Dean Janes

8.7K posts

Dean Janes

Dean Janes

@TheDeanJanes

I'm just a dude, playing a dude being a dude.

Katılım Mayıs 2023
1.2K Takip Edilen997 Takipçiler
Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@JonathanTurley On principle, I don't like this. But if you've ever flown on this airline, it's hard to feel bad about it
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Jonathan Turley
Jonathan Turley@JonathanTurley·
Spirit customers today may have a difficult time seeing how the blocking of a merger to save the airline was what Elizabeth Warren called "a Biden win for flyers!" Rather than "fewer flights and higher fares" cited by Warren at the time, they now have no flights and no jobs...
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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@jasoncloninger @shipwreckedcrew Not to mention that having a private email server bypasses her duty to archive her communications as secretary of state. Also violates FOIA.
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jasoncloninger
jasoncloninger@jasoncloninger·
Not one American working in the government sector with a security clearance agreed with what he said. Every single one of us KNEW that we would have been arrested IMMEDIATELY if we had done what HRC did. It became apparent at that time that (at the very least) that FBI leadership was compromised. It didn’t matter IF Obama had emailed her on that server or not, the REALIZED or POTENTIAL harms and crimes that were done needed to be exposed and flushed out to the American people and to Congress, so that laws could be drafted and Americans would have confidence in the Executive & Legislative branches pursuit of justice.
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Shipwreckedcrew
Shipwreckedcrew@shipwreckedcrew·
The HRC announcement was the final nail in the coffin for just about every FBI Agent I've ever spoken about him with. The consistent sentiment was "If any FBI agent did what HRC did, we'd be prosecuted." He branded himself with those words because the FBI Special Agent work force knows what careless handling of classified information is and how it is dealt with.
Heart | Wit | Drive@BeSarahConnor

@shipwreckedcrew @TheJohnNantz I was one of those agents. I saw through him from Day 1. He was smug, arrogant and an empty suit. I’ll never forget the day he stood in front of the camera and said, “No reasonable prosecutor would bring such as case…” (Clinton investigation). That was the beginning of the end.

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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@g_garison @wesyang @KurtSchlichter Your response makes no sense. Historically shaming for inappropriate dress is from our matriarch. I assume you believe the inverse is acceptable that people can walk around naked in any instance or social gathering.
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Wesley Yang
Wesley Yang@wesyang·
This is a real problem with "wear whatever you like." There should be a clear understanding that this violates social norms and legitimate boundaries in ways that casts those who indulge it in serious disrepute.
Anna Maria Junus@JunusAnna

According to those of you who say that males can be women - then these people are little girls. They're dressed as little girls. They call themselves little girls. They like little girl things. Then they should be allowed to go to little girl events and change with little girls.

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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@HansMahncke What about a prosecution internationally? COVID killed millions around the world
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Hans Mahncke
Hans Mahncke@HansMahncke·
Everyone should reread Fauci’s last minute pardon. The most conspicuous detail has always been the date, 2014, which happens to coincide with Fauci approved funding routed through Daszak for gain-of-function experiments on coronaviruses at the Wuhan lab. That work was then paused after an NIH official flagged it as prohibited gain-of-function, and quickly restarted under mysterious circumstances, as acknowledged by Daszak in thanking NIH for restoring the funding. Fauci then went on to lie to Congress about it. These are established facts, so the only real question is whether Fauci should be charged. Normally, there is a strong argument against it given the pardon, however unconscionable it may be, since it does cover the conduct in question. That said, there is still the unresolved autopen issue, and given that the statute of limitations expires on May 11, there is a serious argument that charges should be filed to preserve the case on the record.
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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@ConceptualJames Of course it's silly as it doesn't state why pushing any button would end or save lives. Childish propaganda
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Shipwreckedcrew
Shipwreckedcrew@shipwreckedcrew·
Practitioners and Laymen: Q. Why do you think the rate of guilty pleas is so high in Federal Court? A. Because cases get to trial. A looming trial date tends to galvanize a defendant's thinking. Federal cases get to trial because they are nearly impossible to derail pretrial with motions that challenge the evidence. That's because of the grand jury system. Once the grand jury indicts, the system's default is "A Jury trial is necessary to determine not guilty/guilty beyond a reasonable doubt." There almost zero room in the process for judicial intervention that says "The Grand Jury should not have done that." There is no "mediation" or referral to arbitrators, or discovery to further develop the evidence, or summary judgment motions to end the case prior to trial. There is an indictment, a plea, or a trial. That's it.
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Cynical Publius
Cynical Publius@CynicalPublius·
I've discovered an excellent, no-cost, seven-step weight loss plan: 1. Have very invasive knee surgery that puts you on crutches for 4-6 weeks where you are not allowed to put any weight on one leg. 2. Go lay down in your bed with an ice machine on your knee. 3. Bring no food in the bedroom with you. 4. Get hungry. 5. Decide it's too much trouble to crutch to the kitchen to get something to eat. 6. Finally when you get really hungry go get something to eat, except not too much because eating over the sink on crutches kinda sucks. 7. Profit.
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NizNellie3
NizNellie3@NizNellie3·
🚨 Wanna puke? Jennifer Mnookin is the president of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her salary is $892,000 with a bonus of $150,000 for no particular reason. She pinky-swore to the Education Secretary, Linda McMahon, that she'd hire ONE, just one, conservative professor in order to continue receiving $816 MILLION in federal funding. She never hired one. $816 MILLION was still shoved into the sweaty hands of her campus. In July, she'll begin her new job as the President of Columbia University, with a salary of $3 million and perks that would make you throw up. American taxpayers are being fleeced for this garbage.
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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@ChrisMartzWX I agree we need to either eliminate or reform social security. I definitely don't agree that the money I was forced to pay since I was 13, (had a real job that took out taxes), should simply vanish.
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Chris Martz
Chris Martz@ChrisMartzWX·
Let me grab some crayons. 🖍️ I’ll explain this to you like you’re five. The money you paid into Social Security has already been SPENT. 💸 Puff the magic dragon, it is gone. Your money is not kept in a lockbox just for you to earn interest and pay ya back when you become age-eligible to receive the benefits. 🚫 🗃️ It’s not a retirement fund. The money you get in return comes out of the paychecks of currently working people vis payroll taxes. Beneficiaries will often (albeit not always) get more in return than they paid in. And because the ratio of workers to retirees has shrunk from 16:1 in 1960 to 2:1 today, there aren’t enough workers pitching in to keep the pool of funds filled. So, the government has to borrow money they don’t have to make up the difference. The Treasury’s BEP then prints money to try compensating for the debt, which then causes inflation. 🖨️ 💵 = 📉 💵 value = 📈 💰 costs You have bought into FDR’s scam hook, line, and sinker. All the more reason it should have been privatized a long time ago.
John Smith@JohnSmith410846

@ChrisMartzWX How did my paying 12.4% to SS my whole career contribute to the deficit math genius 😀?

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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@HansMahncke Lol, you don't need to be a rocket scientist brain surgeon to figure out COVID's origin. Common sense is dead, at least at the NYT.
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Hans Mahncke
Hans Mahncke@HansMahncke·
Reading the New York Times on any issue is a useful guide to where the real sensitivities lie, essentially what they treat as the core threat. Fauci’s top adviser was caught dead to rights destroying emails and other evidence, something honest people have been writing about for the past four or so years. Yet this so-called newspaper brushes past that and instead immediately and aggressively pushes the claim that Covid came from nature, something that has nothing to do with the charges. That is the real red line for them. They will happily throw Morens or any other underlings under the bus as long as that narrative stays intact.
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misty21 🔜
misty21 🔜@misty21·
@TheDeanJanes @ITGuy1959 @NBCNews Code jobs ($ 98,000) pay 2 to 3 time as much as coal mining ($39,000 to $43,000) without the risk of black lung disease. All training and education were offered for free Only the cult would be pissed about a plan to help fellow Americans get a better job without health risk
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NBC News
NBC News@NBCNews·
Thirteen federal workers who were laid off during the DOGE cuts tell NBC News they struggled to find work, had to move or took major pay cuts after their agencies were gutted. nbcnews.com/politics/doge/…
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AG
AG@AGHamilton29·
I am finding the entire discussion surrounding the SPLC revelations to be insane. We can argue the specific charges, but how can anyone defend what they were doing? The defense some people have settled on here is that they were paying informants, like law enforcement sometimes does. Except they aren't law enforcement? There is no special exemption for funding criminal activities from hate groups just because you claim to also be fighting them. Also, the amounts they were paying far exceeded what anyone would need just to gather information. Millions of dollars in funding for the very people they were pretending to fight. The truth is, they were treating this like a business. It worked as a business model. They spent a few million to help fund hateful extremists and then raised tens of millions based on highlighting the growth of the very threats they helped fund. Meanwhile, they would also often conflate political opponents with those extremists, thereby also providing cover for hate groups. The country would be much better off if the SPLC were put out of business.
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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@GBNT1952 I was on the fence because of OPSEC, but I think it's cool he could bet on himself. Especially in light of what Congress does on the daily. It's conflicting, but at the end of the day a nothing burger. We've got bigger problems.
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Green Beret Nap Time
Green Beret Nap Time@GBNT1952·
This is a perfect example of why arresting this soldier for a bet on a relatively small amount of money but allowing members of Congress to make massive amounts of wealth off of the stock market and their insider information makes zero sense. Free this man now.
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz

I have two stacks on my desk. The left stack is financial disclosure forms from members of Congress. The right stack is waivers for members who filed their financial disclosures late. The right stack is always taller. On Wednesday morning, I watched a soldier get arrested on CNN. I am a Disclosure Analyst for the House Ethics Committee. I have held this position for eleven years. My job is to receive the forms, verify their completeness, and file them. I do not investigate. I do not flag. I do not refer. I file. I have a lanyard. The lanyard says ETHICS. The soldier's name is Gannon Ken Van Dyke. He is thirty-eight years old. He was stationed at Fort Bragg. He was Special Forces. In December, he created an account on a prediction market called Polymarket. On January 2nd, he bet $32,500 that the president of Venezuela would be removed from power. On January 3rd, he helped remove the president of Venezuela from power. He collected $409,881. He has been charged with five federal crimes. Commodities fraud. Wire fraud. Unlawful use of confidential government information. Theft of nonpublic government information. Unlawful monetary transaction. The Department of Justice called it "the first-ever insider trading prosecution on event contracts." I watched this on the television in our break room. Then I walked back to my desk and processed a late financial disclosure from a member of the House Financial Services Committee who purchased $250,000 in bank stocks eleven days before his subcommittee held a closed-door hearing on proposed capital reserve changes. The filing was forty-seven days late. The STOCK Act requires disclosure within forty-five days. The penalty for late filing is $200. I waived it. I waive most of them. In 2021, fifty-four members of Congress and senior staff violated the reporting rules. The fines were minimal. Most were waived. I have a form for the waiver. The form has a box that says "Reason." I write "administrative delay." In ethics, "administrative delay" means the member's office forgot and then remembered when a reporter called. My approval rate is one hundred percent. In any other field, that number would trigger an audit. In mine, it is called thoroughness. Let me show you what I processed this year. January. A senator on the Armed Services Committee sold defense contractor shares worth $1.2 million. Three days later, his committee received a classified briefing that the Iran campaign had exceeded its projected cost by 340%. The stock dropped 8%. He filed the disclosure sixty-one days late. I calculated the fine. $200. His chief of staff asked if it could be waived. He did not ask what the senator traded on. Nobody asks that. The form does not have a field for it. I waived the fine. The senator's portfolio returned 23.4% in 2025. The S&P 500 returned 16.8%. February. A representative on the Energy and Commerce Committee bought pharmaceutical stocks worth $400,000. Two weeks later, her committee advanced a bill that would extend patent exclusivity for the exact drug class she purchased. The stocks rose 14%. She filed on time. There was no fine. There was no investigation. There was nothing to investigate because buying stocks in companies regulated by your own committee is not illegal. It is legal. The STOCK Act made it legal by making it disclosed. In Congress, disclosed means legal. In my office, legal means filed. March. A member whose spouse manages a portfolio worth $9.2 million reported forty-three separate transactions in a single quarter. Twelve of them were in sectors directly affected by legislation the member co-sponsored. The timing on eight of those twelve was within a two-week window of committee action. I logged all forty-three. None were flagged. We do not flag. We file. I asked my supervisor once what would happen if I flagged a filing. She said we do not have a form for that. I never asked again. In 2020, I processed 847 disclosures. In 2023, 1,211. In 2025, 1,614. The number of enforcement actions in each of those years was zero. The numerator changes. The denominator does not. I want to tell you about the soldier again. He made $409,881. He tried to delete his Polymarket account by calling customer service and saying he lost access to his email. He moved his profits into a foreign cryptocurrency vault and then into a new brokerage account. He used his real identity. He placed thirteen bets. Every single one was connected to an operation he personally participated in. In my eleven years, I have processed disclosures from members of Congress who traded on: Pending FDA approvals they learned about in committee. Defense appropriations they voted on. Trade policy they negotiated. Pandemic response measures they drafted. Interest rate decisions they were briefed on before the public. None of them have been charged. None of them have been investigated by the Department of Justice. None of them have been referred to the SEC. The STOCK Act has produced zero prosecutions since it was signed on April 4th, 2012. Fourteen years. Five hundred and thirty-five members. $635 million in trades last year alone. Zero cases. My daughter asked me once what happens when someone breaks the rules. I told her we write it down. She asked what happens after that. I said it depends. She was nine. She is twenty now. It does not depend. Nothing happens after that. The soldier made $409,881 and faces decades in prison. Nancy Pelosi entered Congress in 1987 with a portfolio worth approximately $785,000. It is now worth $133.7 million. That is a return of 16,930%. The Dow Jones returned 2,300% over the same period. Professional fund managers who beat the market for three consecutive years are considered exceptional. She has beaten it for thirty-seven. If a hedge fund produced those returns, the SEC would subpoena the records on a Thursday. She produced them from a building with a chapel and a gift shop. She announced her retirement last year. No investigation was opened. No disclosure was flagged. Her filings were on time. In my office, on time means compliant. Compliant means closed. I want to tell you about the fine. $200. That is the maximum penalty for violating the STOCK Act's disclosure requirements. $200 for a member of Congress whose portfolio gained $4.7 million in a single quarter. I calculated what $200 represents as a percentage of $4.7 million. It is 0.004%. I could not find a comparison that made it meaningful. It is less than the price of the parking pass in the Rayburn garage. It is less than lunch at the members' dining room if you order the crab cakes, which I am told are excellent though I eat at my desk. Since 2012, thirty-one bills have been introduced to restrict congressional trading. I keep a list. The list is longer than the STOCK Act itself. On March 5th, 2026, a representative from Michigan introduced the thirty-second. He called it the "No Getting Rich in Congress Act." The bill would prohibit the President, Vice President, members of Congress, and their spouses from trading individual stocks, cryptocurrency, futures, and commodities while in office. The bill was referred to committee. The committee has not scheduled a hearing. The committee is chaired by a member whose spouse executed $2.1 million in trades last year. The bill will be reviewed. In my office, reviewed means read. Read means acknowledged. Acknowledged means a status has been assigned. A status is the absence of an action that has been given a name so it looks like one. The soldier used classified information to make $409,881 on a prediction market. He has been charged with five federal crimes. The Department of Justice announced the case on the same day I processed three disclosures from members who traded on committee knowledge worth a combined $3.8 million. The difference between the soldier and the members is not what they did. It is the building they did it in. He did it from Fort Bragg. They did it from the Capitol. He used a prediction market. They used the New York Stock Exchange. He bet on a military operation. They bet on the legislation they write. He did not write the law. They did. They wrote the STOCK Act. Then they funded its enforcement at zero dollars. Then they set its maximum penalty at $200. Then they gave my office the authority to waive it. Then they traded $635 million. The soldier flew to Caracas. He breached a compound. He put his body between a mission and a bullet. The people who ordered the operation were in a building with a credenza and sparkling water. They did not go to Caracas. They went to their brokerage accounts. The soldier made $409,881 and is now in federal custody. The people who knew what he was going to do before he did it made more and filed less. His prosecution is not a failure of the system. It is the system. One conviction per decade, at the lowest level, so the briefing slides can say enforcement exists. The $409,881 is not the crime. It is the cost of making $635 million look supervised. In my field, we call this self-regulation. The soldier's Polymarket account has been frozen. His military career is over. He will spend years in federal prison. My office will process every congressional disclosure filed this year. Every trade logged. Every $200 fine calculated and waived. The system is immaculate. Fourteen years. Zero prosecutions. $635 million a year. A 16,930% return. I have not leaked a document. I have not filed a complaint. I have not deviated from the process one single time. The process was written by the people whose forms I process. As long as the disclosures go up and the cases don't, my performance review says I am meeting expectations. My lanyard still says ETHICS. In eleven years, nobody has asked me to define the word.

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bitchuneedsoap
bitchuneedsoap@bitchuneedsoap·
SPLC is in a legal box with no clean exit. To defeat the donor fraud charges, they have to argue the informant program was legitimate intelligence work coordinated with federal law enforcement. Bryan Fair already said that on video on April 21st. But the moment that's the defense, three new problems open: Donors did not give money to fund FBI-coordinated intelligence operations. Class action exposure on the actual basis of the donor relationship. 501(c)(3) status doesn't cover serving as a federal intelligence contractor. Tax exemption becomes contestable. Admitting FBI coordination validates exactly the Grassley-Patel-HJC finding that SPLC was feeding the FBI taxonomies used to target American religious communities. The traditional escape hatch in a case like this is graymail. SPLC threatens to expose FBI coordination in discovery. DOJ backs off to protect FBI secrets. Except this DOJ wants that exposure. Patel severed the FBI-SPLC relationship in October. Grassley released documents in June. The Weaponization Working Group is already mapping this. Exposing FBI wrongdoing under the prior administration is a feature, not a cost. The graymail doesn't work because the target doesn't want to protect what you're threatening to expose. Which means SPLC's options narrow to: Plead to narrower charges and accept reputational collapse Go to trial and have the whole operation documented in the public record Drag proceedings out hoping for a political reversal before donor class actions and state AG investigations land There's no fourth door.
bitchuneedsoap@bitchuneedsoap

If SPLC was running paid informants inside violent extremist groups, and SPLC was sharing that intelligence with the FBI, and SPLC's "hate group" designations were showing up in internal FBI memos targeting American religious communities… At what point did SPLC stop being an advocacy organization and start being an intelligence contractor? The indictment unsealed on April 21st describes an informant program that ran from 2014 to 2023. $3 million. Eight informants. Leading figures inside the KKK, Aryan Nations, and National Socialist Party. One was the Imperial Wizard of the United Klans of America. Another was in the online leadership chat that planned Unite the Right. SPLC's own CEO said on video that the intel went to federal law enforcement. Sen. Grassley spent 2023-2025 documenting how SPLC's hate group designations were cited in at least 14 internal FBI intelligence products. One of them, the Richmond memo, proposed FBI source development inside parishes where Latin Mass is celebrated. They interviewed a priest. A choir director. An internal FBI email Grassley obtained: "our overreliance on the SPLC for hate designation is problematic." Two streams of information. One endpoint. The FBI was receiving input on American threats from a 501(c)(3) that was paying people inside the KKK. And using that input to propose surveillance of Catholic parishes. That's an outsourced intelligence operation that nobody voted for and nobody audited. The fraud indictment is the floor of this story.

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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@ChrisMartzWX Simple, they are the party of envy and hate, mascara ding as the party of compassion and virtue.
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Chris Martz
Chris Martz@ChrisMartzWX·
I am not quite sure why Democrats want the rich to pay more taxes. The top 1% make 26% of all income and pay 46% of all income taxes. The bottom 50% make 10% of all income and pay 2% of all income taxes. This is a fact. You might not like the facts or what they imply, but they are the facts. Quite frankly, until government spending is reined in and spending cuts are made to balance the budget, I think that every American taxpayer, rich and poor, should simply stop paying taxes altogether. Just stop filing. They can’t arrest us all. The government gets more than enough revenue. We don’t have a revenue issue, we have a spending issue. Democrats and Republicans alike are like a teenage girl at the mall with her dad’s credit card. And, when they run out of money, they simply have the treasury print more to match the supply of money to the debt, which causes inflation, the biggest tax of all on us. No one currently in Congress (except for two I can think of) have done a thing to address this with legislation. And, when they do, the bills get shot down by both parties.
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Dean Janes
Dean Janes@TheDeanJanes·
@TRobinsonNewEra Maybe we need to sell you Brits some good ol American wood chippers??
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Tommy Robinson 🇬🇧
Tommy Robinson 🇬🇧@TRobinsonNewEra·
A smirking invader raped two men he met on Grindr has been convicted of rape for a third time. Mohammed Altaher, 41, an Iraqi, during the investigation, he played the victim, alleging detectives subjected him to 'degrading treatment' because he was gay. April 8, following a trial at Aylesbury Crown Court, he was found guilty of raping his third victim.
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