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Re: Browns News 4.0 lampdogg 07/31/25 10:52 PM
Originally Posted by Dawgs4Life
good. We are going to be very bad, but at least maybe a little tougher

I don’t think we’ll be bad. We might not contend for the playoffs but we won’t be a 3- win football team.
78 2,514 Read More
Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Lib city Squires 07/31/25 10:23 PM
This forum has become a liberal echo chamber. There is no discussion happening here anymore. You blindly follow the liberal hive mind or you get responses like this:

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I'm sorry PPE hasn't given some of you a whiner forum. It sounds like you need one.

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Thread topic summation..................


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Rather than man up you respond like a child.

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Yet another whiner enters the ring

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You've added nothing to this forum for a very long time.


Given these responses, why would anyone attempt to have discussion?
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Re: Training Camp 2025 dawglover05 07/31/25 08:30 PM
One can surely hope and pray!
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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Revealed: records show border patrol gave inaccurate testimony about people it jailed. Prosecutors now face ‘embarrassing’ dismissals PitDAWG 07/31/25 07:58 PM
US immigration officers made false and misleading statements in their reports about several Los Angeles protesters they arrested during the massive demonstrations that rocked the city in June, according to federal law enforcement files obtained by the Guardian.

The officers’ testimony was cited in at least five cases filed by the US Department of Justice amid the unrest. The justice department has charged at least 26 people with “assaulting” and “impeding” federal officers and other crimes during the protests over immigration raids. Prosecutors, however, have since been forced to dismiss at least eight of those felonies, many of them which relied on officers’ inaccurate reports, court records show.

The justice department has also dismissed at least three felony assault cases it brought against Angelenos accused of interfering with arrests during recent immigration raids, the documents show.

The rapid felony dismissals are a major embarrassment for the Trump-appointed US attorney for southern California, Bill Essayli, and appeared to be the result of an unusual series of missteps by the justice department, former federal prosecutors said.

The Guardian’s review of records found:

Out of nine “assault” and “impeding” felony cases the justice department filed immediately after the start of the protests and promoted by the attorney general, Pam Bondi, prosecutors dismissed seven of them soon after filing the charges.

In reports that led to the detention and prosecution of at least five demonstrators, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents made false statements about the sequence of events and misrepresented incidents captured on video.

One DHS agent accused a protester of shoving an officer, when footage appeared to show the opposite: the officer forcefully pushed the protester.

One indictment named the wrong defendant, a stunning error that has jeopardized one of the government’s most high-profile cases.

“When I see felonies dismissed, that tells me either the federal officers have filed affidavits that are not truthful and that has been uncovered, or US attorneys reviewing the cases realize the evidence does not support the charges,” said Cristine Soto DeBerry, a former California state prosecutor who is now director of Prosecutors Alliance Action, a criminal justice reform group.

She said officers often call for charges that prosecutors don’t end up filing, but it was uncommon for the justice department to file, then dismiss cases, especially numerous felonies in rapid succession.

“It seems this is a way to detain people, hold them in custody, instill fear and discourage people from exercising their first amendment rights,” DeBerry said.

There are at least 18 cases brought by the justice department against LA protesters that prosecutors have not dismissed, covering a wide array of alleged criminal conduct, according to case records the US attorney’s office shared with the Guardian. In three of those cases, protesters have agreed to plea deals, including one defendant accused of spitting at an officer and another who allegedly threw rocks. Some still facing charges are accused of throwing bottles and molotov cocktails, pointing a laser at a helicopter and aiding in civil disorder by distributing gas masks.

In six of the felony dismissals reviewed by the Guardian, the justice department has refiled lower-level misdemeanors against the defendants.

For the many protesters whose charges were withdrawn or scaled back, the officers’ initial allegations, as well as the department’s filings, have deeply affected their lives. All the demonstrators who won dismissals spent time in jail before the government’s cases against them fell apart.

“We are not the violent ones,” said Jose Mojica, one of the protesters whose assault case was dismissed, in an earlier Guardian interview. “They are chasing down innocent people.”

Dismissed ‘in the interest of justice’

The justice department’s initial wave of cases stemmed from one of the first major protests in the LA region, a demonstration on 7 June in the south Los Angeles city of Paramount. Border patrol sightings had sparked fears that agents were targeting laborers at a Home Depot, and as dozens of locals and demonstrators gathered outside an office complex that houses DHS, officers fired teargas and flash-bang grenades while some protesters threw objects.

The US attorney’s office filed a joint case against five demonstrators, charging each with assaulting officers, a felony the justice department warned could carry 20-year sentences.

A criminal complaint, written by DHS and filed in court by the justice department on 8 June, said that as the crowd grew, some protesters “turned violent”. Two sisters, Ashley, 20, and Joceline Rodriguez, 26, began “blocking” officers’ vehicles, the complaint alleged. When a border patrol agent attempted to move Ashley, she “resisted” and “shoved the agent with both her hands”, then Joceline “grabbed the arm” of one of the agents to prevent her sister’s arrest, the charges said. Both were arrested.

In an investigative file, the DHS suggested that “in response” to the sisters’ arrest, Christian Cerna-Camacho, another protester, began to “verbally harass” agents, making threatening remarks. Demonstrator Brayan Ramos-Brito, then “pushed [an] agent in the chest”, the DHS claimed, at which point, a fifth protester, Jose Mojica, “used his body to physically shield” Ramos-Brito and then “elbowed and pushed” agents. Agents then “subdued” and arrested Mojica and Ramos-Brito, the complaint said.

All five defendants are Latino US citizens.

The DHS’s own subsequent reports, however, reveal multiple factual discrepancies in the narrative initially presented by officers and prosecutors. While the complaint suggested Cerna-Camacho, Ramos Brito and Mojica attacked agents in protest of the sisters’ arrest, records show the women were arrested in a separate incident – which occurred after the men were detained.

Border patrol agent Eduardo Mejorado, a key witness considered a victim of the assaults, appeared to initially give inaccurate testimony about the order of events. He “clarified” the timeline when questioned, a DHS special agent wrote in a report three days after charges were filed. A supervisor on the scene also documented the correct chronology in a later report and “apologized” for errors, saying, “Due to the chaos of the events that day, some events may have been miscommunicated.” Mojica had outlined the discrepancies in an interview with the Guardian days after his arrest.

The DHS special agent also noted that defense lawyers had presented video they said was “in direct contrast to the facts” laid out in the initial complaint. The footage, seen by the Guardian, appeared to show an agent pushing Ramos-Brito, not the other way around, before he was taken to the ground along with Mojica, who was also not seen in the footage shoving or assaulting agents.

The agent acknowledged the officer’s shoving and said the subsequent “fight” was “hard to decipher”. The agent also claimed Ramos-Brito’s behavior before he was pushed included “pre-assault indicators”, such as “clenching fists” and “getting in [the agent’s] face”.

Meanwhile, chaotic social media footage of the arrest of the sisters appeared to show an officer pushing Ashley, prompting her to briefly raise her hand, at which point two agents grabbed her and took her to the ground. Her older sister was then seen briefly touching the arm of one of the agents on top of her sister. Both appeared to be filming with their phones before their arrests, and it’s unclear who the DHS and the justice department were alleging were the victims in their purported assaults.

DHS records also show that one supervisor emailed a female border patrol agent seen in the video standing near the sisters, saying he was “trying to tie that whole event together for prosecution” and looking into a “rumor” Ashley “may have shoved” this agent. The agent responded that she had told Ashley to move, but did not say she was shoved.

Within two weeks of the initial charges, the US attorney’s office filed motions to dismiss the cases against the sisters, Ramos-Brito and Mojica “in the interest of justice”, without providing further explanation.

The justice department then filed a new case against the sisters, this time accusing them each of a single misdemeanor, saying they “assaulted, resisted, opposed, impeded, intimidated, and interfered with” the border patrol, but offering no detail. The sisters pleaded not guilty to the misdemeanors; Ashley’s lawyer declined to comment and Joceline’s attorney did not respond to inquiries.

The justice department also filed a misdemeanor indictment against Ramos-Brito, but then said it was erroneous and rescinded it, only to refile a misdemeanor in a different format. Ramos-Brito pleaded not guilty and his lawyer didn’t respond to emails.

Mojica, who spoke out about how he was injured during his arrest, has not been charged again.

Essayli, the US attorney for LA, who is an ardent Trump supporter appointed this year, initially published mugshots of the defendants, but has not publicly acknowledged that he has since dismissed their felonies. Ciaran McEvoy, a spokesperson for Essayli, declined to comment on a detailed list of questions about specific cases. The LA Times reported last week that Essayli was heard “screaming” at a prosecutor over a grand jury’s refusal to indict one of the protesters.

McEvoy said the LA Times story relied on “factual inaccuracies and anonymous gossip”, without offering specifics, adding in an email: “Our office will continue working unapologetically to charge all those who assault our agents or impede our federal investigations.”

Bondi defended Essayli in a statement, calling him a “champion for law and order who has done superlative work to prosecute rioters for attacking and obstructing law enforcement in Los Angeles”. She added: “This Department of Justice is proud of Bill, and he has my complete support as he continues working to protect Californians and Make America Safe Again.”

Jaime Ruiz, a spokesperson for Customs and Border Protection, which oversees border patrol, did not respond to detailed questions about cases and officers’ inaccurate testimony, saying the department is “unable to comment on cases under active litigation”.

“DHS and its components continue to enforce the law every day in greater Los Angeles even in the face of danger,” he added. “Our officers are facing a surge in assaults and attacks against them as they put their lives on the line to enforce our nation’s laws. Secretary [Kristi] Noem has been clear: If you obstruct or assault our law enforcement, you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

Tricia McLaughlin, DHS assistant secretary, added in a statement: “Our agents, officers, and prosecutors will continue to work together to keep Americans safe, and we will follow the facts, evidence, and law.” Mejorado, the border patrol agent, could not be reached.

Cerna-Camacho is the only defendant of the five whose original charges are still pending, but when he showed up to court for his recent arraignment, the justice department attorney was forced to admit his office had made an error: the one-paragraph indictment filed against Cerna-Camacho erroneously named Ramos Brito. Cerna-Camacho’s lawyers have argued that the government’s 30-day window to indict his client had passed, and the case must be dismissed. Cerna-Camacho pleaded not guilty, and his lawyer declined to comment.

“This is an extraordinary mistake and a dangerous embarrassment,” said Sergio Perez, a former justice department lawyer who is now executive director of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law, a California-based legal advocacy group, about Cerna-Camacho’s case. “The US Department of Justice is supposed to be the pinnacle of professional and responsible criminal prosecutions. When you can’t get the name right, it calls into question all other factual assertions in those documents. It’s way beyond a clerical error. It’s smoke where there is likely fire.”

The case is a significant one for the Trump administration. Cerna-Camacho was arrested four days after the protest, when two unmarked vehicles rammed his car while his toddler and infant were inside, with officers deploying teargas. The incident caused outrage locally.

But DHS aggressively defended the arrest, publishing a photo of Cerna-Camacho being detained, and saying he had “punched” a border patrol officer at the Paramount protests. Video from the protest showed Cerna-Camacho and an officer scuffling in a chaotic crowd, with Cerna-Camacho at one point raising his hand, but it’s unclear if he made contact with the officer.

More cases crumble

In an initial complaint against Jacob Terrazas, DHS accused the man of felony assault, saying he was “one of several individuals … actively throwing hard objects [at officers]” during the Paramount protests, without referencing specific evidence or details. Video of his arrest showed an officer slamming him to the ground, and at his arraignment, Terrazas appeared badly concussed, and a judge ordered he immediately get medical attention.

Terrazas was released after nine days in jail, then two days later, the justice department moved to dismiss the case. However, prosecutors filed a new misdemeanor charge, accusing him of a “simple assault” misdemeanor, saying he “aided and abetted” others and “forcibly assaulted, resisted, opposed, impeded, intimidated, and interfered with” a border patrol employee, without providing details. Terrazas has pleaded not guilty, and his lawyer did not respond to inquiries.

The government has also dismissed its “conspiracy to impede an officer” felony charges against Gisselle Medina, but then filed an “accessory” to “assault” misdemeanor, claiming in a brief charging document that she had “assisted the offenders”. The charges did not offer any details on how she allegedly assisted others. Medina has not yet been arraigned and her lawyer did not respond to inquiries.

The justice department also recently dismissed felony assault charges against Russell Gomez Dzul, who had been stopped on 7 June by border patrol when officers deemed him suspicious for appearing “nervous” near them and biking away, but then filed a simple assault misdemeanor, without offering details. He has pleaded not guilty and his lawyer did not respond to requests for comment. Andrea Velez, a US citizen arrested during a 24 June raid in downtown LA on her way to work, also had a felony assault charge dismissed this month, and has not faced further prosecution.

One of the only cases from the first round of prosecutions that the government has not dropped is the one that made international headlines – the arrest of David Huerta, a prominent California union leader jailed while observing an immigration raid.

Carley Palmer, a lawyer who served as a supervisor in the US attorney’s office in LA until she left last year, said the dismissals and downgrading of charges probably occurred after more in-depth evaluation by line prosecutors and supervisors, and in some ways reflected “the process working”: “We want prosecutors to feel they can re-evaluate evidence and change their mind when new information comes to light.” Prosecutors might dismiss cases if a grand jury declines to indict, if they believe they can’t persuade jurors at trial, or if they learn officers violated the defendants’ rights, she added.

The LA Times reported that Essayli has struggled to secure indictments at grand juries.

Palmer, now an attorney at the Halpern May Ybarra Gelberg firm, said it was unusual, however, for the office to prosecute these kinds of “he said she said” protest scuffles in the first place, taking away resources from traditional priorities, including fraud, economic crimes, public corruption and civil rights abuses.

“Federal charges are very serious and have real implications for people’s lives,” Palmer added. “Even if it gets dismissed, it will be on someone’s record for the rest of their lives. It carries a lot of consequences, so you want prosecutors to understand and appreciate the power they have.”

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/28/doj-la-protesters-false-claims
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Tailgate Forum Jump to new posts
Re: Cleveland Guardians MemphisBrownie 07/31/25 07:51 PM
321 23,449 Read More
Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Banff National Park bonefish 07/31/25 05:49 PM
If you like mountains Banff is the place to see them.

I have traveled the Rockies mountains from Sante Fe, NM. to Banff National. Through Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, British Colombia, and Alberta. I have fished in Alaska. They are not the Rockies but there are mountains there. I lived in the Sierra Nevada range and fished in the Cascades.

Most of my time was spent chasing wild trout. Other times site seeing and soft hiking.

Yellowstone and Glacier National are incredible to see but Banff somehow seems different.

For someone who is a photographer and is into photographing mountain landscapes. Damn, they would be in heaven.

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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Liberation Day Part Deux PitDAWG 07/31/25 05:48 PM
When all else fails there is always hope. I understand how some people using fuzzy math can't figure out that when an import tax is added to goods, somebody has to pay the bill for that. Somebody pays that added 15% or 20% or 30%. Whether that's small business owners fighting to make it or taxpayers purchasing those goods.

You do realize that many of these tariffs are still being negotiated right? I'm not sure claiming how well it's going in the middle of the process is a wise path to follow. I'm not sure why you believe all of these goods can increase in costs and that cost will not eventually make itself to consumers?

The key word in your post is "yet".

It seemed that for years all we heard was that if you raise wages it will increase costs. But now it seems some people are prematurely claiming a victory because they claim just the opposite applies with tariffs. Raise wages? Increased costs and inflation. Create and increase tariffs? That isn't costing us anything.

Quite the conundrum.
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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Trump Campaign Promises Part 6 PitDAWG 07/31/25 03:27 PM
The EDA? Environmental Destruction Agency?

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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Trump Slaps 50% Tariff on Brazil Over "Witch Hunt" PitDAWG 07/31/25 02:24 PM


Does this sound familiar?....................

Brazil prosecutor says ex-President Jair Bolsonaro, a Trump ally, guilty of violent coup plot

Brasilia — A prosecutor asked Brazil's Supreme Court on Tuesday to find ex-president Jair Bolsonaro guilty of plotting a coup, in closing arguments after a trial that saw President Trump try to intervene on behalf of his right-wing ally. Bolsonaro is accused of seeking to overturn the 2022 election won by his left-wing opponent, current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

The prosecution told the court that Bolsonaro, a former army officer, and seven others were guilty of participating in "armed criminal association" and had sought to "violently overthrow the democratic order."

After the defense presents its closing arguments, a five-justice panel will decide the fate of the former president. If found guilty, Bolsonaro and his co-defendants could face up to 40 years in prison.

Bolsonaro says he is the victim of political persecution, echoing Mr. Trump's defense when he faced criminal charges before his White House return.

"It's not about imprisoning me; they want to eliminate me," Bolsonaro told news website Poder360 on Tuesday.

Prosecutors say Bolsonaro tried to overturn his 2022 loss in a plot that only failed because the military did not side with him. The plan allegedly included dozens of people and involved a plot to poison Lula and shoot a Brazilian Supreme Court justice. Bolsonaro's defense team has vehemently denied the charges. Bolsonaro has also been barred from running for office until 2030, after casting doubt on the country's electronic voting machines.

After the plot failed, violent Bolsonaro supporters rioted, rampaging through government buildings in the capital Brasilia in scenes that echoed the Jan. 6, 2021 assault on the U.S. Capitol by Mr. Trump's supporters after the Republican lost to Democrat Joe Biden in 2020.

The trial has attracted attention from Mr. Trump, who returned to power in the 2024 election and continues to claim — despite this being rejected repeatedly by the courts — that he won in 2020. Mr. Trump has repeatedly called on social media for Bolsonaro's trial to be stopped, accusing the authorities in Brazil of mounting a "witch hunt" and a "disgrace."

On July 9, he took his campaign to extraordinary new levels by announcing plans to tariff Brazilian imports to the U.S. at 50%, again citing what he called a "witch hunt" against Bolsonaro. And on Tuesday, Washington said it was opening an investigation into "unfair trading practices" by Brazil, a move that could provide a legal basis to justify imposing tariffs on South America's largest economy.

Unlike the tariffs that Mr. Trump is slapping on countries around much of the world, including top U.S. allies, the measures against Brazil — which are set to take effect on August 1 — were announced in openly political terms.

Mr. Trump cited "Brazil's insidious attacks on Free Elections," among other issues, warning of further escalation if the country retaliated — something Lula indicated would happen.

Unlike many other countries that have been threatened with tariff hikes, the U.S. runs a trade surplus with Brazil, meaning Brazil buys more American goods than the U.S. buys from Brazil. Last year, the U.S. exported about $49 billion worth of goods to Brazil, and Brazil exported just over $42 billion in goods to the U.S., according to Census Bureau figures.

On Friday, Mr. Trump reiterated his claim that Bolsonaro was being unfairly treated.

"They're treating President Bolsonaro very unfairly," Mr. Trump told reporters, calling him "a good man."

"I know the honest ones, and I know the crooked ones," he added.

Lula has hit back at Mr. Trump's "interference," insisting that "no one is above the law."

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/brazil-jair-bolsonaro-donald-trump-violent-overthrow-coup-plot/

This isn't about "reciprocal tariffs". This is about political blackmail for a man who did the same thing he did.
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Tailgate Forum Jump to new posts
Re: Quinshon Judkins Arrested for Domestic Violence PitDAWG 07/31/25 02:00 PM
Originally Posted by Ballpeen
Originally Posted by PitDAWG
rofl

Either you presume he's guilty or you don't. I say that's up for the jury to decide. You agreed. Of course you editorialized it further than that but the end result was the same. tsktsk

It wasn't.

Make up my mind.
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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: DOJ, FBI conclude Jeffrey Epstein had no "client list," committed suicide Damanshot 07/31/25 11:56 AM
Originally Posted by BADdog
Does anyone think we will ever see all information from the resent DOJ meetings with Maxwell? Or will trump cherry pick what information to release and who to pursue based on his political agenda. ie go after all democrats on the list and only republicans he doesnt like. Republicans he wants to protect will not be mentioned. You know like adding and abetting for his gain.


Yes, but it will take someone on the inside that has had enough of the BS and wants the real stuff out there. Otherwise, all we'll get will be cleaned of Trump related stuff that makes him look good.
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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Trump Surprised ‘Terrible Fed Chair’ Jerome Powell Was Appointed — Forgetting He Appointed Him PitDAWG 07/30/25 06:32 PM


Fed board of 12 voted 10-2 to keep interest rates steady. Damned that Powell! rofl
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: Sometimes, We Need Positive Stories PitDAWG 07/30/25 05:29 PM
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: Music Thread # ..... I lost Count PitDAWG 07/30/25 04:26 PM
For those of us who throughout our lives have lost close friends and buddies we still miss to this very day..............

321 15,100 Read More
Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Gabbard Claims Obama Officials ‘Manufactured’ Intelligence of 2016 Russian Election Interference PitDAWG 07/30/25 03:22 PM
You've been ignoring any substance that doesn't suit your agenda for years now. When you refuse to look at it you'll never see it. That's a choice you're making. Not that it isn't there.
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Fantasy & Gaming Jump to new posts
Re: Yahoo DT Fantasy Football 2025 oobernoober 07/30/25 12:42 PM
I'm down for going again. Is everyone from last season in again? Is there anyone new that wants to hop in as well?
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Pure Football Forum Jump to new posts
Re: Quarterback height 10YrOvernightSuccess 07/30/25 01:00 AM
I feel like too many people put too much stock, positive and negative, in the predictive merit of a player’s draft position. Each one of these guys is an individual player with a story for why they got drafted where they did. There’s certainly some “wisdom of the crowd”, players drafted earlier show up as starters more often than those drafted later, but there’s also group think and sometimes some traits get over valued which leads to other traits getting overlooked.

I’m not an idiot, I know physical attributes matter a great deal in this game but what’s between the ears matters more to the QB position than just about any other in major sports. I don’t know if Gabriel washes out because his body just can clear the bar but when I look at his consistency and productivity in different environments, all against elite competition, I think that’s the kind of head-set that excites me. I totally understand why he dropped and I know I have a typical Brownsian wishful thinking but I’m very excited to see this kid in action. I love an underdog!
41 1,549 Read More
Pure Football Forum Jump to new posts
Re: Player News Continued..... 10YrOvernightSuccess 07/30/25 12:38 AM
I hate the Texans but man I’m rooting for him to have an epic year. Not to make us look bad, we do that plenty well thank you very much. He just deserves it.
266 24,280 Read More
Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Trumps new Air Force One from QATAR Damanshot 07/29/25 03:39 PM
Originally Posted by mgh888
LOL - all sorts of secret squirrel conspiracy theories about the Biden family being underworld bosses clearing $ millions .... most of it pure BUNK.

But the Saudis giving Jared $2Billion when he is wholly and unequivocally unqualified to invest/manage ... after Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman boasted Jared was in his pocket and after Jared did the Saudi bidding while in office.

Now this giant $400M bribe.

All in the open .... and no doubt we'll hear more crickets. No wonder they don't post anymore.

According to this article it's closer to a Billion dollars to retrofit the jet

https://www.forbes.com/sites/sarado...on-cost-could-reportedly-near-1-billion/
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Pure Football Forum Jump to new posts
Re: Browns football operations beginning to change..? PitDAWG 07/29/25 02:24 PM
When we start to do things the right way? I think you need a Buccaneers Baker jersey for Christmas.
23 872 Read More
Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Gaza PitDAWG 07/28/25 04:18 PM
Israel again intercepts Gaza-bound ship carrying activists and humanitarian aid

It was the second ship operated by the coalition that Israel has prevented in recent months from delivering aid to Gaza, where food experts have for months warned of the risk of famine.

https://www.nbcnews.com/world/middl...ng-activists-humanitarian-aid-rcna221311

Netanyahu at this point should be tried for war crimes against humanity.
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Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Trump calls for major TV network to have license revoked for being 'pawn' for Democratic Party PitDAWG 07/28/25 01:45 PM
Do you have any problem with news networks that lean too far to the right? I notice neither you nor trump mentioned anything about that.
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Everything Else... Jump to new posts
Re: The LIfe of Arch jfanent 07/28/25 12:07 AM
That's awesome, Arch. Some folks can now rest easy.
23 1,292 Read More
Palus Politicus Jump to new posts
Re: Let’s talk Homelessness solutions. northlima dawg 07/27/25 05:40 PM
Yes, They are making the root causes worse or will shortly-living wage, cuts to veterans services, medicaid changes and then come out and use this as a reason to remove homelessness camps or to take people off the streets and put them in long term institutional confinement
23 1,191 Read More
Tailgate Forum Jump to new posts
Re: History of the Dawgs Dawgs4Life 07/27/25 02:01 AM
as someone who is too young to remember much before the move, I like watching stuff from the "good times" ... wish I coulda seen them
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