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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Influencer arrested over video of 192-mph motorcycle ride on Connecticut highways
2025-04-13


[NYPOST] He had a need for speed — and now, he needs a good lawyer.

Connecticut cops arrested a 22-year-old influencer this week for a risky and reckless motorcycle ride — at 192 mph — he took last year across two of the Nutmeg State's busiest highways.

Showboating YouTuber Brice Bennett would likely have gotten away with his death-defying joyride, had he not shared the frightening footage with his 220,000 subscribers, according to an arrest warrant obtained by The Post.

State police said they were tipped to the video's existence by Gov. Ned Lamont's office, which received an anonymous complaint about Bennett's YouTube channel in late December.

Bennett's self-incriminating video allegedly shows him weaving in and out of traffic on his Honda CBR 1000RR Fireblade at speeds of up to 192 mph.

The video has been viewed over 4 million times since it was first posted to YouTube 11 months ago.
Related:
Ned Lamont 06/15/2024 Four Democratic operatives are charged with election offenses including one caught 'ballot-stuffing'
Ned Lamont 12/22/2023 Connecticut to wipe clean 80,000 criminal records
Ned Lamont 10/14/2022 Heartbroken father of Connecticut cop killed in shooting that left two officers dead hails him as an ‘true American patriot' -

Related:
Brice Bennett 03/26/2022 Conflicts of Interest in HB 1013, the Georgia Mental Health Parity Act

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Government Corruption
Four Democratic operatives are charged with election offenses including one caught 'ballot-stuffing'
2024-06-15
[Daily Mail, where America gets its news] Four Democratic operatives in Connecticut were charged with election fraud months after one was seen in shocking footage that allegedly showed evidence of ballot stuffing.

Two campaign workers in Bridgeport, along with Bridgeport City Councilmember Alfredo Castillo and the town's Committee Vice Chair Wanda Geter-Pataky, were charged this week with election offenses.

The charges relate to the Democratic primaries in the 2019 Bridgeport mayoral election, with three of those charged reportedly supporting the eventual winner, Joe Ganim.

The charges come months after footage also alleged to show Geter-Pataky ballot stuffing in the 2023 mayoral primary, with the surveillance footage leading a judge to order the election be re-held last November.

The charges have been presented almost five years after an investigation was launched into the alleged misuse of absentee ballots in the 2019 mayoral election.

The Connecticut Attorney General's Office arrested Castillo and Geter-Pataky alongside election workers Nilsa Heredia, 61, and Josephine Edmonds, 62, for alleged offenses in the contentious election. They are charged with unlawful possession of absentee ballots, and Edmonds, Geter-Pataky, and Heredia are also charged with tampering with a witness, per the Stamford Advocate. According to prosecutors, the latter three misrepresented eligibility requirements for constituents to be allowed to vote by absentee ballot in the election.

The four accused are also charges with a litany of other election fraud-related crimes, including Geter-Pataky and Castillo allegedly failing to sign as an assister on an absentee ballot. It is unclear if they entered pleas, as all four were released and are scheduled to be back in court on June 24.

While unrelated to the charges, the Bridgeport mayoral election previously made national headlines in 2023 when a state judge sensationally overturned the primary election following the emergence of surveillance footage.

In the footage, Geter-Pataky and another woman were allegedly seen making several trips around the city to stuff absentee ballots into drop boxes.

At the time, Superior Court Judge William Clark said the surveillance 'calls the result of the primary election into serious doubt and leaves the court unable to determine the legitimate result of the primary.'

The judge cited statistics showing that abnormally large numbers of absentee ballots were cast in certain voting districts and video evidence shows multiple people shoving stacks of ballots into drop boxes, in violation of state law.

Ganim won the original election by just 251 votes out of 8,173 cast, but went on to win more convincingly in the re-count and the subsequent general election. The Bridgeport Mayor has denied any knowledge of the alleged ballot stuffing.

Following the charges related to the 2019 contest, Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont insisted that 'justice will be served.'

'This has gone on too long and I'm really glad the state’s attorney stepped in,' Lamont said.

'I think the fact that the state's attorney is bringing charges... I think that's going to make any of those that want to commit fraud like this think twice. We're going to hold them accountable.'

Mayor Ganim - who previously served seven years in prison on federal corruption charges - said in a statement following the charges that the alleged offenses were 'unacceptable.'

'We all agree that the integrity of the voting process is vital to our democracy. Charges that question that integrity are of concern,' he said.

'I always stand for maintaining the rights of the voters and a fair election. The investigations pertaining to both 2019 campaigns are now in the hands of the courts and will be addressed through the justice system.'
Related:
Connecticut: 2024-06-08 Good Morning
Connecticut: 2024-06-08 Connecticut residents form armed group to defend against violent crime
Connecticut: 2024-05-29 Former Yale student who is suing a woman for defamation after he was exonerated at a criminal trial on rape charges is now suing 15 liberal organizations and their lawyer.
Related:
Bridgeport: 2023-12-24 How a sitting Democratic Connecticut mayor could be ousted after 'shocking' evidence
Bridgeport: 2023-12-15 Uncontrollable street takeover sees participants throwing fireworks at cop cars as Connecticut authorities try to identify participants in gatherings that have run rampant across the state
Bridgeport: 2023-11-03 Stunner! Judge overturns election because of ballot stuffing fraud

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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Connecticut to wipe clean 80,000 criminal records
2023-12-22
Making more voters.
The Clean Slate law automatically erases criminal records of people 7 years after date of conviction for misdemeanor or 10 years after certain felony convictions.

Connecticut is set to wipe clean the criminal records of more than 80,000 people with previous convictions under a long-delayed law set to go into effect in the new year.

The Clean Slate law, which was approved by the state Legislature in 2021, will automatically erase the criminal records of people seven years after the date of their conviction for a misdemeanor or 10 years after the date of their conviction for certain low-level felonies if they hadn’t been convicted of other crimes.

Gov. Ned Lamont said the goal of the law is to remove barriers to jobs, education and housing for people convicted of low-level offenses but stayed out of trouble.

“Turning your life around after making a mistake isn’t easy, but many people who’ve been convicted of low-level offenses and haven’t committed any other crimes find those convictions haunting them for decades," he said in a statement.

"The idea that minor crimes should remain a part of someone’s permanent record is outdated, ineffective, and can cause more harm than good," he added.

State officials attributed the two-year delay to "intensive information technology system upgrades," which they said will allow criminal justice agencies to "identify eligible convictions and then erase them in an automated manner pursuant to the Clean Slate Law."

That $8 million computer system is now live, they said, and over the next month, individuals who meet the Clean Slate Law’s eligibility requirements will have their offenses automatically erased from their records. No application or petition is required.

Overall, the system has flagged at least 178,499 offenses from more than 80,000 people that will automatically be erased next month when the system begins processing the records. People with convictions prior to the year 2000 are also eligible, but they must first petition the court for approval.

State officials point out that erasure doesn't mean deletion or destruction of the records but prevents their disclosure to anyone other than the court clerk holding the records.

Earlier this year, Connecticut wiped clean 43,754 low-level drug possession convictions under the state's recreational cannabis law.

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-War on Police-
Heartbroken father of Connecticut cop killed in shooting that left two officers dead hails him as an ‘true American patriot' -
2022-10-14
[Daily Mail, where America gets its news] ...after pair of brothers faked 911 call and ambushed trio of cops when they arrived
  • The father of a Connecticut cop shot to death after a fake 911 call has called his son a 'patriot' and an 'all-American'Alex Hamzy, 34, was shot dead after being lured to a faked domestic dispute call in Bristol, Connecticut, by brothers Nicholas, 35, and Nathan Brutcher, 32

  • Dustin DeMonte, 35, was also shot dead after being met outside by an armed suspect

  • One officers, Alec Iurato, 26, has been rushed to hospital and undergone surgery for a 'severe gunshot' injury

  • Connecticut State Police Sgt. Christine Jeltema said it was an 'isolated incident' with 'no threat to the community'

  • Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont directed flags to be lowered to half-staff in honor of the fallen officers

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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Flaw in Manufacturer's Testing System For Coronavirus Used by Labs Across the US Causing False Positives
2020-07-22
[Gateway Pundit] A flaw in a manufacturer’s Coronavirus testing system used by labs across the US are causing false positives.

Department of Public Health scientists in Connecticut discovered the flaw in the testing system manufactured by Thermo Fisher Scientific.

According to DPH scientists, the affected patients were tested between July 15 to July 17 and out of a total of 144 ’positive’ tests, 90 were false positives!

This is just the tip of the iceberg.

The Associated Press reported:

Scientists at Connecticut’s public health laboratory say they’ve discovered a flaw in a manufacturer’s testing system for the coronavirus that’s used by labs around the country. So far, it’s resulted in 90 people — mostly residents of Connecticut nursing homes and assisted living facilities — recently receiving false positive tests.

State public health officials are now reviewing whether nursing home residents who received false positive tests were grouped with other residents with accurate positive tests, given the state’s recommendation to cohort nursing home residents who test positive for COVID-19.

"We don’t know that yet," said Josh Geballe, Gov. Ned Lamont’s chief operating officer, noting that a team from the state’s Department of Public Health has been reaching out to every clinician responsible for those individuals, as well as the facilities where they live, and compiling data on the situation.

Meanwhile, Dr. Deidre S. Gifford, the state’s acting public health commissioner, said her agency is also reaching out to labs throughout the state to see how many of them use the testing platform manufactured by Thermo Fisher Scientific.
Related:
Coronavirus testing: 2020-05-06 ICE detainees refuse coronavirus tests, rush officers and trash detention center instead
Coronavirus testing: 2020-03-13 Chris Murphy: Pissing off Europe by not giving them prior notice of the travel ban was totally unnecessary.
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Home Front: Politix
Trump Destroys Connecticut Governor's Claim the Strategic National Stockpile Has Been Emptied
2020-04-02
[PJMEDIA] Ned Lamont, the Democrat governor of Connecticut, claimed on Tuesday that the U.S. Strategic National Stockpile of medical supplies is now empty and alleged that the state is now on its own in securing ventilators and masks to fight the coronavirus (aka COVID19 or Chinese Plague)
...the twenty first century equivalent of bubonic plague, only instead of killing off a third of the population of Europe it kills 3.4 percent of those who notice they have it. It seems to be fond of the elderly, especially Iranian politicians and holy men...
pandemic without the help of the federal government.

"It was disturbing today to find out that the national strategic stockpile is now empty. We did get 50 ventilators, for which I am very thankful," Governor Lamont said. "For now we are on our own. For now, we are doing the best to scour the globe for PPE (personal protective equipment) as best we can."

This, it turns out, was not true. President Trump was asked about Lamont's claim during the Coronavirus Task Force press briefing, and he explained what's really happening.

"It's not emptied, let me explain something. What we're doing [...] rather than having it brought into the stockpile, where appropriate [...] we're trying to have supplies sent directly to the states," Trump explained. "Because we don't want medical supplies coming into warehouses all over the place and then we take them from there and bring them to another warehouse. So we're having them brought, ideally, from the manufacturer directly to the hospital or the state where it's going."

Related:
Ned Lamont: 2020-03-21 So much for the booming Trump economy - Over 75 million under lockdown in US as weekend begins
Ned Lamont: 2018-12-19 Union Organizers Honored by State Communist Party
Ned Lamont: 2010-01-25 Obama Administration Steers Lucrative No-Bid Contract for Afghan Work to Dem Donor
Link


-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
So much for the booming Trump economy - Over 75 million under lockdown in US as weekend begins
2020-03-21
[Washington Examiner] Cities and entire states have gone on lockdown in the past week as officials work to stem the rapid spread of the coronavirus, sequestering at least 75 million people in their homes.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced a statewide stay-at-home order Thursday night, and other governors followed suit within hours. Andrew Cuomo of New York, Ned Lamont of Connecticut, and J.B. Pritzker of Illinois, all Democrats, issued similar orders Friday, telling people to stay in their homes unless to go to "essential" businesses only, including pharmacies, grocery stores, banks, gas stations, and child care services.

President Trump applauded Govs. Cuomo and Newsom in Friday’s White House press briefing for taking "strong, bold steps" to stem the outbreak, while National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony Fauci said he "strongly supports" the governors’ actions.

Meanwhile, officials in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, Washington state, and more have ordered all bars and restaurants to close.

The most recent announcement came from Pritzker, who told reporters in Illinois that the order would last until April 7.

"I fully recognize that, in some cases, I am choosing between people’s lives and saving people’s livelihood," Pritzker said in a news conference. "But, ultimately, you can’t have a livelihood if you don’t have your life."
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Home Front: Politix
Union Organizers Honored by State Communist Party
2018-12-19
[Free Beacon] The Connecticut Communist Party honored a pair of union organizers, including an official who nearly captured the Democratic nomination for lieutenant governor, at its annual awards ceremony.

The party presented the People's World Amistad Awards to Eva Bermúdez Zimmerman in recognition of her upstart challenge against establishment Democrat, as well as longtime union official Shellye Davis. The party described the honorees as "fierce warriors in the forefront demanding workers' and immigrant rights, social justice, peace and equality for a better and sustainable world" in an announcement. The award ceremony was held at a Methodist Church in New Haven on Dec. 8 to mark the 99th anniversary of the Communist Party USA.

Bermúdez Zimmerman made headlines in 2018 when she launched a long shot campaign to challenge Democratic gubernatorial nominee Ned Lamont's lieutenant governor, former Connecticut secretary of state Susan Bysiewicz. Bermúdez Zimmerman, who is married to Connecticut SEIU state council associate director Stacey Zimmerman, took a leave of absence from her work as organizing director of the SEIU Local 2001 for the campaign. Her insurgent run garnered intense media interest as the state's first Puerto Rican candidate for lieutenant governor and was hailed as a "fresh face" in Connecticut's political scene. Despite being out fundraised by Bysiewicz, Zimmerman managed to capture 37 percent of votes in the the August Democratic primary. Lamont and Bysiewicz narrowly won the November election.

The state party also recognized the efforts of Shellye Davis, president of the AFL-CIO affiliated Greater Hartford Central Labor Coalition and a longtime official with the American Federation of Teachers, was also honored for her long history of labor activism. The announcement hailed her work as "leader for the rights of public sector union members and the people they serve, especially the youth."
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Home Front: Politix
Obama Administration Steers Lucrative No-Bid Contract for Afghan Work to Dem Donor
2010-01-25
Promise #385 broken
Despite President Obama's long history of criticizing the Bush administration for "sweetheart deals" with favored contractors, the Obama administration this month awarded a $25 million federal contract for work in Afghanistan to a company owned by a Democratic campaign contributor without entertaining competitive bids, Fox News has learned.

The contract, awarded on Jan. 4 to Checchi & Company Consulting, Inc., a Washington-based firm owned by economist and Democratic donor Vincent V. Checchi, will pay the firm $24,673,427 to provide "rule of law stabilization services" in war-torn Afghanistan.

A synopsis of the contract published on the USAID Web site says Checchi & Company will "train the next generation of legal professionals" throughout the Afghan provinces and thereby "develop the capacity of Afghanistan's justice system to be accessible, reliable, and fair."

The legality of the arrangement as a "sole source," or no-bid, contract was made possible by virtue of a waiver signed by the USAID administrator. "They cancelled the open bid on this when they came to power earlier this year," a source familiar with the federal contracting process told Fox News.

"That's kind of weird," said another source, who has worked on "rule of law" issues in both Afghanistan and Iraq, about the no-bid contract to Checchi & Company. "There's lots of companies and non-governmental organizations that do this sort of work."

Contacted by Fox News, Checchi confirmed that his company had indeed received the nearly $25 million contract but declined to say why it had been awarded on a no-bid basis, referring a reporter to USAID.

Asked if he or his firm had been aware that the contract was awarded without competitive bids, Checchi replied: "After it was awarded to us, sure. Before, we had no idea."

He declined to answer further questions, however, and again referred Fox News to USAID, saying: "I don't want to speak for the U.S. government."

Asked about the contract, USAID Acting Press Director Harry Edwards at first suggested his office would be too "busy" to comment on it. "I'll tell it to the people in Haiti," Edwards snapped when a Fox News reporter indicated the story would soon be made public. The USAID press office did not respond further.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said Fox News' reporting on the no-bid contract in this case "disturbed" him.

Issa has written to USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah requesting that the agency "produce all documents related to the Checchi contract" on or before Feb. 5. Citing the waiver that enabled USAID to award the contract on a no-bid basis, Issa noted that the exemption was intended to speed up the provision of services in a crisis environment.

Yet "on its face," wrote Issa to Shah, "the consulting contract awarded to Checchi to support the Afghan justice system does not appear to be so urgent or attendant to an immediate need so as to justify such a waiver."

Corporate rivals of Checchi were reluctant to speak on the record about the no-bid contract awarded to his firm because they feared possible retribution by the Obama administration in the awarding of future contracts.

"We don't want to be blackballed," said the managing partner of a consulting firm that has won similar contracts. "You've got to be careful. We're dealing here with people and offices that we depend on for our business."

Still, the rival executive confirmed that open bidding on USAID's lucrative Afghanistan "rule of law" contract was abruptly revoked by the agency earlier this year.

"It's a mystery to us," the managing partner said. "We were going to bid on it. The solicitation (for bids) got pulled back, and we do not know why. We may never know why. These are things that we, as companies doing business with the government, have to put up with."

As a candidate for president in 2008, then-Sen. Obama frequently derided the Bush administration for the awarding of federal contracts without competitive bidding.

"I will finally end the abuse of no-bid contracts once and for all," the senator told a Grand Rapids audience on Oct. 2. "The days of sweetheart deals for Halliburton will be over when I'm in the White House."

Those remarks echoed an earlier occasion, during a candidates' debate in Austin, Texas on Feb. 21, when Mr. Obama vowed to upgrade the government's online databases listing federal contracts.

"If (the American people) see a bridge to nowhere being built, they know where it's going and who sponsored it," he said to audience laughter, "and if they see a no-bid contract going to Halliburton, they can check that out too."

Less than two months after he was sworn into office, President Obama signed a memorandum that he claimed would "dramatically reform the way we do business on contracts across the entire government."

Flanked by aides and lawmakers at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building on March 4, Obama vowed to "end unnecessary no-bid and cost-plus contracts," adding: "In some cases, contracts are awarded without competition....And that's completely unacceptable."

The March 4 memorandum directed the Office of Management and Budget to "maximize the use of full and open competition" in the awarding of federal contracts.

Federal campaign records show Checchi has been a frequent contributor to liberal and Democratic causes and candidates in recent years, including to Obama's presidential campaign.

The records show Checchi has given at least $4,400 to Obama dating back to March 2007, close to the maximum amount allowed. The contractor has also made donations to various arms of the Democratic National Committee, to liberal activist groups like MoveOn.org and ActBlue, and to other party politicians like Sen. John F. Kerry, former presidential candidate John Edwards and former Connecticut Senate candidate Ned Lamont.

Sources confirmed to Fox News that Checchi & Company is but one of a number of private firms capable of performing the work in Afghanistan for which USAID retained it.

For example, DPK Consulting, based in San Francisco and with offices in Washington, D.C. and elsewhere, states on its website that it has contracted with USAID and other federal agencies on more than 600 projects involving "governance and institutional development" across five continents.

Among DPK's most recent projects are the establishment of a new public prosecutor's office in Jenin, in the troubled West Bank area of the Palestinian Authority, and the improvement of court facilities in the Kyrgyz Republic in Central Asia. Similarly, BlueLaw International, based in Virginia, was awarded a $100 million contract by the State Department in April 2008 to strengthen the "rule of law" in Iraq.

Although Obama suggested in his remarks on March 4 that he hoped particularly to address problems associated with defense contracting, an Associated Press analysis last July found that the Defense Department frequently awards no-bid contracts under the aegis of the $787 billion stimulus program, and often at higher expense to U.S. taxpayers.

According to The AP, more than $242 million in federal contracts, or roughly a quarter of the Pentagon's contract stimulus spending, was awarded through no-bid contracts. And while procurement officers say competitive bidding can actually cost the taxpayers more -- because it involves delays and can thereby subject pricing for services and equipment to inflation -- the AP analysis found that defense-related stimulus contracts awarded after competitive bidding saved the Pentagon $34 million, compared with $4.4 million when no bidding was involved.

Figures kept by OMB Watch, a non-profit research and advocacy group that tracks federal spending, show that no-bid contracts have been common under administrations controlled by both parties.

During fiscal years 2000 and 2001, for example, when Bill Clinton was president, as much as $139.2 billion in federal contracts was awarded without competitive bidding. The OMB Watch figures show that the practice appears to have accelerated sharply during the Bush administration, but the figures are not adjusted for inflation.
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Home Front: Politix
Dems plan payback for Lieberman
2008-09-25
HARTFORD, Conn. -- Connecticut Democrats, angry that Sen. Joe Lieberman is campaigning for the Republican presidential candidate and criticizing his own party's nominee, agreed Wednesday to circulate a resolution to censure the veteran politician but won't consider acting on it until after Election Day.

The state party's central committee Wednesday agreed to send copies of the resolution to every Democratic town committee in the state. The resolution condemns Lieberman for speaking at the Republicans' convention and backing John McCain.

Party officials said the group plans to get input from the town officials and revisit the issue in December. "When we have someone who is our elected senator, as a Democrat, standing in front of not only a national, but an international audience, speaking in support of Sen. McCain, it was the final straw for me personally," said Audrey Blondin, a 30-year party veteran who helped to put together the resolution.

Lieberman was re-elected to the Senate as an independent after losing the Democratic primary in 2006 to businessman Ned Lamont. While he calls himself an "independent Democrat" in the Senate, he remains a registered Democrat and has said he has no plans to change his party affiliation.

Lieberman was the Democratic nominee for vice president in 2000 and ran for the party's presidential nomination in 2004.

Lieberman and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont have been caucusing with Democrats in Washington, giving the party control of the Senate with what is effectively a 51-49 majority -- even though each party has 49 members. Democrats, in turn, have made Lieberman chairman of the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

Blondin said Lieberman's speech at the Republican National Convention, in which he praised McCain and criticized Democrat Barack Obama, convinced her that state Democrats needed to take a stand. "Our point is not that Joe should in some way be prohibited from supporting McCain or speaking at the National Republican Convention. That's not the issue," Blondin said. "The issue is, he's a Democrat. And Joe, in our opinion, needs to reconsider membership in our party."

Lieberman, speaking earlier Wednesday to a radio station, said that he was surprised by the move to censure him. "Honestly, I thought that was the kind of thing that happened only in the former Soviet Union. I understand that people are unhappy, but, you know, I'm doing something that I really believe," Lieberman told WICH-AM. "I thought in this country you don't get punished for that. So, I hope that in the end, my colleagues will understand and life will go on either way."
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Home Front: Politix
Obama's Hopefund and the candidates it is supporting.
2008-09-03
Looks like these folks are all getting a piece of the pie.

Daniel K Akaka (Hawaii)
Jeff Bingaman (New Mexico)
Sherrod Brown (Ohio)
Robert C Byrd (West Virginia)
Maria Cantwell (Washington)
Thomas R Carper (Delaware)
Hillary Rodham Clinton (New York)
Kent Conrad (North Dakota)
Dianne Feinstein (California)
Edward M Kennedy (Massachusetts)
Amy Klobuchar (Minnesota)
Herb Kohl (Wisconsin)
Ned Lamont (Connecticut)
Claire McCaskill (Missouri)
Ben Nelson (Nebraska)
Bill Nelson (Florida)
Debbie Stabenow (Michigan)
Sheldon Whitehouse (Rhode Island)
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
Lurid Moonbat Fantasy #58: Lieberman will throw political opponents into concentration camps
2008-08-21
Jane Hamsher, Huffasnuffaluffagus Post

. . . I have an elaborate nightmare where Joe Lieberman gets the VP nod, McCain wins, then dies -- and we're looking at a President Lieberman. At which point I and a host of others bloggers who supported Ned Lamont wind up in Guantanamo Bay.
Jane, Jane, not everyone is a fascist like yourself ...
Now I may just be engaging in extraordinary delusion cynicism here. . . . I sure hope this is just my dark thoughts getting the best of me.

Because I do not look good in orange.
I don't think it's going to be Lieberman--but you gotta admit, it would be entertaining seeing the Ned Lamont moonbats have a cow over it if it was.

If you think the ever-classy, well-spoken Ms. Hamster Hamsher is worked up, you should see some of the HuffPo commenters:


I think Joe Lieberman is running for Secretary Of State on the Republican ticket.
I Think Joe Lieberman is supporting John McCain because Israelis want to wipe Palestine off the map? The next place we will be sending our military to fight and die will be Israel.

Oh well, With the recently converted Obama and probably Hillary who said, "Obama will be a great friend to Israel." and now this, McCain saddled with Liberman, it's clear who has all their bases covered in the November election.
Free at last, free at last.
"sigh"

"and we're looking at a President Lieberman. At which point I and a host of others bloggers who supported Ned Lamont wind up in Guantanamo Bay. .."
Understandable paranoia, if you ask me. To date, there seems to be little that Lieberman will not do to attain and maintain power.

Since McCain and Lieberman are BOTH owned by the Lansky-Bronfman organized crime syndicate, there would be a LOT of mob money available to buy the election. You might try Googling McCain + Organized Crime and/or Lieberman + Organized crime. There is no secret to it; it's all out in the open for anyone who wants to investigate. MY question is, "Is it a good idea to turn the NATION over to the Mob? I really believe that they have enough influence already."

Once again, we see casual anti-Semitisim bubble up on a Left-leaning site, and there's no pushback.
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