Yenta Alert
Your terms are acceptable.
Had a friend God rest his soul told me his grandparents had land in the mountains with multiple old wells that had partially collapsed. So deep in Appalachia no one would have known. Period
Someone doesn't know how to revenge correctly!
Never forget what these two did to Rudy
The two Georgia poll workers you're referring to are Ruby Freeman and her daughter Wandrea "Shaye" Moss (also known as Shaye Moss), former Fulton County election workers who were falsely accused of ballot fraud in the 2020 presidential election.
They filed a defamation lawsuit against Rudy Giuliani (and initially others) for spreading those false claims, which led to severe harassment, threats, and damage to their lives.
In December 2023, a federal jury in Washington, D.C., awarded them a total of $148 million (precisely $148,169,000) in damages against Giuliani. This included:
- Approximately $33 million in defamation damages.
- $40 million for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
- $75 million in punitive damages.
The award was broken down roughly as follows (per reports): Freeman received about $16–20 million in certain categories, and Moss received a similar amount, with the rest covering shared punitive and other damages.
Giuliani declared bankruptcy afterward and resisted payment, but in early 2025 (January), they reached a settlement agreement. By February 2025, court filings confirmed the $148 million judgment was "fully satisfied," meaning Giuliani paid the amount (or the equivalent through the settlement terms, which included him keeping certain assets like property and rings, plus a promise to stop defaming them). The exact cash payout details weren't publicly disclosed beyond satisfying the full judgment amount.
They also settled related defamation suits:
- With One America News Network (OAN) in 2022 (terms undisclosed).
- With The Gateway Pundit in 2024 (terms undisclosed).
The primary and most publicized amount from the high-profile case is the $148 million from the Giuliani verdict/settlement. No other major "Georgia poll workers" lawsuit matches this description with a comparable publicized award.
American eagles at 84.?
LETS FUCKING GOOOOOOOO!
WITSEC Drop the freaking Christmas hammer already!
Saban Capital Group — Private investment firm owned by billionaire Haim Saban, with investments in media/entertainment historically, but expanded into real estate including GSA assets.Haim Saban (often spelled "Haim Saban") is an Israeli-American billionaire media mogul, investor, producer, and philanthropist. Here's a detailed overview based on current and historical information:
Surprise Surprise
Just check on mine local and im pissed.
ZIPPLR LLC appears to be a low-profile, private limited liability company (LLC) registered in the United States. Here's a summary of the publicly available information from business registries and directories (as of late 2025, no major recent changes or news appear):
- Registered address: 12 Sequoia Drive, Dayton, NJ 08810, USA. This is consistently listed across multiple states.
- Registered agent: Northwest Registered Agent Service, Inc. (in at least the Georgia filing).
- Status: Active (based on available records).
- Incorporation/Registration details:
- West Virginia: Company number 497554 (listed on OpenCorporates).
- Georgia: Registered as a foreign LLC on June 7, 2020 (company ID 20100584).
- Michigan: Incorporated as a foreign LLC on February 4, 2021 (ID 802602475).
- It is qualified/registered as a foreign LLC in multiple states, suggesting the company is likely formed in one home state (possibly New Jersey, given the address) and operates or is authorized in others.
No official website, public social media profiles, product descriptions, news articles, executive names, financials, or detailed business activities are readily available in public searches. It does not appear to be a well-known brand, startup, or publicly discussed entity on platforms like X (formerly Twitter), where mentions of "Zipplr" mostly relate to unrelated products (e.g., "Padded Zipplr" as a backpack model from Eastpak × Timberland collaborations in older posts).
There are no indications of major activity, controversies, funding rounds, or media coverage. It may be a small/private holding company, service-based entity, or dormant/low-activity LLC. Similar-sounding names (e.g., Zipple, Zipdev, Zip) refer to entirely different companies.
If this relates to a specific context (e.g., legal, vendor, or location check), more details could help narrow it down further! For official verification, check state business registries directly (e.g., via New Jersey Division of Revenue if that's the home state, or the listed agent service).
There's a brand spanking new VA medical center here in Central Bama that was built despite a huge Government owned facility in Montgomery. Come to find out its being leased to the fed by private company contract. The wasting of our country continues......
Central casting
Merry Christmas Central Alabama
250 years
I still think that number is a stretch!
I'm gonna need those military issued weapons.
Media control via Grok
- Declared War or Genuine National Emergency (via Communications Act of 1934, Section 706 / 47 U.S.C. § 606) During a proclaimed war or national emergency (as defined by the president), the Communications Act grants the president broad authority over "wire or radio communications." This includes powers to: Prioritize government/defense communications. Suspend or amend FCC rules. Take over, use, or close communication facilities/stations. Authorize government control of radio, wire, broadcast, or other electromagnetic-emitting devices. Historical context: During World War II and other crises, similar powers were used (e.g., FDR considered seizing broadcast networks). The provision remains on the books and is vaguely worded—"war," "threat of war," "public peril," "disaster," or "other national emergency" are not strictly defined. In practice: This could theoretically allow shutting down or commandeering broadcasters/TV/radio in a true existential crisis (e.g., invasion or massive cyberattack). Modern attempts to use it for political reasons (e.g., revoking licenses of "unfair" outlets) would violate the First Amendment and Communications Act prohibitions on content-based censorship. Courts would almost certainly block it absent a clear, imminent national security threat.
Flipped tables enters the chat....
Sounds like something John McAfee would do. Wink wink
Stopped to help a broken down vehicle and was hit !
Sorry
I think this is it however its DOJ and I can't throw them that far!
Those hair plugs filled in just nice!
Cancer my ass
Just dialed the number still hits the Governors office!