Not that there was any doubt about the family’s criminality before, but this seals it
/Every family member who received wire transfers from the Chinese and Ukrainians.
He’s a brazen cocksucker, ain’t he?
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more
Every family member who received wire transfers from the Chinese and Ukrainians.
He’s a brazen cocksucker, ain’t he?
was that wrong? should i not have said that?
Jamie Raskin on presidential pardons:
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) January 20, 2025
“The seeking of pardons is powerful demonstration of the consciousness of guilt, or at least the consciousness that you may be in trouble.”
Biden just preemptively pardoned him for his role in the Jan 6th committee. pic.twitter.com/VajwMhgrGt
clone a waiter, never a porterhouse
Via SciTechDaily (emphasis added):
Plant-Based Meat Alternatives (PBMAs), a common choice among vegetarians, are classified as ultra-processed foods and may carry similar risks.
A groundbreaking study published in Food Frontiers by researchers from the University of Surrey found that vegetarians who consumed PBMAs faced a 42% higher risk of depression compared to vegetarians who avoided these products.
The study, which was led by Hana Navratilova, analyzed data from the UK Biobank and found no notable differences in intake of sodium, free sugar, total sugar, or saturated fatty acids between those vegetarians who ate PBMAs and those who did not. The researchers did find, however, that those who eat PBMAs had higher blood pressure and C-reactive protein* (CRP) levels, a marker of inflammation, and lower levels of apolipoprotein A, a protein associated with HDL, a “good” cholesterol; PBMA consumption was, however, also linked to a reduced risk of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) by 40%.
*C-reactive protein levels are the single most telling biomarker of systemic inflammation, and as such are the single most important biomarker for chronic disease risk associated with inflammation — which is virtually all chronic diseases. So it’s not “a marker of inflammation,” as ScitTechDaily describes it, it’s the marker of inflammation.
From the study cited, published via Food Frontiers (emphasis added):
CRP levels were higher in PBMA consumers. PBMAs often contain different nutrient profiles compared to traditional meat, including higher levels of certain additives, preservatives, or processed ingredients that might contribute to inflammation. This finding is consistent with a previous study using the same cohort, where higher UPF [ultra-processed food] intake was associated with higher odds of elevated inflammatory biomarkers such as CRP…
It is hypothesized that UPFs can increase inflammatory factors (IL-6, TNF-α, IL-1β), which eventually affect CRP levels.
Very much related, because the real goal is to do away with people entirely: Letitia James vs. Beef: The War on Food
you just can’t please some people
BRIDGEPORT — A Monroe couple is suing medical providers over a 2023 operation in which they say an implant for a right knee was placed in the husband’s left knee, with effects that include pain, impaired range of motion, snapping of the knee joint and inflammation.
“Remarkably, not one of at least six individuals in the operating room that day identified the safety lapse or implant error: Michael was discharged to home the next day to ambulate with two right knees,” the complaint says.
Thomas Catenacci Free Beacon
January 20, 2025
The Department of Energy, in one of its final actions under President Joe Biden, earmarked billions of dollars in green energy loans to utility companies based in Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm's home state of Michigan—defying the agency's inspector general, who called on the Biden administration to suspend the loan program amid conflict-of-interest concerns.
Some of Granholm's largest campaign benefactors during her Michigan gubernatorial campaign were among the companies receiving the hefty last-minute loans.
The Department of Energy's Loan Programs Office announced Thursday that it awarded a staggering $22.9 billion in loan guarantees for utility companies to develop green energy projects across 12 states. More than $14 billion of that total was awarded to DTE Energy and Consumers Energy, the two companies with ties to Granholm, solely for projects in Michigan.
In addition, on Friday afternoon, the office announced a $1.3 billion loan for Michigan Potash Company to help fund a sustainable fertilizer plant in Osceola County, Michigan.
DTE Energy's political action committee contributed more than $34,000 to Granholm's 2006 gubernatorial campaign, according to state records. Then-DTE Energy CEO Stephen Ewing, whom Granholm appointed to serve on the state's Early Childhood Investment Corporation Executive Committee, personally donated another $3,400 to Granholm's campaign in 2004.
Consumers Energy's political action committee gave Granholm's gubernatorial campaign $25,000 in that same timespan, additional data show. And Brandon Hofmeister, the company's current senior vice president of strategy, sustainability, and external affairs, served as Granholm's energy and climate policy adviser and deputy legal counsel when she was governor.
The outsized lame duck spending benefiting Michigan is the latest activity from the Loan Programs Office to raise questions about the integrity of the office's spending programs. Since the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act reactivated the office, giving it tens of billions of dollars in lending authority and making it a central pillar in the Biden administration's climate agenda, it has unveiled an eye-popping $107.4 billion in green loans, the vast majority of which has come following President-elect Donald Trump's victory in November, according to a Washington Free Beacon analysis.
Biden administration officials have continued to dole out lucrative loans even after the Department of Energy's inspector general issued a report in December calling on the Department of Energy to suspend the program. The watchdog warned that agency officials are not complying with conflict-of-interest rules and that the program carries a "significant risk of fraud."
The Free Beacon reported in January, for example, that Loan Programs Office director Jigar Shah held a financial stake in Plug Power through his green investment firm before joining the Biden administration, raising conflict-of-interest concerns. The Loan Programs Office finalized a $1.7 billion loan for Plug Power on Thursday.
Chris Wright, Trump's nominee to lead the Department of Energy, said during his Senate confirmation hearing Tuesday that he was aware of the inspector general report and would immediately address the program if confirmed.
CNBC first reported Granholm's financial ties to DTE and Consumers Energy in 2020 after Biden picked her as his nominee for energy secretary. Granholm served as governor of Michigan between 2003 and 2011.
"I am proud of the dedicated federal workforce that has been and will continue to be committed to using all the tools available to ensure our nation stays competitive and energy secure," Granholm said in a statement Friday touting her agency's accomplishments over the last four years.
The Department of Energy did not respond to a request for comment.
I was reflecting this morning that the past eight years have seen the complete destruction of the credibility of the nation’s major institutions: education, science, health,
The Associated Press report of these pardons reads like a page from the left’s propaganda machine. Reporters Colleen Long and Zeke Miller write, “The decision by Biden comes after Donald Trump warned of an enemies list filled with those who have crossed him politically or sought to hold him accountable for his attempt to overturn his 2020 election loss and his role in the storming of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump has selected Cabinet nominees who backed his election lies and who have pledged to punish those involved in efforts to investigate him.”
Interestingly enough, Long and Miller also acknowledge that what Biden has done with his pardons falls far outside convention.
“It’s customary for a president to grant clemency at the end of his term, but those acts of mercy are usually offered to everyday Americans who have been convicted of crimes,” they write. “But Biden has used the power in the broadest and most untested way possible: to pardon those who have not even been investigated yet.”
…“Biden, an institutionalist, has promised a smooth transition to the next administration, inviting Trump to the White House and saying that the nation will be OK, even as he warned during his farewell address of a growing oligarchy”. …. “He has spent years warning that Trump’s ascension to the presidency again would be a threat to democracy. His decision to break with political norms with the preemptive pardons was brought on by those concerns.”
An “institutionalist”, eh? What institution is that? The Biden crime syndicate? The Democrat Party? Certainly not democracy, or the principle of the rule of law, both of which he sacrificed to preserve his skin and satisfy his malicious lust for revenge.
institutionalism
noun
1: emphasis on organization (as in religion) at the expense of other factors
TikTok tucking itself in with Trump. Twitter under control of the White House. Facebook making major changes to placate MAGA, doing PR campaign to align w Trump.
— Chris Murphy 🟧 (@ChrisMurphyCT) January 19, 2025
Does everyone not see what’s happening here and how terrifying this is. pic.twitter.com/PpnfqfI6Ij
An oceanfront home in Kennebunkport set records Friday when it sold for $12 million.
Though some luxury properties around Maine are seeing price cuts due to cooling demand, luxury home values and prices have been steadily appreciating in the years since Maine’s real estate market spiked during the COVID-19 pandemic, [listing agent Bill Gaynor] said.
“This number sounds extraordinarily high,” he said. “It is on a comparative historical basis, but it makes some sense. And stay tuned, right? Wait five years, it’ll be worth more than that.”
The home’s prime location, its 275 feet of bold waterfront and high standard of design are the reasons behind that eye-popping price tag, Gaynor said. Built in 1969 on an acre, the property has been owned by the same person for over 40 years, he said. The homeowner lived year-round in Greenwich, Connecticut, and summered here.
Its new owner is an industrialist from Chicago who has been visiting Maine for years, Gaynor said. Only 90 minutes after the property was listed in December, the buyer called in and made an almost full-price offer. It sold at full price, the agent confirmed.
relic of the 2020 campaign and the vigorous youthful muscular administration it foretold:
Miss out on that? There’s probably still time to get ahold of a couple of cases of this one — save ‘em, collect ‘em, swap ‘em with your friends! Free Beacon’s Andrew Stiles has the review.
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