bigolsmitty
stares Trick Daddily
- Messages
- 3,427
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 0
I mean if you use your relatively large platform to spread fascist propaganda (Milo / McInnes) you're at least a bit of a shit.
Lord of The Curry said:So....all of mainstream media basically?
I might have shared this on here already? However, they had a reasonable answer as the source of the food could not be verified, so they didn't want the people to be accidentally poisoned. It wasn't as heinous as it sounds.Mr. S£im Citrus said:https://twitter.com/nowthisnews/status/1063118934789050368
My bad.Brodypedia said:I might have shared this on here already?
However, they had a reasonable answer as the source of the food could not be verified, so they didn't want the people to be accidentally poisoned. It wasn't as heinous as it sounds.
“I love my president, and I was like, ‘Oh my God,'” Kotseos tells the Daily Beast of her reaction to the video.
Afterward, she and her husband invested thousands of dollars in Iraqi dinars on the hopes that Trump’s deal-making prowess would soon make them instant millionaires.
Kotseos isn’t alone either: Sommer has found that “court papers related to dinar scams often mention millions of dollars worth of dinar purchases” and that “dinar holders regularly tweet at Trump and various Iraqi government Twitter accounts, demanding to know when they’ll finally enact the ‘RV’ that will let the money flow in.”
This isn't limited to Trump supporters. A former co-worker of mine has been collecting these for years because he thinks he'll be worth billions once they go into effect.cobainwasmurdered said:https://www.rawstory.com/2018/11/trump-supporters-think-investing-iraqs-worthless-currency-will-make-millionaires/?utm_source=fark&utm_medium=website&utm_content=link&ICID=ref_fark
“I love my president, and I was like, ‘Oh my God,'” Kotseos tells the Daily Beast of her reaction to the video.
Afterward, she and her husband invested thousands of dollars in Iraqi dinars on the hopes that Trump’s deal-making prowess would soon make them instant millionaires.
Kotseos isn’t alone either: Sommer has found that “court papers related to dinar scams often mention millions of dollars worth of dinar purchases” and that “dinar holders regularly tweet at Trump and various Iraqi government Twitter accounts, demanding to know when they’ll finally enact the ‘RV’ that will let the money flow in.”
Horrible people getting what they had coming to them.
An evangelist killed by an ancient tribe on a forbidden island made several trips to try to convert them to Christianity, police have revealed.
On one occasion John Allen Chau suffered arrow injuries, and on another the tribe broke his canoe.
When he finally encountered the people on the remote North Sentinel Island, the American sang worship songs and told them "Jesus loves you".
I think it was a combination of the two. Like he'd get some every few months but would be spending $100 or more at a time.cobainwasmurdered said:damn man, do you know if he was investing a lot of money in it or just collecting them as he could. I have a hard time feeling bad for people that stupid I have to say except for the elderly who are targeted because they might be suffering from dementia. So maybe this being big with Trump supporters makes sense.
This is fucked up. The last rites are already a little creepy (I've received them due to a language barrier with a priest) and add on this dude's a creep. Man fuck that.Brodypedia said:https://www.statesman.com/news/20190320/austin-priest-groped-woman-while-performing-last-rites-police-say
An arrest affidavit filed last week said the 60-year-old woman suffered from several medical conditions including diabetes, and was put into hospice care at her home because of renal failure. Her husband reached out to the Knights of Columbus to tell them about his wife’s illness, and the group said it would send a priest over to give the woman her last rites, the affidavit said.
Langsch was known to the woman, who is not being named because of the nature of the allegation, as Father Gerold of St. Paul’s Catholic Church, Austin Police Department investigators said. The affidavit said Langsch arrived arrived Oct. 5 and used a bottle of holy water to anoint the woman’s chest three times, before he pulled out a separate bottle of lotion and began to apply it to her chest.
The document said Langsch massaged the woman’s breast, pinched her nipple and asked, “Does that feel good?”
The woman said she was in shock and felt like a “nasty, dirty piece of meat,” the affidavit said, adding that Langsch also tried to put his hand down the woman’s adult diaper and lift her leg, which caused her pain because she also suffered from neuropathy.