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To: bitt; little jeremiah; thinden; Richard Kimball; RinaseaofDs; overkill_007_2000; The Klingon; ...

here’s the recent reports from dave at X22:

Ep. 2759b - When Do Birds Sing? Panic, Another Piece On The Chess Board Has Been Moved Into Place (run time: 40:08)

https://rumble.com/v12eccq-ep.-2759b-when-do-birds-sing-panic-another-piece-on-the-chess-board-has-bee.html

Ep. 2759a - [CB] Just Signaled That They Have Been Trapped, Nothing Can Stop This (run time: 15:15)

https://rumble.com/v12eaxw-ep.-2759a-cb-just-signaled-that-they-have-been-trapped-nothing-can-stop-thi.html

have a goot one, eh


1,542 posted on 04/26/2022 10:46:03 AM PDT by thinden (buckle up)
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To: thinden; numberonepal

Hmm hmm...Catturd on twtter last night:
“After being stagnate for over a year, I got 10,000 new followers yesterday.
Something’s happening already.”

‘Elon Is the Singular Solution I Trust’: Jack Dorsey Throws Support Behind Musk After Twitter Takeover Approved

https://www.theepochtimes.com/elon-is-the-singular-solution-i-trust-jack-dorsey-throws-support-behind-musk-after-twitter-takeover-approved_4427681.html

Jack Dorsey, the co-founder and former CEO of Twitter, threw his support behind Elon Musk’s deal to take the social media platform private, with a Twitter thread that begins with a link to Radiohead’s “Everything In Its Right Place.”

The Twitter board had unanimously approved the Tesla and SpaceX CEO’s unsolicited offer amidst polarizing reactions and a shift in content moderation policies that some users claim has already begun. As the drama unfolds, Dorsey weighed in with his opinion regarding the takeover and Twitter’s future with Musk at the helm.

“In principle, I don’t believe anyone should own or run Twitter,” Dorsey said late Monday. “It wants to be a public good at a protocol level, not a company. Solving for the problem of it being a company, however, Elon is the singular solution I trust. I trust his mission to extend the light of consciousness.”

Dorsey said in the thread that Twitter has always been “my biggest regret,” and taking it back from “Wall Street” was the “correct first step” for the popular platform.

Musk said on Saturday that Twitter’s board was not acting in the interests of its shareholders and that board members would be paid nothing if he takes over. Although Dorsey said that the executive board has “consistently been the dysfunction of the company,” his recent posts suggest he has some hopes that Musk can build a working team.

“Elon’s goal of creating a platform that is ‘maximally trusted and broadly inclusive’ is the right one. This is also @paraga’s goal, and why I chose him. Thank you both for getting the company out of an impossible situation. This is the right path … I believe it with all my heart,” Dorsey posted, referring to Parag Agarwal, the current CEO of Twitter who took over from Dorsey in November.

Musk’s $44 billion offer was initially rejected by Twitter’s board. With 84.6 million followers on the platform, Musk has been one of Twitter’s biggest critics and has advocated for free speech. He has since said he will make the algorithms used by the platform open source.

Musk’s proposed reforms to content moderation have led many “blue checkmark” journalists and prominent commentators to react with hostility to the takeover while advocating for a mass exodus from the site.

“Not sure I am interested in Twitter if Elon Musk owns it,” said CNN contributor, John W. Dean.

Musk said on Monday after the approval of the deal, “I hope that even my worst critics remain on Twitter, because that is what free speech means.”

Dorsey ended the thread saying, “I’m so happy Twitter will continue to serve the public conversation. Around the world, and into the stars!”

Meanwhile, some users with conservative political leanings are claiming to have regained followers in an interesting development that, if true, immediately followed the Twitter board approving Musk’s offer.

“WOW. I am picking up followers en masse for the first time in years on here,” said Raheem Kassam, editor-in-chief of The National Pulse. Kassam currently has 381,000 followers on Twitter.

“Yep. @elonmusk should find out what they did differently today. I had previously lost 200k plus in the Big Purge last year,” said former U.S. director of national intelligence Richard Grenell, who has 756,900 followers.


1,554 posted on 04/26/2022 1:45:07 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Don't worry about anything. Worry has never solved any problem or moved any stone. )
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To: thinden

I think I posted another article about this yesterday, but here’s a different one. Hopefully MTG will get her case tossed asap.

Ruling by Arizona Judge a Blow to Democrat Efforts to Disqualify House Republicans for ‘Insurrection’

https://www.theepochtimes.com/arizona-decision-is-setback-in-dem-effort-to-disqualify-house-gopers-for-insurrection_4426154.html

An Arizona judge’s ruling against efforts to keep two Republican congressmen and a state representative off the November ballot due to their alleged Jan. 6, 2021, “insurrection” roles at the U.S. Capitol likely foreshadows the outcome of similar efforts in other states, according to the attorney who argued the case.

Superior Court Judge Christopher Coury ruled against motions brought by plaintiffs seeking the removal of U.S. Reps. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) and Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) and state Rep. Mark Finchem, a Republican, saying the 14th Amendment’s Disqualification Clause requires congressional action to remove an elected official, not a suit brought by private citizens in a state court.

“The express language of the United States Constitution controls this issue. The Disqualification Clause creates a condition where someone can be disqualified from serving in public office. However, the Constitution provides that legislation enacted by Congress is required to enforce the disqualification pursuant to the Disqualification Clause,” Coury ruled.

“Aside from criminal statutes dealing with insurrection and rebellion which Congress has enacted (lawsuits which require the government, not private citizens, to initiate), Congress has not passed legislation that is presently in effect which enforces the Disqualification Clause against the candidates,” Coury said.

Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) testifies at a House hearing in front of the Committee on Oversight and Reform, in Washington on July 12, 2019. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
He was referring to Section 3 of the 14th amendment as the “Disqualification clause” approved by Congress following the Civil War to bar former officials of the Confederacy from holding office under the U.S. Constitution.

Coury noted that “legislation that proposes to enforce the Disqualification Clause currently is pending in the United States Congress, but has not yet been enacted. Therefore, given the current state of the law and in accordance with the United States Constitution, Plaintiffs have no private right of action to assert claims under the Disqualification Clause.”

The 11 plaintiffs, all individual Arizona citizens, who filed the complaint against Gosar, Biggs, and Finchem were represented by attorneys with Free Speech for People (FSP), an Austin, Texas-based left-wing advocacy group.

An FSP spokesman told The Epoch Times the plaintiffs reject the judge’s reasoning and are planning to file an appeal to the Arizona Supreme Court.

“This ruling is contrary to the law. Arizona is not exempted from the mandate of Section Three of the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. A candidate who has taken an oath of office and then engaged in insurrection has no place on a future Arizona ballot. We will be appealing this decision to the Arizona Supreme Court.”

he FSP is also involved in related litigation against Representatives Madison Cawthorne (R-N.C.) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.).

In their complaint, the plaintiffs claimed Finchem—who is now seeking the Secretary of State position in the November election—was an active January 6 participant and coordinated his actions with Gosar and Biggs.

“Finchem was engaged in efforts to intimidate Congress and the Vice President into rejecting valid electoral votes and to subvert the essential constitutional function of an orderly and peaceful transition of power,” according to the complaint.

“Finchem was engaged with the January 6 attack by being in close contact with the planners of the Wild Protest, including throughout the day on January 6, and by participating in the attack with the advance knowledge that it was substantially likely to lead to the attack,” the complaint said.

“Finchem promoted the events of January 6 ahead of time. He coordinated many of his efforts with U.S. Representatives Paul Gosar and Andrew Biggs, and agreed with them on a plan to first delegitimatize, then challenge, and finally overturn the 2020 presidential election,” the complaint continued.

George Wentz, an attorney representing Gosar, told The Epoch Times that “the 14th amendment establishes the disqualification of people that have been engaged in insurrection or given aid and comfort to the enemy. Right there, in the 14th amendment, it says Congress shall decide how this will be enforced. And if only Congress can determine this, then certainly a state cannot.”

Wentz said he believes the attorneys representing the plaintiffs are “trying to bypass the Department of Justice, they are trying to appoint themselves as a self-appointed, unaccountable to the people prosecutorial arm of the government, but they are trying to do [it] through a state law in a state civil court using [the] standard of the preponderance of the evidence.”

But under the federal law approved by Congress, such prosecutions must be done in federal criminal courts using a standard of clear and convincing evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, Wentz pointed out.
Congress did so, he said, by approving a law that directs the President of the United States, through the Department of Justice, to enforce the Disqualification Clause by initiating action in federal court in appropriate cases.

“So they’re trying to do an end-run around the 14th Amendment itself,” Wentz said.

A scheduling conference was held today between the parties, and appeal briefs are expected to be filed beginning next week, with a decision coming perhaps as early as mid-May.


1,562 posted on 04/26/2022 2:01:24 PM PDT by little jeremiah (Don't worry about anything. Worry has never solved any problem or moved any stone. )
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To: bitt; little jeremiah; thinden; Richard Kimball; RinaseaofDs; overkill_007_2000; The Klingon; ...

most recent reports from dave at X22

Ep. 2760b - [HRC]/[DS] Players Took The Bait, Trap Set, All The Walls Are Falling Down (run time: 51:16)

https://rumble.com/v12jqyn-ep.-2760b-hrcds-players-took-the-bait-trap-set-all-the-walls-are-falling-do.html

Ep. 2760a - [CB]/[DS] Continually Show Their Hand, The [CB] Plan Exposed And Failed (run time: 16:18)

https://rumble.com/v12jppn-ep.-2760a-cbds-continually-show-their-hand-the-cb-plan-exposed-and-failed.html


1,731 posted on 04/27/2022 9:10:22 AM PDT by thinden (buckle up)
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