Friday, December 31, 2021
When did our FBI morph into the KGB?
The FBI’s Criminal Lead Informant in Whitmer ‘Kidnapping’ Caper
Parroting Louis Farrakhan views of Jews and Israel
DECEMBER 30, 2021
A member of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's staff described the nation of Israel as "a racist European ethnostate," according to Fox News.
The outlet reported that Hussain Altamimi, who is a legislative assistant for the Democratic lawmaker, posted the comment on Instagram last week.
"Israel is a racist European ethnostate built on stolen land from it's indigenous population!" Altamimi wrote in an Instagram story, according to a screenshot of the post that Fox News Digital obtained.
Altamimi made the comment while sharing a post from from "letstalkpalestine" — the post he shared from that account reads in part, "Israel is an exclusive ethnostate, established to serve one ethnic group at the expense of another."
Ocasio-Cortez, a progressive lawmaker from New York who has servedin the U.S. House of Representatives since 2019, has accused Israel of being guilty of human rights abuses.
Earlier this year she voted present when the House passed a measure to provide funds for Israel's Iron Dome missile defense system. The lawmaker had initially voted against the measure but then changed her vote to "present."
"Yesterday, the House called to the floor a rushed, $1 billion supplemental military funding bill for Israel’s Iron Dome defense system. I want to be clear with our community that I am opposed to this bill, but ultimately cast a PRESENT vote," Cortez noted back in September."I also believe that, for far too long, the U.S. has handed unconditional aid to the Israeli government while doing nothing to address or raise the persistent human rights abuses against the Palestinian people, and that this imbalance of power must be centered in any honest conversation about Israel and Palestine," Cortez said in the statement.
Illinois cop killed, second injured in hotel shooting...by Black supremecists? The tell is the 'X'
Illinois cop killed, second injured in hotel shooting
A man fatally shot one Illinois cop and critically injured another when the police officers were called to a hotel on a routine noise complaint, officials said.The two officers were called to the hotel over a report of dogs barking in an unattended car in the parking lot. Once there, they went into the hotel to find the car’s owner, Bradley Police Department said in a news release.
“The senseless harm and killing of two more Illinois police officers But when they started a conversation with the apparent owner inside a hotel room, the suspects attacked the officers. Both were shot. They were then taken to the hospital, with the sergeant pronounced dead early Thursday and Bailey still in critical condition as of Thursday.The gunman killed Bradley police Sgt. Marlene Rittmanic, 49, and wounded Officer Tyler Bailey, 27, at the Comfort Inn around 9:41 p.m. on Wednesday, according to police.
A manhunt is on for alleged shooter Darius D. Sullivan, 25, and Xandria Harris, 26, who is a “person of interest” in the shooting, officials said.
“The senseless harm and killing of two more Illinois police officers But when they started a conversation with the apparent owner inside a hotel room, the suspects attacked the officers. Both were shot. They were then taken to the hospital, with the sergeant pronounced dead early Thursday and Bailey still in critical condition as of Thursday.The gunman killed Bradley police Sgt. Marlene Rittmanic, 49, and wounded Officer Tyler Bailey, 27, at the Comfort Inn around 9:41 p.m. on Wednesday, according to police.
A manhunt is on for alleged shooter Darius D. Sullivan, 25, and Xandria Harris, 26, who is a “person of interest” in the shooting, officials said.
Here's why teacher union are more interested in wokeness then the three 'R's'
Reading, writing and ratios.
An error-laden letter from a Virginia teachers union calling for more protections against the coronavirus has gone viral on Twitter.
Startled by a slew of linguistic gaffes, an Arlington parent took a correction pen to the piece and posted the aftermath online.
“Hey @VEA4Kids, are you going to send out more of these grammar worksheets over break?” the poster quipped derisively. “My kids and I had a great time spotting errors! Did we find them all?”
Despite the letter only consisting of five paragraphs, the Twitter teacher spotted roughly 20 blunders and highlighted them in green pen.
Addressed to Arlington Schools Superintendent Dr. Francisco Duran, the union letter highlights the recent spread of the coronavirus and argues for a delayed resumption of classes in January to address the issue.
The document also asserts that continuing with indoor lunch in the midst of the surge creates “super-spreader” events inside schools and that teachers are having to make the “ultimate sacrifice” as Omicron cases multiply.
The online editor completely reworked the letter’s opening sentence.
“On behalf of the members of the Arlington Education Association, this dire expression lends great concerns for Arlington Public Schools return plans for January 3rd, 2022,” the original version read.
In another sentence, the letter uses the word “are” when it should have said “our.”
“The fire departments in are region are exemplifying domino outbreaks as well,” the missive states.
“Apparently ‘learning loss is not limited to students!” one Twitter user wrote in response to the post, which had drawn hundreds of likes and retweets by Thursday afternoon.
Thursday, December 30, 2021
Does the CDC follow an ideology when it comes to personal sovereignty?
Maryland doctor says people are 'going to die' after Biden admin uses faulty data to snub antibody treatments
Dr. Ron Elfenbein called the pause in some antibody treatments the 'height of bureaucratic arrogance'
A doctor in Maryland said he had to cancel potentially life-saving monoclonal antibody infusions for about 250 people over the last week after the federal government stopped distributing treatments made by Regeneron and Eli Lilly because they aren't effective against omicron, even though the delta variant, which the drugs are effective at treating, was still dominant at the time.
The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response halted the allocationof those two antibody treatments last Thursday amid the rise of omicron, which the CDC had said days earlier was responsible for 73.2% of all new cases.
But the CDC backtracked on that alarming estimate this week, revising it down to just 22.5% for the week ending Dec. 18, more than a 50-point drop.
The delta variant, which Regeneron and Eli Lilly's treatments are effective against, was actually responsible for 77% of all new cases when the federal government stopped distributing those antibody drugs.
Now, one doctor says the government's massive miscalculation cost lives.
"I am as angry as I possibly can be about this," Dr. Ron Elfenbein, the medical director and CEO of FirstCall Medical Center in Gambrills, Maryland, told Fox News Digital on Wednesday.
"The fact that these people are so adamant that they're right when they're using faulty data and they're using faulty logic and frankly statistical modeling that has never been correct, ever, throughout this entire pandemic, to look at this, is just beyond the pale…. People are definitely going to die because of this or need hospitalization because [health officials] misread the statistics."
The FDA has authorized three different monoclonal antibody treatments, which are lab-made substitutes for antibodies that can help fight off viruses.
The two treatments made by Regeneron and Eli Lilly are ineffective against omicron, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, but a third treatment created by British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline has shown promise at beating back the new variant. When the federal government stopped the allocation of Regeneron and Eli Lilly's drugs last week, the Maryland Department of Health sent a letter to doctors throughout the state that said "sites… have been directed to stop administering these therapeutics."
"Maryland is experiencing a sharp rise in COVID-19 Omicron variant cases. It is now the most dominant variant in the state," Maryland's top health officials wrote to doctors in a Dec. 23 letter, which was obtained by Fox News Digital. Now that the CDC has significantly lowered its estimate for how prevalent omicron was at the time, Dr. Elfenbein said the pause in treatments was clearly unnecessary and is "absolutely hurting people."
"I don't know how many people throughout the country are dead, dying, in the hospital, or about to be hospitalized because of the mistakes that they just made," Dr. Elfenbein, who runs two monoclonal antibody clinics, said on Wednesday.
"It's just the height of bureaucratic arrogance, and it's just, it's horrible. I had to turn friends away, family, people call me, ‘Oh, my uncle has cancer. Can he get an infusion?’ I'm like, 'I cannot give you an infusion because I will lose my medical license.'"The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response said in an update on Wednesday afternoon that they will still pause allocations of Regeneron and Eli Lilly's drugs for states that have greater than 80% prevalence of omicron, but will restart allocations for states below that 80% threshold. If treatment sites are able to distinguish between variants using testing, then they can still use Regeneron and Eli Lilly's drugs, even in states that are above 80% omicron prevalence, the federal government added.
Omicron is responsible for 57.7% of new cases in Maryland's region, which includes Delaware, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C., Virginia, and West Virginia, according to the latest CDC estimate.
Nationwide, omicron was responsible for 58.6% of all new cases in the week that ended Dec. 25, narrowly edging out the delta variant. GlaxoSmithKline's antibody treatment, sotrovimab, is effective against COVID-19, but states nationwide are experiencing shortages of the lifesaving drug.
"Physicians are strongly encouraged to prioritize the use of sotrovimab for individuals who are 65 years old and older and individuals who are moderately to severely immunocompromised," the Maryland Department of Health told doctors last week.
There's a human price for liberal guilt
Monday, Dec. 27, 2021 | 7:05 p.m.
Metro Police has arrested a man suspected of shooting a restaurant worker in Chinatown last week.
Rashawn Gaston-Anderson, 23, was taken into custody Monday without incident near East Desert Inn Road and South Maryland Parkway.
A citizen who recognized Gaston-Anderson alerted police to his whereabouts.
Gaston-Anderson is believed to have entered through the back door of the ShangHai Eats restaurant in the 4200 block of Spring Mountain Road just before 3 a.m. Dec. 20, police said. He fired multiple rounds at an employee.
The victim, whom police have not identified, was transported to University Medical Center and was in stable condition as of Thursday, police said.
Anyone with information regarding the case is asked to call investigators at 702-828-2639; or contact Crime Stoppers at 702-385-5555, or go online at www.crimestoppersofnv.com.
In his decision, Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Joe Bonaventure cited pending criminal cases against Rashawn Gaston-Anderson, 23, when police say he shot waiter Chengyan Wang at ShangHai Taste, 4266 W. Spring Mountain Road, on Dec. 20 during an apparent botched robbery.
In court, Bonaventure said Gaston-Anderson was arrested in early November on charges of pandering and carrying a concealed weapon.
“I did see fit to have an order he be released with conditions, including an order to remain out of the resort corridor,” he said.
Within 48 hours, Bonaventure said Gaston-Anderson was arrested again on burglary and grand larceny charges. Bonaventure said he initially ordered Gaston-Anderson detained in that case, but that a $3,000 cash bail was set at a later date in a different courtroom.
“He then posted a cash bail amount and was out of custody on those two cases,” Bonaventure said. “He has now picked up a third felony case. … He is ordered detained without bail.”
Court records indicate Gaston-Anderson, described by police as a transient, previously pleaded guilty to attempted grand larceny in 2018 and was sentenced to 18 months of probation.
Bad news for the Democrat base....
DECEMBER 29, 2021
While Uncle Sam demands a portion of law-abiding Americans' hard-earned money in taxes each year, even criminals are supposed to report their earnings to the U.S. government, according to the Internal Revenue Service.
The government agency literally spells it out, saying that drug dealers must report their ill-gotten gains and thieves must report the value of purloined items, unless those items are returned during the same year they were taken.
"If you steal property, you must report its fair market value in your income in the year you steal it unless you return it to its rightful owner in the same year," according to the government agency.
Wednesday, December 29, 2021
Since most drive by shootings are black on black how does it become racist.
Washington state lawmakers introduce bill that would reduce penalties for drive-by shootings
Law would removed drive-by shootings as basis for enhanced murder charges
Washington state lawmakers introduced a bill this month that would reduce penalties for drive-by shootings with the aim of "promoting racial equity."
The bill, introduced by Democratic Representatives Tarra Simmons and David Hackney ahead of the state's 2022 legislative session, would eliminate drive-by shootings as the basis for elevating a first-degree murder charge to aggravated murder in the first degree, which carries a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment.
Drive-by shootings were added to the list of aggravating factors for murder charges in 1995. Other aggravating factors include the murder of law enforcement officers, murders committed by inmates while they are behind bars, and murder-for-hire schemes.
Note that Ms. Simmons is a convicted felon. She served 30 months for theft and drug charges yet she still got the state bar to legitimate her. Democrats love their pet criminals.