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1
Money & Investment / Real insider information?
« on: Today at 12:55:18 PM »
Samuel Alito Dumped Bud Light Stock at Quite a Suspicious Time

Samuel Alito Dumped Bud Light Stock at Quite a Suspicious Time. Newly published financial disclosure reports revealed that Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito dumped stock in Anheuser-Busch last summer during the height of a manufactured anti-trans hate campaign targeting the brewer.


2
General Discussion / Look like twins even at 27 years apart
« on: Today at 12:52:57 PM »
Chiefs CEO's Wife and Daughter Respond to Harrison Butker Controversy
Kansas City Chiefs CEO Clark Hunt's wife and eldest daughter are weighing in on the controversy surrounding kicker Harrison Butker's commencement speech at a Catholic college. Tavia Hunt, who has been married to the billionaire businessman for more than 30 years, shared her thoughts about being a stay-at-home mom May 16, five days after the athlete sparked mixed reactions over his remarks at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kan., in which he said most female graduates would be "most excited" about marriage and motherhood.

"I've always encouraged my daughters to be highly educated and chase their dreams," the 52-year-old, who also shares daughters Gracie Hunt, 25 and Ava Hunt, 18, and son Knobel Hunt, 20, with Clark, wrote on Instagram, alongside throwback pics of herself with her kids. "I want them to know that they can do whatever they want (that honors God). But I also want them to know that I believe finding a spouse who loves and honors you as or before himself and raising a family together is one of the greatest blessings this world has to offer."


3
Red Lobster Chain Goes Bankrupt After Unlimited Shrimp Deal

Restaurant chain Red Lobster has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, citing high labor costs, rising rents, and, above all else, its unlimited shrimp deal. In 2023, Red Lobster announced their $20 endless shrimp deal would become a permanent fixture on their menu.

4
Pro Sports Discussion / $1600 a year eh??
« on: Today at 02:29:36 AM »
NFL fans in US must pay $1,600 a year to watch every game after Netflix addition

Cord-cutting fans will need to subscribe to all seven services to get access to the entire 2024 NFL slate, with a price tag about $1,600 based on last season's pricing and Netflix's current cheapest offering. That figure does not include the cost of an internet service necessary to run a streaming-only option.



5
He had strict instructions from the groom: ‘Stay away from the bridesmaid.’ Here’s what happened next

Ariff Hassan arrived at the wedding under strict instructions: “Stay away from the bridesmaid.”

It was August 2018. Ariff had traveled from his home in Singapore to Kazakhstan to attend the wedding of an old friend.

This friend, like Ariff, had grown up in Malaysia. They’d been close back in the day, but lost touch when Ariff moved to the UK in early adulthood. When Ariff relocated to Singapore, the two friends reconnected, and then the wedding invite followed.

Ariff was touched and honored to make the guest list. Plus, his friend’s soon-to-be wife was from Kazakhstan – the couple had met in Kuala Lumpur – and the celebrations were set to take place in Kazakhstan’s largest city: Almaty.

A keen traveler, Ariff never turned down the opportunity to explore somewhere new. Right away, he RSVPed “yes.”

“I’d been to Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan before, and I thought, ‘I’ve not been to Kazakhstan. When else am I going to go?” Ariff tells CNN Travel today.

Ariff’s friend was delighted that Ariff could make his celebrations. But before the big day, the friend took Ariff aside and gave him a firm warning. “The bridesmaid” was his fiancée’s cousin. Ariff’s friend wanted to avoid a potentially messy family situation, especially as he figured Ariff wasn’t after anything serious.

“Listen,” said Ariff’s friend. “I know you don’t want to get married. And I don’t want to have any problems later, with my extended family. So just give her a wide berth, OK?”

Ariff laughed, but he agreed. Anyway, he wasn’t going to the wedding to meet women – he just wanted to cheer on his friend on his big day, and experience a new country and culture.

In the week leading up to the wedding, the bride and groom planned daily activities for their wedding guests – many of whom, like Ariff, were in Kazakhstan for the first time.

Ariff liked Almaty right away. He recalls thinking the city seemed like “a great mix of old Soviet architecture and modern shiny buildings, quiet alleys and parks, and busy bars and restaurants.”

“It is surrounded by beautiful mountains,” he adds. “We had the chance to stay in a chalet up there for a few days, where the views were absolutely breathtaking.”

Then, the night before the wedding, Ariff attended a dinner hosted by the bride’s side of the family.

And that’s when he saw Liliya Dauletaliyeva for the first time.

“I remember Lili walked in,” says Ariff. She stood out to him right away.

“She was wearing a check shirt. All the other girls were wearing evening dresses.”

Over dinner, Liliya was friendly, chatty and at the center of most of the conversations. To Ariff, she projected self-confidence.

“She was doing the translating, between Russian and English, for everybody’s benefit,” Ariff recalls.

But when Liliya approached Ariff and tried to make conversation, Ariff made only noncommittal, vague and decidedly awkward responses.

He really wanted to talk to Liliya, find out more about her. But Ariff’s friend’s warning was ringing round his head.

Because Liliya was – of course, inevitably – the bridesmaid Ariff had been warned to stay away from.

First impressions
Back in 2018, Liliya Dauletaliyeva, born and raised in Almaty, was in her early 20s and living in the Kazakh capital of Astana. She’d recently finished up her bachelor’s degree and enrolled in a master’s program. Liliya was firmly focused on her studies and “not planning to get married” any time soon.

When she wasn’t working late in the library, Liliya was planning future travels. She loved exploring the world, and prioritized adventures whenever she could. She’d just got back from a trip to Iceland, and was looking forward to her cousin’s wedding partly because she’d get to meet a bunch of people from across the world.

At the pre-wedding dinner, Liliya noticed her cousin’s fiancé only had a couple of friends who’d flown in for the celebrations. One of the guys seemed outgoing and talkative. The other – Ariff – seemed more reserved. Liliya wondered if he was shy, or perhaps nervous.

“I know a lot of people, their first impression of Kazakhstan, it might be a bit of a cultural shock,” Liliya tells CNN Travel. “So I thought that he must be feeling a bit weird – or maybe even awkward because he just reconnected with his friend that he hadn’t seen for ages.”

Liliya tried to talk to Ariff to make him feel “more comfortable.” But she approached him, his eyes widened and he seemed even more awkward than before.

“I didn’t talk back,” says Ariff. “I had instructions to follow.”

The wedding the next day was “an almost 12-hour affair,” as Ariff recalls.

“A Kazah wedding is very different from a Southeast Asian wedding,” he says. “A lot of drinks and a lot of dancing.”

It was a great day, and when the celebrations wrapped up at around 1 a.m., the party continued at a nearby hotel.

“There was a huge karaoke venue at that hotel,” says Liliya. “And so all the young people – the bridesmaids and the friends and family, we all went there.”

That’s how, in the early hours of the morning, Ariff and Liliya found themselves sitting side by side in the karaoke bar.

“And that’s when we started talking, “ says Liliya. “After all this singing and drinking and dancing. We just sat down and talked.”

After “eight or nine hours of drinking” Ariff was no longer preoccupied about his friend’s warning.

“The instructions went out the window,” he says.

At first, Liliya and Ariff talked about Kazakhstan. Liliya asked Ariff what he thought of her home country, commenting that Ariff seemed to be one of very few friends of the groom who’d traveled for the wedding.

“Why did you decide to come?” she asked him. “I know many people are like, ‘Oh Kazakhstan, what is this place? Why would we go there?’”

“I like adventures,” said Ariff. “I love traveling and exploring new countries.”

Ariff mentioned the wedding invite had come through when he was planning a trip to Iceland. He’d abandoned those plans, and prioritized Kazakhstan instead.

“I told him that I just came back from Iceland a couple of months before,” recalls Liliya. “We realized that we both love traveling. And then just started talking about all these adventures and travel plans, where we want to go…”

Liliya and Ariff spent the rest of the evening deep in conversation, but parted ways without exchanging contact details. Still, Ariff was hopeful they might see each other again – following the Kazak wedding, Ariff’s friend and Liliya’s cousin had a second wedding celebration planned in Malaysia in a few weeks time. Ariff figured Liliya, as a bridesmaid, would likely be there, although he didn’t know for sure.

“I couldn’t stop thinking about her,” he said. “I tried to figure out how to contact her without obviously asking my friend or his wife for help – because, you know, the instructions were to stay away from the cousin.”

In the end, Ariff tracked Liliya down on Facebook and dropped her a friend request and a message:

“Hey, I hear you’re coming to Malaysia this weekend for the second leg of the wedding,” he wrote. “If you’d like to hang out or something, here’s my number.”

“And then we did hang out,” says Ariff.

It was a fun few days – Ariff showed Liliya his favorite places in Kuala Lumpur and recalls that they “were quite excited to see each other.”

Still, it wasn’t obvious where their connection would go from there.

“I’m not a fan of long distance,” says Liliya. “I kept thinking, ‘Maybe we can be friends.’”

Taking a risk
Before she left Malaysia, Liliya – on a whim – invited Ariff to come and visit Kazakhstan again, in a month’s time, for her 24th birthday party.

“I obviously sat on the decision for about a week and a half, because I thought, ‘I’ve just been there,’” recalls Ariff.

He remembers turning the idea over in his mind. Ariff really liked Liliya and wanted to see her again. But traveling across the world on a bit of a whim seemed “crazy.”

“I was kind of hesitating to go, because I thought, ‘This is insanity,’” says Ariff.

Ariff mentioned the dilemma to an older family friend whose opinion he trusted. Ariff’s confidant told him that, some 40 years ago he’d “missed an opportunity with a girl” and still regretted it to that day.

“He was like, ‘Don’t be me. Go and live your life,’” Ariff recalls.

So Ariff put aside his hesitations and embarked on the 19-hour journey to visit Liliya.

“I took three planes,” he recalls. “Singapore to Bangkok, Bangkok to Almaty, Almaty to Astana.”


“I remember I went to pick him up from the airport,” Liliya says. “I was so nervous. I called my friends and I was like, ‘I don’t know what I’m doing. Why did I even agree to that? What did I sign up for? This guy, I only saw him for like, four or five days.’”

Liliya wondered what she and Ariff were going to talk about, what were they going to do together, would it be awkward?

But as soon as they were together again, Liliya and Ariff’s respective worries melted away.

“We literally spent every single day together. He stayed for 10 days. And every minute that I was not in school, we tried to spend together,” says Liliya. “It was so much fun.”

Liliya also felt heartened that Ariff had followed through – she’d invited him, he’d said he’d come, and then he did.

“I was pleasantly surprised,” she recalls. “I was like, ‘That’s the person that keeps his word, that you can rely on.’ I started thinking, ‘I wouldn’t mind starting a relationship with a person like this.’”

Deciding on the future

By the end of the 10 days, both Liliya and Ariff were certain about their future.

“That first trip, we decided we were going to get married,” says Ariff.

It wasn’t really a formal conversation, says Liliya: “We were just having dinner and talking.”

Neither of them had been looking for love, let alone marriage. But after meeting each other, Ariff and Liliya were sure they wanted to be together, and to commit to a life side by side.

They knew the whole thing was “pretty nuts,” as Ariff puts it today. But they were confident in their feelings and in each other.

A month later, in October, Liliya went with Ariff to visit his parents in Malaysia. That Christmas, Ariff’s mother invited Liliya on a family trip to the UK. Ariff’s parents liked Liliya right away – and, certain marriage was on the cards, Ariff’s mother suggested she and Liliya go shopping for wedding dresses while they were in London.

Lilya and Ariff wanted to avoid extended periods of long distance, so around this time Liliya decided to quit her master’s degree and move to Singapore to be with Ariff.

“Obviously my family didn’t approve,” says Liliya. “But I thought, ‘You know what, I can get my master’s in Malaysia or Singapore, and that’s probably an even better option. It’s not a big deal.’”

In general Liliya and Ariff’s friends and loved ones were supportive, but a little concerned about the speed at which the romance was moving.

“It was really fast,” admits Liliya. “Some of my friends, they’re still shocked. They’re like, ‘He hadn’t even proposed and his mom took you to pick a wedding dress.’”

Liliya and Ariff shrugged off the concerns, and in December 2018, Liliya moved to Singapore. A couple of months later, Ariff formally proposed, on Valentine’s Day 2019.

The couple liked the idea of a “a very small, intimate wedding,” says Liliya. “Just friends and family members, somewhere fun.”

“Maybe somewhere in the Mediterranean, a bit of a party with friends,” says Ariff.

This dream wasn’t to be.

“Parents had different ideas,” says Ariff, laughing.

Ariff and Liliya ended up with several wedding celebrations – a small ceremony to sign the legal papers in April 2019, followed by a 300-person wedding in Malaysia in the summer “with a lot of food and alcohol” and another big party in Kazakhstan.

Amid all the planning – and parental negotiations – Ariff and Liliya took a break and went on a pre-wedding honeymoon.

“It was great to go on a honeymoon before. We picked places where it was very hard to reach us,” says Ariff.

The couple returned from their vacation refreshed and ready to enjoy the August 2019 celebrations.

Liliya and Ariff Kazakhstan wedding celebration incorporated a number of Kazakh traditions.

“We had ‘qyz uzatu,’ a Kazakh traditional ceremony where the bride is sent off from her parental home to the groom’s family, marked by a farewell party attended by close relatives and friends,” says Liliya.

“The event includes ceremonial rites, blessings from elders, presenting gifts to the groom’s family, and the singing of traditional Kazakh songs. Parents give their blessings and advice to the bride.”

The Malaysian celebration also included “recitations of prayers and blessings, a traditional meal, and an exchange of gifts,” says Liliya.

All of the celebrations were “a blast,” says Ariff. There was lots of laughter, and moving moments too. The family friend who encouraged Ariff to take a risk and visit Liliya was one of the witnesses when the couple signed the papers. Meanwhile, friends from across the world came to celebrate with the couple – including, of course, Ariff’s childhood friend and Liliya’s cousin, who’d unwittingly kicked off Ariff and Liliya’s love story the year before.

“I don’t have any siblings, but I grew up with my cousin,” says Liliya. “We are very close. So obviously she came to both our weddings, and we’re still super close.”

Ariff’s friend had forgiven him for breaking his promise to “stay away from the bridesmaid.” But he still worried, right up until the wedding, that it wouldn’t work out.

“I think my friend was very stressed until we got married, until we legally signed the papers because he was like, ‘Please don’t mess it up,’” says Ariff.

“Now we’re all part of one big family,” says Liliya.

Engagement-Party-2009.

Ariff and Liliya love traveling together. Here they are in Angkor Wat, Cambodia. Ariff Hassan and Liliya Dauletaliyeva
Post-wedding, Liliya and Ariff settled into an easy rhythm in their relationship.

The couple “don’t have many cultural differences,” says Liliya, even though they grew up in different countries.

“We quickly learned that Kazakh and Malay cultures are very similar, both emphasizing the importance of family, traditions, and community,” she says.

Still, they like learning new things about each other’s “history, people, food…” says Liliya. They enjoy sharing these learning moments with one another.

After a few years in Singapore, in 2021 Liliya and Ariff moved to Malaysia. And another big shift occurred last year, when Liliya decided to recommence the master’s course she quit back in 2018.

“Even after years of working, this idea of me leaving something incomplete kept bothering me, so I decided to apply again,” she says.

Liliya was excited to return to academia, but felt the associated upheaval would only be “worth it” if she was attending one of the best universities in the world.

That’s how she ended up accepting a place at the University of Oxford, in the UK. Liliya is loving the experience studying there. The only downside is she and Ariff are now contending with the long distance they actively avoided at the start of their relationship.

That is slightly “ironic,” admits Ariff. But he’s really proud of Liliya and excited for her next career steps. He visits Oxford every month, and is able to work remotely from the UK for significant chunks of time. In between, the couple video chat regularly.

“I think it’s actually much easier to have a long distance relationship when you’ve already been in this relationship for quite some time,” says Liliya.

The fact Liliya and Ariff both love traveling also makes journeying back and forth a little easier.

“We want to keep exploring the world and experience living in as many countries as possible,” says Liliya, adding they “can’t imagine their lives without the thrill of new adventures.”

“We like to take risks, both of us, daily,” says Ariff, pointing out that mindset’s woven into their love story. When they first met, they both jumped into the unknown, flying across the world to visit one another, and then deciding to be together, despite the obstacles.

Today, Liliya and Ariff find it surreal to think Liliya barely knew Ariff when she moved across the world to be with him. After five years together, they’re just as certain that they made the right choice.

And while they know each other much better, they’re still learning new things about each other. Liliya thinks that’s a big part of what it means to be in love with someone.

“It’s just a great feeling when you feel like you just met this person, because you feel like you keep rediscovering, keep learning something new every day,” she says. “It never gets boring.”

“Thinking about how all these puzzle pieces, how they all came together – I just started believing in destiny. What else can it be?”

6
...weak sauce consequences:

Quote
Alleged Porch Pirate Takes Package In Front of Homeowner

Police in Pennsylvania say a brazen porch pirate wasn’t put off by the presence of the homeowner when he went to poach a package. The Cheltenham Township Police Department says the package from AT&T contained six iPhones and was left on the homeowner’s porch. Just as he went to retrieve it, they say a man came up the walkway, snatched it and took off, leaving the homeowner stunned. Inside Edition Digital’s Mara Montalbano has more.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvCUHKNt13U

7
 ::)  ???:

San Francisco Taxpayers Forced To Fund Free Alcohol For Homeless; California Tax Rates Increase Further, Prompting More Exodus

California already held the distinction of having the highest state income tax in the country, with its top income tax rate at 13.3% for a decade. It was raised even higher to start 2024, with the top rate now reaching an astronomical 14.4%.

High earners contributing to California's economy might be disappointed to hear of a new taxpayer funded program in San Francisco that's sparked outrage among some locals.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the city spends $5 million a year on the "Managed Alcohol Program," a program providing free alcohol to the city's homeless alcoholics.

City public health officials argue the program's benefits, citing emergency room declines, savings from reduced hospital visits, and relief for the city's already strained emergency services.

However, residents such as Adam Nathan, a small-business owner and chair of the Salvation Army San Francisco Metro Advisory Board, question the city's approach.

Mr. Nathan, who raised attention to the controversial program, explained it as "set up so people in the program just walk in and grab a beer, and then another one," and that "inside the lobby, they had a kegs set up to taps where they were basically giving out free beer to the homeless who've been identified with [alcohol use disorder]."

While questioning the program itself, Mr. Nathan continued to voice outrage at the use of taxpayer dollars for the relatively unknown program, saying "I am a taxpayer. When did this Managed Alcohol Program get approved? Where were the public hearings? Why is it hidden away in an old hotel?"

Trending: Invest like a millionaire. Exclusive opportunity to invest in Epic Games $17 billion gaming empire.

While California's homeless population continues to climb, even amounting to 28% of the nation's homeless, its overall population statistics show a decline. 2023 marked the third straight year of population decline.

LA Times economic reporter, Don Lee, noticed a troubling trend in those now leaving, saying "in years past, the tendency has been that California would lose more relatively lower-income people, people with less education than those coming into the state. That, in recent years, has reversed. We've had tens of thousands more that are better educated and have higher incomes leaving than those that have come in."

8
Say What?!? Lauren Boebert Gushes Over How 'Pretty' Trump Is When He Sleeps

Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.) was given a blunt wake-up call by her critics on Thursday after her over-the-top defense of Donald Trump amid reports he keeps falling asleep during his criminal trial in the Stormy Daniels hush money case.

“I think he’s praying,” she said after Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) detailed all the times Trump is said to have dozed in court. “But if he is sleeping, y’know, he certainly looks pretty while he sleeps. Maybe it’s an endearing moment of prayer, though.”


9
Mike Johnson Fumbles When Asked Why GOP Is Defunding the Police

In a press conference Wednesday, Speaker of the House Mike Johnson was caught off-guard by a reporter’s question about police funds being cut in a proposed Republican budget.

“We’ve heard a lot this week about Democrats supporting ‘defund the police.’ The Republican Study Committee budget cuts the main federal grant program that local departments use to hire officers. How is that not proposing to defund the police?” the reporter asked during an event set up for “Police Week.”

Johnson replied that he hadn’t looked into it, but replied that “there’s lots of nuances.” Despite admitting he hadn’t examined the budget closely, he went on to claim that funding for law enforcement increased in other areas.

“That’s a central theme of what we believe. It’s part of our worldview, it’s part of our party platform, and it will always be consistent,”Johnson said, asserting that Democrats were guilty of pushing “defund the police” policies in the past, resulting in higher crime rates today.

10
Fire Chief Caught Vandalizing JDM Nissan 270R NISMO

A fire chief in New Jersey was caught on camera allegedly vandalizing a rare JDM Nissan 270R NISMO recently. It’s a shocking act we would expect from some neighborhood thugs, not a person who’s supposed to be out saving the public when they’re in need.

Aussie teens swipe a Porsche and Maserati, leading police on two chases.

As the owner told CBS New York in an interview we’ve shared, Nissan only made 30 of these sports cars for the Japanese domestic market. They’re exceptionally rare, highly sought after by fans of the brand or JDM performance vehicles, and so is worth a fair bit of cash.

That makes what the police chief did all the more painful. Surveillance footage shows the chief throwing a Home Depot Homer bucket full of rocks, mud, and gravel onto the back of the rare Nissan.

We personally wouldn’t even do that to the junkiest Civic. That could’ve broken the window or done all kinds of other damage. Plus it’s just plain rude.

The owner says the Nissan suffered some scratches and dents from the alleged act of vandalism.

At the time of the incident, the owner of the Nissan 270R NISMO says it was parked next to the fire station but was on his property. He also claims the chief was upset about water from the victim’s sump pump draining onto the firehouse property. So he took it out on the car. Make it make sense.

For now, the police chief is facing a charge of third degree criminal mischief. Do you think that’s appropriate or should this guy be flogged publicly if found guilty? We think he got off easy considering what a lot of enthusiasts would do if he dumped that garbage on their 1 of 30 collector car.

In the meantime, the Nissan’s owner has lawyered up and we bet he’s getting ready to go after the fire chief and city legally. We can’t blame him one bit because what was caught on camera was something we can’t print, but you know very well what that is.

11
A Chicago teen entered college at 10. At 17, she earned a doctorate from Arizona State

Dorothy Jean Tillman II's participation in Arizona State University's May 6 commencement was the latest step on a higher-education journey the Chicago teen started when she took her first college course at age 10.

In between came associate's, bachelor's and master's degrees.

When Tillman successfully defended her dissertation in December, she became the youngest person — at age 17 — to earn a doctoral degree in integrated behavioral health at Arizona State, associate professor Leslie Manson told ABC’s “Good Morning America” for a story Monday.

“It’s a wonderful celebration, and we hope ... that Dorothy Jean inspires more students,” Manson said. “But this is still something so rare and unique.”

Tillman, called “Dorothy Jeanius” by family and friends, is the granddaughter of former Chicago Alderwoman Dorothy Tillman.

When most students are just learning to navigate middle school, her mother enrolled Tillman in classes through the College of Lake County in northern Illinois, where she majored in psychology and completed her associate's degree in 2016, according to her biography.

Tillman earned a bachelor's in humanities from New York's Excelsior College in 2018. About two years later, she earned her master's of science from Unity College in Maine before being accepted in 2021 into Arizona State's Behavioral Health Management Program.

Most of her classwork was done remotely and online. Tillman did attend her Arizona State commencement in person and addressed the graduating class during the ceremony.

Tillman told The Associated Press on Tuesday that she credits her grandmother and trusting in her mother's guidance for her educational pursuits and successes.

“Everything that we were doing didn't seem abnormal to me or out of the ordinary until it started getting all of the attention,” said Tillman, now 18.

There have been sacrifices, though.

“I didn’t have the everyday school things like homecoming dances or spirit weeks or just school pictures and things like that ... that kind of create unity with my peers,” she said.

She has found time to dance and do choreography. Tillman also is founder and chief executive of the Dorothyjeanius STEAM Leadership Institute. The program includes summer camps designed to help young people in the arts and STEM subjects.

She said her plans include public speaking engagements and fundraising for the camp, which Tillman said she hopes to franchise one day.

Tillman is motivated and has innovative ideas, said Manson, adding, "And truly, I think what is inspiring is that she embodies that meaning of being a true leader.”

Jimalita Tillman said she is most impressed with her daughter’s ability to show herself and her successes with grace, but to also understand when to “put her foot down” when choosing between social outings and her education.

12
General Discussion / Would you pardon Trump like Mitt?
« on: May 16, 2024, 11:39:13 PM »
Romney says if he were president he would have immediately pardoned Trump

Utah GOP Sen. Mitt Romney said that if he were President Joe Biden he would have “immediately pardoned” former President Donald Trump.

“Had I been President Biden, when the Justice Department brought on indictments, I would have immediately pardoned him,” Romney told MSNBC’s “The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle” in an interview set to air Wednesday. “I’d have pardoned President Trump. Why? Well, because it makes me, President Biden, the big guy and the person I pardoned a little guy.”

Trump, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, faces 88 charges over four criminal indictments in Georgia; New York; Washington, DC; and Florida — with the latter two being federal cases prosecuted by Special Counsel Jack Smith.

While the longtime Trump critic disagreed with Biden’s handling of the federal cases, Romney also criticized Trump’s attacks on the courts and called out Republicans who are trying to curry favor with the former president amid his hush money trial in Manhattan.

The former president, who has pleaded not guilty to all charges, has repeated the baseless claim that Biden has weaponized the Justice Department against his 2024 presidential election rival. He has also continuously attacked the judges overseeing his cases, giving rise to security concerns with some receiving threats.

“I think it’s a terrible fault for our country to see people attacking our legal system, that’s an enormous mistake,” Romney stated.

Allies of the former president have been flocking to the Manhattan criminal courthouse to display their support for Trump, including North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum and Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, who are both under consideration to be Trump’s running mate.

“I think it’s also demeaning for people to quite apparently try and run for vice president by donning a red tie and standing outside the courthouse. It’s just, I’d have felt awkward,” Romney said.

The politicians coming to the former president’s defense — who have also included Florida Reps. Byron Donalds and Cory Mills and former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy — are attacking the people Trump is barred from publicly speaking about due to a gag order issued by the judge in the ongoing Manhattan hush money trial.

Romney has long been a critic of Trump and has often criticized his Republican colleagues for their continued loyalty to the former president. He found Trump guilty of abuse of power during Trump’s first impeachment trial in the Senate, becoming the first senator in US history to vote to remove from office a president from the same party. And a year later, he voted with six other Republicans to convict Trump of inciting an insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6 during the former president’s second impeachment trial. Romney has said he did not vote for Trump, his party’s nominee, in 2020 and has said he will not vote for him in 2024.

The 77-year-old senator as the Republican Party nominee in the 2012 presidential race, losing to Democratic incumbent Barack Obama. Romney, known for his distinctive voice in the Senate as a lawmaker willing to take on his own party, announced last year he would not seek reelection to his seat.

13
..as Kevin Von Erich:




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