TYSON HAS LONG BEEN IDENTIFED WITH THE DEMOCRAT PARTY FOR OBVIOUS REASONS.
Tyson Foods Faces Boycott After Firing 1,200 Americans, ‘Would Like to Employ’ 42,000 Migrants - AND BIDEN - MAYORKAS - SCHUMER HAVE USHERED OVER THE BORDER 15 MILLION TO PICK FROM.
Cyclist Carries Abandoned Dog to Safety on His Back
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A cyclist dressed up in his racing gear carried an abandoned and severely dehydrated dog to safety on his back after finding the animal in the middle of the road, according to a video.
The Facebook video, filmed by Marican Team, showed the man carrying the large black and white dog on his back while he continued to pedal down the road in Argentina.
The video has been viewed more than 623,000 times and has gained more than 11,000 reactions on Facebook.
According to local media, three cyclists from the Argentinian town of Villa Regina were traveling together when they discovered the abandoned dog in the middle of the road.
The dog appeared to be disoriented and dehydrated when he was found.
The video was accompanied by a message, roughly translated from Spanish which stated, “Rodri, Alan, and Emiliano from Villa Regina during their training attended to an abandoned puppy who was dehydrated during their training,”
The cyclists eventually brought the animal back to town. It is unclear who is currently caring for the dog.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) selectively enforced the law regarding financial crimes as a local prosecutor, often to the benefit of friends and political allies.
Klobuchar cut a profile as a tough-on-crime prosecutor during her tenure as the chief legal officer of Minnesota’s most populous county in the early 2000s. Not only did she push for locking up more juvenile offenders, but she was also a leading exponent of the “broken windows” theory of policing.
“What I’ve heard again and again is that no crime is a small crime and that we must enforce the law down the line,” she wrote in a policy paper at the time.
Left unsaid, though, is that certain “small” crimes were more likely to warrant prosecution than others, especially depending on one’s personal connection to Klobuchar. As Profiles in Corruption notes, that inequitable approach was nowhere more apparent than “white-collar” crimes.
While Klobuchar aggressively pursued small actors, like airline pilots not paying state income taxes or a home remodeler upcharging his clients, bigger and more nefarious financial crimes were ignored.
“But the largest financial fraud by far in her jurisdiction involved a massive conspiracy that she never even appeared to investigate, despite plenty of warning signs,” Schweizer writes. “It involved the second-largest Ponzi scheme in American history to date.”
The man at the center of the crime was Tom Petters, a Minnesota philanthropist and longtime Democrat campaign donor. Petters, who counted among his friends not only Klobuchar, but also former Vice President Walter Mondale, operated a series of shady investment funds.
Between 1998 and 2008, roughly the years spanning Klobuchar’s tenure as prosecutor, Petters raised nearly $4 billion for his hedge funds. More of than not, individuals entrusting him with their money would never see a penny of their investment returned.
As Schweizer elaborates, there were plenty of warning signs that something was off. Petters was consistently facing legal troubles, either from clients he had failed to repay or from his own improper conduct, like writing bad checks. More troubling, however, was the fact that his business associates kept getting convicted of wrongdoing, often by Klobuchar herself.
“In January 1999, just weeks into her tenure, potential evidence of the Ponzi scheme began to cross her desk,” Schweizer writes. “Officers from her office raided the home of Richard Hettler and Ruth Kahn. They were Petters investors.”
Documents seized during the raid reportedly implicated Petters in a “mutually beneficial and highly illegal financial scheme.” Despite securing convictions for both Hettler and Khan, Klobuchar seemed to make no attempt to move against Petters or “apparently even investigate” his part in the matter.
Klobuchar’s unwillingness to look into Petters coincided with a time their professional relationship was flourishing.
When Klobuchar first ran for county attorney in 1998, Petters and his associates only donated $8,500 to her campaign. By the time she was running for the United States Senate in 2006, Petters had emerged as one of Klobuchar’s most prolific financial backers. During that campaign alone, the Ponzi scheme operator donated more than $120,000, earning him the designation of being one of Klobuchar’s single largest campaign contributors.
The donations also seemed to signal a strong personal relationship. When the FBI finally caught up to the illegal operation and raided Petters’ office and home in 2008, he admitted on a wire-tap recording that Klobuchar had called him in the aftermath. Even though the confines of that conversation were never made public, the events that followed seemed to indicate Klobuchar was sympathetic to the plight of her longtime donor.
“Reportedly Klobuchar’s aides suggested a close family friend, Doug Kelley … provide legal help,” Schweizer writes. “Kelley had been a longtime friend of Klobuchar’s father, both as a lawyer to help him with legal issues and as a mountain-climbing partner.”
Ultimately, Kelley was unable to make much of a difference. Petters’ fate seemed to be sealed as soon as court proceedings began, especially when law enforcement and judicial officers expressed disbelief that he was able to operate for so long with so many red flags.
“But, it looks to me like [Petters] had friends in high places,” Garrett Vail, an attorney who initially worked on case against Kuhn in 1999, told the Daily Caller. “The only way he ran a $3 billion Ponzi scheme was [that] he had politicians in his pocket.”
In December 2009, Petters was convicted on 20 different counts of mail fraud, money laundering, and wire fraud. He was sentenced to more than 50 years in prison for defrauding investors of more than $3.7 billion.
Klobuchar, for her part, escaped the situation relatively unscathed. The senator was reelected overwhelmingly in 2012, despite attempts by her Republican challenger to make Petters an issue. Reelected again in 2018, Klobuchar is now vying for the Democrat presidential nomination on a platform that relies heavily on her accomplishments in public office.
Those accomplishments, however, only underscore Klobuchar’s selective approach to exercising political power, as Profiles in Corruption exposes.
Schweizer:
Warren, Klobuchar Have ‘Cashed in’ from Corruption
After detailing the corruption seen
among former Vice President Joe Biden and his family, Schweizer described how
his fellow 2020 Democratic presidential candidates Sens. Elizabeth Warren
(D-MA) and Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) had “cashed in” from corruption.
Schweizer said there is a
“three-layer cake of corruption” with Warren.
“[Warren] was actually a government
consultant paid by the U.S. Congress in the 1990s to rewrite our bankruptcy
laws,” Schweizer outlined. “OK, that’s all fine and good, but she did the
typical Washington crony move: She cashed in. After she rewrote those laws,
what did she do? She went to the corporations who would benefit from the law
and said, ‘Hire me, and I will help you interpret the law that I myself wrote.’
And she made millions of dollars doing that.”
He continued, “She’s also got a
daughter who set up a business. She was setting up that business while
Elizabeth Warren was head of the TARP Oversight Committee, and what ends up
happening is the daughter gets her business financed and gets advisors from the
very investment banks that Elizabeth Warren’s TARP Committee was bailing out.”
Schweizer said Klobuchar has
“mastered the art of shaking down contributors and then pushing their
legislation.”
He stated, “[Klobuchar] was a
prosecutor before she was a U.S. Senator — very selective, did not go after people
that were donors of hers, who were clearly engaged in corruption. And as a U.S.
Senator, she has mastered the art of shaking down contributors and then pushing
their legislation. There are instances where dozens of executives from a
corporation over a three-day period will give her the donation, and then
literally a few days later, she introduces legislation on their behalf.”
In
May 2012, only days after JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon revealed that his bank
had lost billions of dollars in speculative bets, President Barack Obama
publicly defended the multi-millionaire CEO, calling him “one of the smartest
bankers we’ve got.” What Obama did not mention is that Dimon is a criminal.
JPMorgan
is not the exception; it is the rule. Virtually every major bank that operates
on Wall Street has settled charges of fraud and criminality on a staggering
scale. In 2011, the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations released a
630-page report on the financial crash of 2008 documenting what the committee
chairman called “a financial snake pit rife with greed, conflicts of interest
and wrongdoing.”
These
multiple crimes by serial lawbreakers have had very real and very destructive
consequences. The entire world has been plunged into an economic slump that has
already lasted more than five years and shows no signs of abating. Tens of
millions of families have lost their homes as a result of predatory mortgages
pushed by JPMorgan and other Wall Street banks.
Watch: Jon Stewart’s ‘Irresistible,’ Starring Steve Carell, Portrays DNC As Out of Touch with Everyday Americans
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Irresistible, the second feature film written and directed by former Daily Show host Jon Stewart, portrays the Democratic party as hopelessly elitist and desperate to ingratiate itself with everyday Americans at any cost.
Focus Features, which dropped the first trailer for the comedy on Friday, is planning to release the movie May 29.
The movie stars Steve Carell as a wonkish Democratic strategist who thinks his party has become too elitist and out of touch with the heartland.
“We need some way to road test a more ‘rural friendly’ message,” he tells his team.
He finds his meal ticket in the form of a Wisconsin farmer and ex-Marine (Chris Cooper) whose rant to local officials in defense of illegal immigrants is captured on video and goes viral. The movie follows the DNC’s attempt to transform the unassuming farmer into the party’s shining new star.
“Col. Jack Hastings is our key back into the great, now swing state of Wisconsin. He just doesn’t know it yet,” the Carell character says.
Later, Carell tells the farmer: “Guys like me don’t know how to talk to guys like you. But I would like to offer my services to help you run for mayor of Deerlaken.”
The DNC’s machinations draw the attention of Republicans, who send one of their own (Rose Byrne) to thwart the growing campaign.
The movie marks a reunion between Stewart and Carell since they worked together on Comedy Central’s The Daily Show. Carrell was a correspondent on the show before hitting it big with NBC’s The Office.
Irresistible is Stewart’s second movie as writer-director. His first effort, 2014’s Rosewater, was a drama based on the true story of journalist Maziar Bahari who was detained and interrogated in Iran.