Joe Biden is now POTUS

FBI memo warns law enforcement across U.S. of possible armed protests at 50 state Capitols
The FBI also says an armed group has threatened to travel to Washington and stage an uprising if Congress removes Trump from office.
Members of the National Guard walk through the rotunda of the Capitol on Jan. 11, 2021.Stefani Reynolds / Getty Images


Jan. 11, 2021, 2:07 PM EST
By Tom Winter and Andrew Blankstein
The FBI has sent a memo to law enforcement agencies across the country warning of possible armed protests at all 50 state Capitols starting Jan. 16, and also says an armed group has threatened to travel to Washington, D.C., the same day and stage an uprising if Congress removes President Donald Trump from office, according to a senior law enforcement official.
The memo includes information provided by the ATF, DEA, Defense Department, Park Police, and the U.S. Marshals, among other agencies, according to the official. Some of the information came from social media, some from open source, and some from other sources of information.

The memo was first reported by ABC News.
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The senior law enforcement official says the FBI’s National Crisis Coordination Center distributed the update to law enforcement agencies as a summary of threat information they’ve received following last Wednesday’s deadly mob attack on the Capitol.
While the memo discusses possible threats discussed by online actors for Jan. 16 through the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden on Jan. 20, it doesn’t mean that law enforcement agencies expect violent mass protests or confrontations in every state.
For instance, a spokesperson for the FBI in Boston says, “At this point in time, the FBI Boston Division is not in possession of any intelligence indicating any planned, armed protests at the four state capitals in our area of responsibility. (ME, MA, NH, and RI) from January 17-20, 2021.”


Capitol riot ‘more sinister and dangerous’ as time goes on
JAN. 11, 202102:32

The spokesperson added, “As always, we are in constant communication with our law enforcement partners and will share any actionable intelligence.”
According to the memo, the armed group that has discussed traveling to Washington on Jan. 16 said there would be a huge uprising if Congress tries to remove Trump via the 25th Amendment. Law enforcement officials point out that Congress can’t remove a president via the 25th Amendment.
None of them is gonna do shit. They are all talk. They have seen their friends
get handcuffed and put in jail. Those were likely the most radical, leading the
weaker and less resolute ones out there mouthing dissatisfaction. At this time,
they have seen their little revolution peter out, and the so-called leader cede
and affect contrition. All the people who incited them have receded and more
or gone into hibernation.
What would they be fighting for?
 

:lol::lol::lol::lol:
The same people who tell you they rather live in Russia telling you your actions are going to harm “democracy”.

At this point I don’t know why the press insists on gathering a quote from them. Anyone voting Republican is an American Separatist.
 

:lol::lol::lol::lol:

Nothing to see here

This was written by Kelly Jane Torrance ... She is on the NY Post's editorial board

Here is some Context

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US elections
https://twitter.com/i/events/1348712917663846400?s=20
18 minutes ago
NY State Bar Association looks to remove Rudy Giuliani as a member
The New York State Bar Association announced on Monday that it would seek to remove President Trump's personal attorney Rudy Giuliani as a member based on a bylaw that prohibits members from encouraging the overthrow of the US government. The NYSBA is a voluntary organization and removal would not affect Giuliani's ability to practice law. The association said in a statement that it has received "hundreds of complaints" about Giuliani's efforts to challenge the 2020 presidential election results. Giuliani will have a chance to defend and explain his actions prior to removal.


The New York Times
@nytimes
3h
The New York State Bar Association is investigating Rudy Giuliani for his role in the riot at the U.S. Capitol last week.
The bar association has no power to strip him of his law license, but he could be removed from the group.


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80d34df86c393fa2a79d6b33cbaf7c9e.png


 
:lol: this motherfucker might literally rot in jail.



It’s like every fucking headline and tweet are trying to out-do each other in absurdity. It’s a festival of ignorance and a cornucopia of retarded bullshit out here. I’ve smh’d so goddamn much over the last 4 years that I may have expanded the range of motion on my neck or some shit :smh:
 
Expect a bankruptcy filing within this year:
____________________________________________

Donald Trump's money faucet is getting turned off
By Chris Isidore, CNN Business 3 hrs ago

Donald Trump's money faucet is getting turned off



A growing number of businesses suddenly want very little to do with Donald Trump after he incited a mob to attack the Capitol. That could make it more difficult for the Trump Organization to do business after he leaves office.
© Erin Scott/Bloomberg/Getty Images U.S. President Donald Trump walks on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Jan. 5, 2021. Trump and President-elect Joe Biden each made last-minute campaign appearances in Georgia for candidates in two runoff elections that will decide whether Republicans retain control of the U.S. Senate. Photographer: Erin Scott/Bloomberg via Getty Images
"I think it's a huge problem for him," said Michael D'Antonio, a CNN Contributor and a Trump biographer. "He created toxicity for an important part of his market. I don't know if some will ever come back. Most brands try to avoid controversy. I feel like he's forced the hands of the companies that decided to disengage."

Since last week's siege of the US Capitol by Trump supporters, a growing list of businesses have cut ties with him, citing violations of their rules against promoting violence -- or concerns about associating their brands with Trump.
Twitter and Facebook banned Trump indefinitely, taking away his biggest megaphones. Stripe is no longer processing credit card payments for his campaign, Shopify stopped operating online stores for the Trump Organization and the campaign and the PGA announced it is pulling a major golf tournament from one of his properties.
It's unclear which, if any, banks will want to loan money to the Trump Organization. Deutsche Bank had loaned the company more than $300 million over the past decade. But New York state criminal investigators looking into Trump's business practices have subpoenaed the bank about its lending relationship with the Trump Organization. Late last month the two private bankers at Deutsche who worked most closely with Trump resigned their positions.

Properties at risk
Some of the Trump properties could be particularly hard hit by last week's events, top among them the Trump hotel in the former post office building in Washington, DC. During the last four years businesses and foreign governments that wanted to curry favor with the Trump administration booked rooms or other events at the hotel.
"It could be that the opposite will be true now," said D'Antonio. "Anyone going to DC on business would be crazy to stay at the Trump hotel unless all their business is with the Republican National Committee."
Trump's contract to operate the hotel in the government-owned property could even come under attack. Critics have argued it was improper for him to be operating it during his administration. Last week's events could increase the calls on the government to end its contract with the Trump Organization.
"As we view it, for four years he violated the terms of that agreement by having a federal office holder benefit from that contract. There should be consequences of that," said Noah Bookbinder, executive director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), a watchdog group that has been a frequent critic of Trump and his businesses.

Bookbinder said that Trump was already likely to lose some business at his hotels, including his Washington property, when he is no longer president. But the actions of last week only accelerated companies deciding to no longer do business with Trump, Bookbinder said.
"I think unquestionably he would have held on to more of it without last week's events," he said. "If he had emerged from this as the power center for the Republican party and the likely candidate in 2024, there would have been a lot of incentive for the RNC and others to keep holding events at his hotels."
Bookbinder said the violence at the Capitol could also give businesses that have contracts with the Trump Organization a way to get out of those commitments.
"It's standard for a lot of contracts to have outs if there is illegal or immoral conduct," he said. "My guess is that a lot of companies will be eager to take advantage of those kinds of legal openings."
Other properties with the Trump name on them could be at risk going forward. Many of those agreements are marketing deals, in which he licenses the use of his name -- and brings in big bucks for doing so.
"Those branding deals were worth millions to him. Not having them would be significant," D'Antonio said.
But it's not clear how long lasting the backlash against Trump from last week's riot will last.
"There are many times in recent years that it seemed the president crossed a line and yet things quickly went back to normal," said Bookbinder. "I suspect that won't be the case here."

New opportunities
Trump does leave office with tens of millions of fervent fans, D'Antonio said, opening up the possibility for new business ventures and new sources of revenue, even if he's closed the door on other business relationships.
There was a lot of speculation before last Wednesday that Trump would start his own media company upon leaving office. Despite the blowback from the Capitol attack, that's still a possibility D'Antonio said.
Conservative networks OANN and Newsmax have picked up viewers since the election from Trump fans who felt that Fox News was not being supportive enough of the president. If he were to have a show on either network it would instantly become their best rated program, D'Antonio said.
"How long would broadcasters or others be able to resist the money?" he said.
And there is a chance he could start a streaming network of his own, even if he doesn't go on a cable system that might be resistant to air a Trump TV network. If he attracted 7 million subscribers, or less than 10% of his vote total, and they paid $5.99 a month, that would be more than $500 million in annual subscriber revenue, D'Antonio said.
So it's possible that even if Trump severely damaged his brand last week, his overall business outlook is in better shape today than it was before he started his campaign for president in 2015, just because of the loyalty he's built up with a large part of the country over the last five years.
"I don't know that the demographic of his absolute die hard base is a good fit for his high end businesses," D'Antonio said. "They can't pay hundreds of dollars a night to stay at some of his properties or belong to his country clubs. But the whole campaign was started as a branding exercise. I think in terms of mass market, he's better off."
 
Biden wants only $10K in student loan cancellation.
I’m fine with this; I agree with more stimulus but folks took out too much money to get degrees that don’t pay em shit, or where just reckless as fuck with it; decided they just HAD to go out of state vs in-state; $10k is reasonable as hell to knock down the debt load.
 
It’s like every fucking headline and tweet are trying to out-do each other in absurdity. It’s a festival of ignorance and a cornucopia of retarded bullshit out here. I’ve smh’d so goddamn much over the last 4 years that I may have expanded the range of motion on my neck or some shit :smh:
Ahhh...poor baby...
 
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