. His farm idea had failed; he had taken a shot to his pride there,” the person who knows Hari told The Intercept. “And then here comes Donald Trump telling everyone, ‘Let’s make America great again.’ To Michael Hari, Trump was a righteous cause.” He later picked up on the pro-Trump QAnon conspiracy in which an alleged government insider known only by “Q” claims the president is working against nefarious forces within American politics bent on harming and destroying its people.
Godson of KKK grand wizard explains his successful Trump-like ‘dog whistle’ campaign for GOP seat in Mar-a-Lago area CNN’s Van Jones interviewed on Saturday a former white supremacist who successfully used racial “dog whistle” campaign tactics to win elective office in the Mar-a-Lago area. Derek Black is the son of Stormfront founder Don Black and the godson of former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke. “What is behind this appeal for white nationalism in America?” Jones asked. “Coming from that background that I do, it’s always been happening. It’s always been — sometimes not on tv — but it’s always been there, there’s always been people who were saying those things you saw at Charlottesville, there’s always been politicians saying the things that Donald Trump says now,” Black explained. “They didn’t get as much support and I think we didn’t pay as much attention to them as we probably should have,” he noted. “You actually were able to run for office and win using some of these kind of dog whistles,” Jones noted. “One of the dog whistles that you were part of this movement to mainstream these ideas.” “Yeah, I ran for this little committee seat, a Republican committee seat in south Florida, right across the water from Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump’s house there — so he’s always been in my life,” Black explained. “And I went door to door, and I said stuff like, ‘don’t you think the signs in Spanish are kind of undermining your culture? So don’t you think that people of color who live in that other neighborhood, don’t you think there needs to be more police for people like that,'” he recalled. “Like these kind of messages really similar stuff to what Trump said on the campaign trail and people would react to it as long as they didn’t hear the word racist, as long as they didn’t hear, you know, I’m a white nationalist, as long as you didn’t say that sort of stuff, these are things that they viscerally reacted to,” he continued. “That is what the white nationalist movement was saying. I would just try to figure out ways to say it that didn’t freak them out so much,” he explained. “I got 62% of the vote saying that stuff,” Black added. Watch:
BUSTED: Trump-loving North Carolina GOP chairman indicted on wire fraud and bribery charges Robin Hayes, the chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party, was indicted by a grand jury on Tuesday on charges of wire fraud and bribery. Local news station WBTV reports that Hayes was arrested on charges that “center around a wealthy Durham businessman named Greg Lindberg, who has been under the microscope of federal investigators for white collar crimes related to his business empire and, later, for contributions he made to politicians in North Carolina.” Both Hayes and Lindberg were indicted on wire fraud charges related to efforts to bribe NC Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey, who is not being charged in the scheme. According to WBTV, the North Carolina GOP is alleged to have illegally funneled a $240,000 donation made by Lindberg to Causey. The party has maintained for weeks that the donation was legal because it was made independent of Lindberg’s direction, but a secret recording revealed that Lindberg and Hayes had conspired to pass the money to Causey via the North Carolina Republican Party. The North Carolina GOP has also come under fire after one of its candidates employed an operative who engaged in a ballot-harvesting scheme that has forced the declaration of a new election in the state’s 9th congressional district.
This is our top local news story today... more coverage can be found at - https://www.wral.com/nc-gop-chairman-major-political-donor-indicted/18300166/ "Greg Lindberg, two of his business associates and N.C. GOP Chairman Robin Hayes were all indicted last month, but the indictments were unsealed Tuesday. They turned themselves in to the FBI in Charlotte Tuesday as well and had first appearances before a U.S. magistrate." Some background info - Greg Lindberg is the owner of insurance companies where he has been using financial gimmicks to siphon off money so he good live the good life. Greg Lindberg over the past few years has been the largest political donor in our state. He donated money to politicians on both sides of the aisle - focusing on those who have any influence over insurance rules. The indictment states he and two associates were directly caught bribing Robin Hayes .
So, Barr has not handed over the full unredacted report today as "ordered" by Schiff? Is that why we are looking at this tripe? It's all you got until the report comes out. Then it will be the Tard Wailing Wall 24/7.