Buy in haste, resell at leisure
/118 Butternut Hollow was listed at $2.995 million on September 6, 2023, went pending that September 12th, and sold for $3.250 million on September 25th. It has now reappeared on the MLS, priced at $3.750.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more.
Greenwich, Connecticut real estate, politics, and more
118 Butternut Hollow was listed at $2.995 million on September 6, 2023, went pending that September 12th, and sold for $3.250 million on September 25th. It has now reappeared on the MLS, priced at $3.750.
The Ohio article is up!
— Oilfield Rando (@Oilfield_Rando) April 28, 2026
Be sure the read the bit about NYAP, a nonprofit tax exempt resettlement org whose CEO is a social worker with a $2 million salary!
The other officers all bank +$300k a year! https://t.co/Zl2BjnYkFj
I see people always asking: “If they hate America so much, why do they keep coming here?”
— Ronny Jackson (@RonnyJacksonTX) April 27, 2026
Simple answer: They don’t come here to become Americans.
They come here to USE America.
They flood in, FEAST on our welfare system, commit MASSIVE FRAUD, and then try to impose their…
And can we assume those who demanded the full release of the DOJ’s Epstein dossier will join in Senator Grassley’s demand?
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley sent a letter Monday to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel demanding records related to the bureau’s Clinton Foundation and Uranium One investigations, citing newly declassified FBI documents revealing a pattern of unresolved corruption allegations and repeated interference with federal investigators.
The letter, accompanied by a 2016 FBI electronic communication, an FBI Little Rock PowerPoint presentation, and a March 2020 investigative update memorandum, outlines years of alleged pay-to-play schemes connecting the Clinton Foundation to favorable U.S. government actions for major donors across multiple countries.
According to the released records, the FBI opened a preliminary investigation into the Foundation on January 29, 2016, focused on its “alleged use by foreign entities to corruptly influence decisions or actions” before the State Department. The investigation was triggered by bank Suspicious Activity Reports suggesting that uranium industry figures and a federal public official may have participated in a scheme where large monetary contributions flowed to a nonprofit under Clinton’s control.
Central to the probe was the sale of Uranium One, a company holding U.S. uranium assets, to Rosatom, Russia’s state-owned nuclear corporation. The transaction was approved by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States in October 2010, with Clinton serving as a member. The FBI alleged Clinton failed to disclose $2.35 million in donations from Ian Telfer, then-chairman of Uranium One, in violation of a Memorandum of Understanding she signed with the Obama administration before taking office.
Beyond Uranium One, the FBI documents outline allegations involving Boeing, Abu Dhabi, Colombia, Bangladesh, and Haiti. In one instance, Clinton allegedly promoted a $3.7 billion aircraft deal between Russia and Boeing during a 2009 trip; two months later, Boeing pledged $900,000 to the Foundation. In Abu Dhabi, the State Department approved a U.S. customs preclearance facility at Abu Dhabi International Airport around the same time Bill Clinton collected hundreds of thousands of dollars in speaking fees from UAE-connected entities.
Despite these allegations, the investigation was repeatedly stalled. A detailed FBI timeline shows the Little Rock field office was directed by headquarters to close its case in August 2016, reopened it in 2017, then faced further obstruction when a senior federal prosecutor incorrectly told investigators the statute of limitations had expired. A January 2020 memo confirmed the IRS also closed its parallel Foundation investigation that month.
A June 2018 internal email from First Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Ross warned that key interviews had never been conducted, resources were inadequate, and that the Justice Department’s own Public Integrity leadership had potential conflicts of interest related to 2016 investigations.
Grassley is demanding a full accounting from DOJ and FBI by May 11, 2026, including all investigative reports, interview transcripts, and the final disposition of every allegation raised in the probe.
Who, besides Fang Fang, remembers this former congressman, Eric Swallowell?
It took a while: two years, but this COVID fraudster in finally getting a dose of justice.
A doctor and top assistant to Anthony Fauci has been arrested for destroying emails relating to the origins of Covid. Finally! Buckle up, more is coming. https://t.co/xdbeYMmuWM
— Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) April 28, 2026
From KTXS:
WASHINGTON (TND) — New documents acquired by the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic show a senior member of Dr. Anthony Fauci’s staff bragged about avoiding public record laws.
The Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA, is a law which requires agencies funded by taxpayer dollars to disclose internal records upon request. Journalists often take advantage of the FOIA to inform the public about how their money is being used.
Internal emails from the National Institute of Health show David Morens, Fauci’s senior advisor, may have been working to shield certain communications from being accessible through FOIA requests.
One email refers to a “private gmail” supposedly used by Fauci. Morens also referred others to a “secret back channel” for communicating about certain issues. He also frequently directed others to message him on his personal Gmail account to avoid FOIA requests.
22 Partridge Hill Lane, $8.5 million. Built in 1996, touched up in 2026. I’m not personally fond of the Alabama antebellum look, but many do like it, and it’s sure to appeal to a Mamdani refugee.
Jacked sky high in 2021 to meet FEMA’s and Greenwich’s own, stricter flood rules, it’s an easy trip to the village in storm weather, properly equipped.
7 Grimes Road, guide price $5.390, under contract 12 days after listing. All pictures have already been stripped off the internet but as of this writing, a promotional video is still up. Four bedrooms, quarter-acre, with loving, attentive neighbors on every side.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Donald Trump welcomed King Charles III and Queen Camilla to the White House on Monday for a brief joint press conference in which he presented the British monarch with an autographed copy of the Declaration of Independence.
Trump fielded a question from a reporter about the longstanding relationship between the U.S. and England before bringing out what he called a "special limited edition" copy of the Declaration of Independence.
"We have here a copy of the Declaration of Independence," Trump said with a boyish grin. "And this one is really special because it's signed by me, your favorite president. My signature is even better than all those other signatures on it, believe me."
When asked by the press where he had gotten the copy, Trump revealed there were still a few of the original copies scattered around the country.
"This is one of 26 surviving original copies," Trump continued. "I don't know how a copy can be an original, but that's what they tell me. You know, Thomas Jefferson wrote it. Very special guy, Tom Jefferson. He wrote a lot. John Adams told him to, can you believe that? He wanted him to write it because John was obnoxious and disliked, not like Tommy. Everyone loved him. Even his slaves loved him, if you can believe it. He was quite a guy."
nice and easy
Adam Carolla suggested it, the White House loves it: retitle the bureau to National Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(h/t, Pierre Delecto)
ICE ➡️ NICE AGENTS.
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 27, 2026
'National Immigration and Customs Enforcement.' DO IT! pic.twitter.com/ILwl6gVx6j
And since voters return these buffoons to office time after time, I guess they are representative of their states. How embarrassing
Lee Zeldin TRIGGERS Democrat Rep. Rosa DeLauro By Exposing Her For Not Knowing Basic Supreme Court Cases DeLauro: "You're here because you need money from us! So HALT for the second! And wait for the questions and ANSWER the questions!"
Nothing infuriates an uninformed Congressional Dem more than when they realize they voluntarily triggered a debate with someone who actually knows what they are talking about, reads federal statute and adheres to Supreme Court precedent. Today’s self-implosion by @rosadelauro was… pic.twitter.com/6HTgVjQCiE
— Lee Zeldin (@epaleezeldin) April 27, 2026
Related?
FACT-CHECKING SOCIAL MEDIA CLAIMS LINKING HAIR DYEING TO MENTAL HEALTH PROBLEMS:
Many people change aspects of themselves to fit in or stand out, and sometimes even as a coping mechanism during stressful times in their lives.
These changes are often seen in how people style their clothes, play with new makeup trends, or dye their hair.
Online platforms such as Instagram and TikTok are filled with posts about dyeing hair—especially unnatural colours.
On Instagram, there are posts about how unnatural hair dyeing can be linked to mental illnesses.
And TikTok is filled with stories about how dyeing your hair is related to “having a mental breakdown.”
These trends have grown in popularity since 2019, becoming popular during the pandemic.
But is there a link between mental well-being and hair colouring?
UPDATE: Minnesota’s buffon could stand beside the Nutmeggers and Miss California but, to be fair, the average IQ of a Somalian is 68 (really-look it up), so this young bigamist has an excuse. Sort of.
— Sack Head Shaun (@2againsttyranny) April 27, 2026
The owners of 45 Willow Road, Riverside, bought it in May 2025 for $6,000,000 after a price war that began at $5.495 and ended one day later. They put it back on the market 11 days ago at $6.550 and today it’s reported pending, undoubtedly at a significantly higher price than they were looking for.
549 Round Hill Road has cut its price from $6.950 million to $5.950. Impressive, but it sold for $3 million in 2024, and other than having a computer draw up some architectural plans that a buyer probably won’t want, and tearing down the 1775 house that stood on the property, not much appears to have been done here in the past year-and-a- half.
7.4 acres, 2.62 of which are deeded, undevelopable conservation land reserved for native Siwanoys, if they ever return.
Previous thoughts on the property are here, written while it was trying to find a buyer in 2024.
dumpstered in 2025
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