Posted on 12/25/2017 12:28:00 PM PST by Freedom of Speech Wins
Apparently she is a Hillary donor.
Too bad the cops don’t dish out wood shampoos anymore.
Here is an article stating she was a Hillary donor:
A Hillary donor. I’m other words, a whiney, self-indulgent over-paid very rich socialist. A liberal tyrant.
She is a countess.
Countess Luann.
Why should I give a frog’s fat ass about this person?
Well, in NYC she might have takers after 1:00AM.
PALM BEACH, Fla. A star of the reality television series "The Real Housewives of New York City" apologized Sunday after she was arrested in Florida, saying her visit to exclusive Palm Beach brought up "long-buried emotions."
Palm Beach County court records show 52-year-old Luann de Lesseps was booked Sunday on charges of battery on a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest with violence, disorderly intoxication and corruption by threat.
I love it when the privileged, in their own eyes, bumps into the reality of life. Oops! Maybe she's not quite as special as her publicist led her to believe?
“That’s a man, baby!”
What happens in Florida stays on TV
a grifter who slept her way up in NYC “society”. In any other world, would be called a hooker.
She is trashy enough to become a full time s Florida resident....
Good question.
Her arrest may or may not be related to the “Storm” of congress members not seeking reelection, CEOs resigning, and sealed indictments apparently outstanding that may result in arrest, which all may signify the fall of the “cabal”.
The Q Anon videos people have produced describe this further.
Who apologizes to their fans after being arrested? They like us don’t even know why she was arrested. Fans might be happy if it was filmed, it would bring more excitement to the show.
Just remember, “A 2 at 10 is a 10 at 2!”
Well, if she’s a countess, then she’s related to this guy.
There will not be enough trees in the jungle to make crosses for your workers graves! The warning was stark and terrible, but Ferdinand de Lesseps, the man who had built the Suez Canal, and who now intended to crown his career by constructing a Panama canal, took no notice.
The warning was given to him by a fellow-Frenchman, who knew what he was talking about. De Lesseps did not, and set in motion a catastrophe so appalling that even a century later the tragedy chills the blood of everyone who hears about it.
In the early 1870s, surveyors, hopelessly hampered by dense forests, considered every possible route for a canal, and most of them decided that one built using the Lake of Nicaragua seemed best, even though locks would have to be built. Alas, a Frenchman named Wyse, after a feeble survey, obtained permission from the government of Colombia (which then included Panama) to build a canal roughly where todays canal is. Unfortunately for many thousands, Wyse found an eager listener in Count Ferdinand de Lesseps.
The Count was known to every Frenchman as the Great Frenchman and he was now 74 years old. Suez had made him world famous. A man of great charm, capable of raising fortunes to finance his schemes, he had been in overall command at Suez, but was not so much an engineer as a general in charge of operations.
The Suez Canal had taken ten years to build, but it was really a giant ditch. Panama, he foolishly believed, was an even easier task. He even refused to accept the fact that the new canal would need locks. De Lesseps brushed aside the two main obstacles, the hills of Culebra, which were 100 metres above sea level, and the raging Chagres River. This flooded regularly, and many millions of tarantulas would blacken the trees of the area as they tried to escape from the floods.
At a meeting of the International Congress of Geographical Sciences in Paris in 1879, most experienced engineers present voted against de Lesseps plan. However he carried the majority and rapidly raised vast sums to finance his scheme. His son Charles, despite misgivings, agreed to act as engineer-in-charge. Incredibly, none of those involved had surveyed the route.
De Lesseps reached Panama in the dry season and conquered nearly everyone with his infectious optimism. The ground was struck with a ceremonial pickaxe by his seven-year-old daughter in January 1880, and de Lesseps left to raise more money. Just a year later, after a reconnaissance that alarmed many experts, work began.
Soon the rains came and with them stark horror. No one knows just how many died before the scheme was finally abandoned in 1889. At least 2,000 French technicians perished, two thirds of those who went there. At least ten times as many labourers died.
Her ex-husband was a count. So is she still a countess even though she divorced him, and has since remarried and divorced again?
Thats dangerous ground there. Laz will need to don the protective suit and make an official verification of whether or not that is female or a man, baby...
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