Forwarded from Liberty Overwatch (Patriot)
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Leaked Audio Suggests AZ AG Brnovich Never Had Any ‘Chucks, Election Investigation All for Show
In leaked audio clips of an hour-long interview with former Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes, the AG’s so-called election integrity investigator reveals that his team has no experience with “election stuff” and he’s begrudgingly going through the motions to support his predetermined no-fraud conclusion:
Investigator: Nobody’s talking about a stolen election at all.
Fontes: I get the feeling from body language and stuff that you guys know this is bullsh*t.
Investigator: I volunteered for some reason I’ll never understand to be the election integrity investigator at the AG’s office.
Investigator: So obviously you know about the ‘audit.’
Fontes: That was almost air quotes.
Investigator: It was.
Source: Garret Lewis, Vaughn Hillyard
Hat tip🤠🙏 @AZInformer
Mark Brnovich:
☎️ 602-542-5025
📧 AGInfo@azag.gov
📧 mark.brnovich@azag.gov
Subscribe: @AZInformer🇺🇸
Learn more🔦🧵 AZ Thread
@LibertyOverwatchChannel
In leaked audio clips of an hour-long interview with former Maricopa County Recorder Adrian Fontes, the AG’s so-called election integrity investigator reveals that his team has no experience with “election stuff” and he’s begrudgingly going through the motions to support his predetermined no-fraud conclusion:
Investigator: Nobody’s talking about a stolen election at all.
Fontes: I get the feeling from body language and stuff that you guys know this is bullsh*t.
Investigator: I volunteered for some reason I’ll never understand to be the election integrity investigator at the AG’s office.
Investigator: So obviously you know about the ‘audit.’
Fontes: That was almost air quotes.
Investigator: It was.
Source: Garret Lewis, Vaughn Hillyard
Hat tip🤠🙏 @AZInformer
Mark Brnovich:
☎️ 602-542-5025
📧 AGInfo@azag.gov
📧 mark.brnovich@azag.gov
Subscribe: @AZInformer🇺🇸
Learn more🔦🧵 AZ Thread
@LibertyOverwatchChannel
Forwarded from Julio Gonzalez-Tax Expert
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget found that Build Back Broke could cost $4.91 trillion -- not $1.75 trillion.
Joe Biden lied to the American people!
Joe Biden lied to the American people!
Forwarded from Tierney
The impression one gets of the young Colin Kaepernick is that of a man with a genuine social conscience but whose Christian faith, while replete with platitudes, tattoos, and sincerity, was lacking in theological substance. As C. S. Lewis once observed, ideological deserts are fertile ground for propagandists, and in the summer of 2016, the likable kid who wrote in elementary school enthusiastically of his American dream fell under the influence of radical social justice warrior (SJW) Ameer Hasan Loggins, a Muslim convert and hip-hop icon cum Berkeley professor.
With Loggins’s encouragement, Kaepernick audited Loggins’s course on popular culture at Berkeley. Loggins characterizes Kaepernick as a hard-working, earnest student who was eager to learn. What, exactly, was Kaepernick learning under this new mentor? In sum, Loggins, who styles himself as an intellectual and a modern-day Malcolm X. He teaches, among other things, Islam as a religion of black liberation, capitalism as a system of oppression, and American history as one act of violence and exploitation after another.
According to the New York Times, Loggins introduced the NFL quarterback to Nessa Diab, an olive-skinned beauty of Egyptian parentage who has made her name as a Muslim-American activist and Bay Area shock jock. Diab is California-born but spent many of her childhood years in Saudi Arabia, where, she says, her sense of social justice grew. Outspoken in her support for Black Lives Matter (not to be confused with “black lives matter”) and in her respect for such champions of social justice as Fidel Castro, her views mirror those of Loggins. She and Kaepernick soon began a romantic relationship, and under the influence of Loggins’s teaching and her sweet nothings, the radicalization of Colin Kaepernick was well underway.
It seems hardly coincidental that in Kaepernick’s social media posts there now appeared indications of a new identity. This Colin Kaepernick was an angry political activist. He tweeted of lynching, murder, and bodies in the streets of America. Unsurprisingly, he expressed his admiration of Fidel Castro and Malcolm X. The oppression of black people at the hands of white police officers was a theme.
“We are under attack!” he wrote. “It’s as clear as day!”
Worse, he increasingly sounded like the black equivalent of a white supremacist, assuming the language of the violent revolutionary complete with the Black Panther “Black Power” salute. It is not hard to see the influence of his new handlers in all of this.
With Loggins’s encouragement, Kaepernick audited Loggins’s course on popular culture at Berkeley. Loggins characterizes Kaepernick as a hard-working, earnest student who was eager to learn. What, exactly, was Kaepernick learning under this new mentor? In sum, Loggins, who styles himself as an intellectual and a modern-day Malcolm X. He teaches, among other things, Islam as a religion of black liberation, capitalism as a system of oppression, and American history as one act of violence and exploitation after another.
According to the New York Times, Loggins introduced the NFL quarterback to Nessa Diab, an olive-skinned beauty of Egyptian parentage who has made her name as a Muslim-American activist and Bay Area shock jock. Diab is California-born but spent many of her childhood years in Saudi Arabia, where, she says, her sense of social justice grew. Outspoken in her support for Black Lives Matter (not to be confused with “black lives matter”) and in her respect for such champions of social justice as Fidel Castro, her views mirror those of Loggins. She and Kaepernick soon began a romantic relationship, and under the influence of Loggins’s teaching and her sweet nothings, the radicalization of Colin Kaepernick was well underway.
It seems hardly coincidental that in Kaepernick’s social media posts there now appeared indications of a new identity. This Colin Kaepernick was an angry political activist. He tweeted of lynching, murder, and bodies in the streets of America. Unsurprisingly, he expressed his admiration of Fidel Castro and Malcolm X. The oppression of black people at the hands of white police officers was a theme.
“We are under attack!” he wrote. “It’s as clear as day!”
Worse, he increasingly sounded like the black equivalent of a white supremacist, assuming the language of the violent revolutionary complete with the Black Panther “Black Power” salute. It is not hard to see the influence of his new handlers in all of this.