Sam
66 posts


@JOKAQARMY1 This is good these foriegn businesses are illegal, anyone noticed that the FBA barber shop was still open.
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@parti_king Meanwhile, this guy got away with actually murdering an innocent Ukrainian girl.

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Nick Shirley just revealed the terrifying reality he witnessed on his trip to Cuba to Stephen A. Smith.
He described a deeply depressed and suppressed population living without electricity or freedom of speech after 60 years of communism.
SHIRLEY: “It was a super sad trip to be honest. Like when you think about Latinos, I’ve always thought of them as very happy and uplifting."
“In Cuba, a lot of these people were very depressed and suppressed from their government. They don’t have access to running electricity. They have blackouts every night. They’ve been suppressed for over 60 years. There’s no freedom of speech.”
“You mention the word communism and you ask for your opinion, the person shuts down because they know if they speak out against the current regime, they’ll be imprisoned.”
“Eventually I was followed by Cuban intelligence. They had spies at the hotel. One thing people don’t understand about communism is it turns the entire country against one another.”
America must never become a communist nation.
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@UziCryptoo He was able to accomplish most of this because he's white.
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This guy faked being a pilot, doctor, and lawyer before he turned 21 and made millions before the FBI hired him.
Frank Abagnale grew up broke and angry after watching his parents marriage fall apart
At 16 he ran away from home with nothing but charm and a dangerous amount of confidence
He figured out early that people don’t question a uniform
So he called Pan Am, told them he was a pilot who lost his badge, and they just… mailed him one
For two years he flew free around the world, sitting in cockpits, getting hotel rooms paid for, eating for free.
He never actually flew a plane once
Then he got bored and became a doctor in Georgia
Then a lawyer in Louisiana
Then a professor
Every single role based on nothing but eye contact and a straight face
He cashed fake checks in 26 countries for years before anyone connected the dots
When they finally caught him he was 21 years old and facing prison time across multiple continents
But here’s the part nobody talks about
He wasn’t just a criminal, He was the most naturally gifted social engineer anyone had ever seen.
The FBI knew it too
So instead of burying him they handed him a job
He spent the next 35 years teaching the government every trick he used against the
The kid who ran away at 16 with nothing ended up in a boardroom consulting for the FBI
Trauma, survival instincts, and zero options will make a person find ways.
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@AngryPatriotX The White supremacist has Penis Envy of the Black man.
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This one is crazy. If ever there was a case that you could point to as police brutality, this one is it.
It’s early morning in Paulding County, Georgia. 29-year-old Tyler Canaris is doing what millions of us do every day—he’s waiting for his ride to work.
Tyler is a landscaper, minding his own business, when Deputy Michael McMaster pulls up.
In the blink of an eye Tyler Canaris was body-slammed so hard by Paulding County Deputy Michael McMaster that his skull fractured. Tyler was an innocent man waiting for his ride to work. He didn't have a weapon. He wasn't committing a crime.
After the slam you can hear Tyler is in pain. Instead of offering help, McMaster mocked him and told him to shut up and act like a man.
One of the most disturbing parts of this case is how long it took for consequences to arrive. For nearly a year, the Paulding County Sheriff’s Office did nothing. McMaster remained on the force, and Tyler was the one facing criminal charges for "obstruction."
It wasn't until the GBI stepped in—that McMaster was finally fired. But even then, the department claimed he was fired for "policy violations" unrelated to the GBI’s use-of-force investigation.
No Charges to this day, Michael McMaster has not been criminally charged for the injuries he inflicted on Tyler. Despite a GBI investigation, no indictment has been handed down. While Tyler lives with metal plates in his body and $75,000 in debt, the man who put him there remains a free man.
Tyler filed a federal civil rights lawsuit (Section 1983) seeking accountability. However, the path to justice hit a major wall:
Parts of the case faced significant hurdles in District Court, as his case was dismissed by the district court with prejudice.
In early 2026, the case moved to the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Tyler’s legal team is fighting to overturn rulings that have stalled his pursuit of damages. As of right now, the court is still processing briefs, meaning Tyler is years away from a potential settlement or trial.
What is your take on this case, I look forward to reading your comments below.
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