Isn't it strange how some actors who were never really stars don't grasp that. They appeared in movies but they never sold tickets. The movie itself might have sold a ticket because it was interesting or some other actor might have sold it. Stella Stevens, for example, was famous and appeared in some movies that were big (THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE) but she was never a star. Marilyn Monroe was a star, she sold tickets. People wanted to go see a movie that she made. Which brings us to . . .
Social
media has been having a field day with “Oppenheimer” and “Barbie” ever
since it was revealed that Universal and Warner Bros. would be opening
the two tentpoles on the same day: July 21. Adding drama to the rivalry
is the fact that Nolan left Warner Bros. after a two-decade partnership
and made “Oppenheimer” at Universal, only for Warner Bros. to then set
its Greta Gerwig-directed fantasy-comedy for release on the same day as
Nolan’s atomic bomb drama.
“This is the first I’m hearing about it, actually. I haven’t paid any attention to that,” Matt Damon recently told Vanity Fair after
learning about the social media debates over which film fans will see
first on opening night. “People are allowed to go see two movies in a
weekend. ‘Oppenheimer’ is one of them!”
We
can also skip both which is what I'll probably do. And OPPENHEIMER
will probably do better if Matt doesn't promote it. People don't like
him. He's not a movie star. We tolerated him in the 90s and early
00s. Then he had his hissy fit that people thought he was gay. As
though he hadn't spent those years making jokes about it himself -- in a
GQ cover story, in televised interviews and most infamously on WILL
& GRACE. It was the only interesting thing about the overly short
man.
Since he's had his
hissy fit over people thinking he's gay and talked about how his
daughter called him out for mocking gay people, he's just seemed
hideous.
And no one wants
to see short and fat Matt in movies. His day has passed. He needs to
take a hint and see if he can star in a JAG reboot on TV.
Going out with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Tuesday, May 23, 2023. Joe Biden again claims Beau Biden died in Iraq,
Marianne Williamson's campaign continues to self-implode, an American is
convicted of torture (sadly, it's not Bully Boy Bush who got
convicted), and much more.
US President Joe Biden has once again come under fire for claiming that
his late son Beau "lost his life in Iraq" -- a statement that alludes to
the president's long-held view that poisonous burn pits were to blame
for the younger Biden's brain cancer death at the age of 46. After
making similar remarks at least twice earlier in the year, the president
made his most recent ones to US troops stationed in Japan during his
visit to the nation.
Yes, we're back to that again.
Joe Biden recently told Marines stationed in Japan that his son Beau
died in the Iraq war—an incorrect statement that the president has
puzzlingly made several times in the past. “My son was a major in the
U.S. Army. We lost him in Iraq,” Biden told the troops in Iwakuni on
Thursday, according to a video obtained by the New York Post.
Despite his son actually dying of brain cancer at the Walter Reed
military hospital in Maryland, Biden has made the same claim about
Beau’s death at least twice before. Last October, Biden told an audience
in Colorado that Beau “lost his life in Iraq.” Just weeks later, he
said “I’m thinking about Iraq because that’s where my son died,” during a
speech in Florida. In reality, Beau died in 2015 after battling stage
four glioblastoma—a diagnosis that the president has previously
attributed to the “burn pits” in Iraq, which the military used to
destroy trash while Beau was deployed from 2008 to 2009.
Right-wing media outlets have attempted to use Mr Biden’s comments on
Beau’s death as a sign that the 80-year-old Democrat has memory issues,
ahead of the 2024 presidential election.
[. . .]
In 2016, then the vice president, Mr Biden said his son’s cancer
could have been caused by the toxic burn pits he was exposed to during
his service in the Middle East.
The New York Times reported that Mr Biden said he was “stunned” when he read a chapter concerning the death of his son in the book The Burn Pits: The Poisoning of America’s Soldiers by Joseph Hickman.
First
off, it's not a sign of 'cognitive decline.' Or, if it is, it was
evident before he was elected. I'm not in the mood to spoonfeed lousy
reporters who can't do their job. But Joe made those remarks on the
campaign trail. We called it out in real time. And a sign of just how
sorry Gustaf is,
Second, Gustaf and other
lazies, there's no reason in the world to refer to some stupid NEW YORK
TIMES article. THE TIMES has 'reporting issues' to put it kindly. If
you want to go to Joe discussing burnpits and Beau, you go to that.
Which is right here, 'journalists.'
Biden also said that reading “The Burn Pits: The Poisoning of
America’s Soldiers,” a book on the topic by Joseph Hickman, which
included a chapter on his son Beau, opened his eyes to the possibility
of a link to his son’s cancer.
“There’s a whole chapter on my son Beau in there, and that stunned
me. I didn’t know that,” Biden said. He added, the author “went back and
looked at Beau’s tenure as a civilian with the U.S. attorney’s office
[in Kosovo] and then his year in Iraq. And he was co-located in both
times near these burn pits.”
Joe's been
making these statements forever. If you're now appalled by it, my big
question would be: Where were you when it started?
Because we've called it out all along, long before he became president.
Beau did not die in Iraq. He came back to the US and died six years later.
People
shouldn't try to justify it or enable him on this. He needs to be held
accountable. But, again, this didn't happen this year or last year or
in 2021 for the first time. It may be a sign of something, but it's not
a new cognitive decline because, again, he was making the statements
that Beau died in Iraq while on the campaign trail.
Since
we're discussing presidential campaigns, let me note how I love the
liars. Oh those Marianne Williamson freaks. They lie and then they lie
again. We told you, before POLITICO ever published the story about
Marianne's 'interacting difficulties,' that she was a nightmare to work
with and that this went back decades. Then POLITICO does their story
about how Marianne terrorized campaign staff during her failed 2020 run
fo the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. And The Merry
Mariannes rushed to tell you it was lies, all lies. POLITICO did
another report about how her current campaign is in shambles and The
Merry Mariannes are back insisting it's a lie.
It's not a lie.
The
departure came about when Marianne ranted and raved over how her
polling was stagnant and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had passed her in the
polling from the moment he announced his candidacy. That was the fault,
she insisted, of her campaign.
Because 'positive thinking' never allows Marianne to own up to her own failures.
As
this very public battle took place -- with four other players present
-- it was offered to Marianne that she was ignoring key issues and maybe
addressing them would bring her more support. She sneered at the
issues (which including that she needed to call out the war on the
LGBTQ+ community) and said she was a "big thinking" candidate and these
little issues were "beneath" her.
The campaign's not going off the rails, it is off the rails.
This
may surprise but, despite her well known vanity, Marianne remains
incapable of self-examination. Oh sure, she's always been her own
favorite topic. But she can't admit any wrong doing and her own
'introspection' plays out like gushing press releases.
She's killing her own campaign.
More say they will be leaving soon.
The
Merry Mariannes throw hissy fits online and have been doing that since
day one. Remember Krystal Ball screeching and screaming that everybody
get on board with Marianne?
They're idiots. Marianne is not happening and won't ever happen unless the candidate learns to listen.
It'll
never happen because the professional 'speaker' doesn't believe
listening is part of an exchange since she never got paid to listen.
The
Merry Mariannes can lie and spin and even deceive themselves but,
currently, the only one who appears to be a viable candidate to rival
Joe is Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
A Stroudsburg man has been convicted in federal court of torturing an Estonian citizen in 2015 in Iraq.
The U.S. Department of Justice says it was in connection with running an illegal weapons manufacturing plant in Kurdistan.
Ross Roggio, 54, was convicted of torturing an employee who raised concerns about what they were doing.
On the matter, the US Justice Dept issued the following:
Man Convicted of Torture and Exporting Weapons Parts and Related Services to Iraq
A
federal jury convicted a Pennsylvania man on May 19 for numerous
crimes, including the torture of an Estonian citizen in 2015 in the
Kurdistan region of Iraq, in connection with the operation of an illegal
weapons manufacturing plant in Kurdistan.
According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Ross
Roggio, 54, of Stroudsburg, arranged for Kurdish soldiers to abduct and
detain the victim at a Kurdish military compound where Roggio suffocated
the victim with a belt, threatened to cut off one of his fingers, and
directed Kurdish soldiers to repeatedly beat, tase, choke, and otherwise
physically and mentally abuse the victim over a 39-day period. The
victim was employed at a weapons factory that Roggio was developing in
the Kurdistan region of Iraq that was intended to manufacture M4
automatic rifles and Glock 9mm pistols.
In connection with the weapons factory project, which included Roggio
providing training to foreign persons in the operation, assembly, and
manufacturing of the M4 automatic rifle, Roggio also illegally exported
firearm parts that were controlled for export by the Departments of
State and Commerce.
“Roggio brutally tortured another human being to prevent interference
with his illegal activities,” said Assistant Attorney General Kenneth
A. Polite, Jr. of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “Thanks to
the courage of the victim and other witnesses, the hard work of U.S.
law enforcement, and the assistance of Estonian authorities, he will now
be held accountable for his cruelty.”
“Today’s guilty verdict demonstrates that Roggio’s brutal acts of
directing and participating in the torture of an employee over the
course of 39 days by Kurdish soldiers could not avoid justice,” said
U.S. Attorney Gerard M. Karam for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
“We thank all the prosecutors and law enforcement agents who worked
tirelessly to address these acts that occurred in Iraq.”
“Today’s milestone conviction is the result of the extraordinary
courage of the victim, who came forward after the defendant inflicted
unspeakable pain on him for more than a month,” said Assistant Director
Luis Quesada of the FBI’s Criminal Investigative Division. “Torture is
among the most heinous crimes the FBI investigates, and together with
our partners at the Human Rights Violators and War Crimes Center, we
will relentlessly pursue justice.”
“U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is firmly dedicated to
pursuing those who commit human rights violations, like Roggio, to
ensure perpetrators face justice for their atrocities,” said Deputy
Director and Senior Official Performing the Duties of the Director Tae
D. Johnson of ICE. “Our investigators will continue to work tirelessly
with government partners so these horrendous acts do not go without
consequence.”
“The illegal export of firearms parts and tools from the United
States often goes hand in hand with other criminal activities, such as
the charge of torture on which the jury voted to convict the defendant,”
said Special Agent in Charge Jonathan Carson of the Department of
Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), Office of Export
Enforcement, New York Field Office. “I commend our law enforcement
colleagues for their dedication to bringing justice in this case.”
Roggio was convicted of torture, conspiracy to commit torture,
conspiring to commit an offense against the United States, exporting
weapons parts and services to Iraq without the approval of the
Department of State, exporting weapons tools to Iraq without the
approval of the Department of Commerce, smuggling goods, wire fraud, and
money laundering. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Aug. 23 and faces a
maximum sentence of life in prison. A federal district court judge will
determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines
and other statutory factors.
Roggio is the second defendant to be convicted of torture since the federal torture statute went into effect in 1994.
The FBI and HSI investigated the torture and were joined in
investigating the export control violations related to the firearms
manufacturing equipment by the Department of Commerce’s BIS Office of
Export Enforcement.
Trial Attorney Patrick Jasperse of the Criminal Division’s Human
Rights and Special Prosecutions Section, Trial Attorney Scott A. Claffee
of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export
Control Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Todd K. Hinkley for the
Middle District of Pennsylvania are prosecuting the case. The Estonian
Internal Security Service, the Justice Department’s Office of
International Affairs, and the Pennsylvania State Police also provided
valuable assistance.
Members of the public who have information about human rights
violators in the United States are urged to contact U.S. law enforcement
through the FBI tip line at 1-800-CALL-FBI or the HSI tip line at
1-866-DHS-2-ICE, or complete the FBI online tip form or the ICE online tip form.
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