• fired

    From Noah Sombrero@fedora@fea.st to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Mon Aug 25 17:10:39 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy


    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another
    outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter.
    It said he was being oremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyo u as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6,
    2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed
    the United States Capitol that day u assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment
    in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to
    whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President
    TrumpAs reframing of its violence as patriotic u and those who had
    prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    Omenous. Vicious. Terror. Shit is passing through the fan.
    --
    Noah Sombrero mustachioed villain
    Don't get political with me young man
    or I'll tie you to a railroad track and
    <<<talk>>> to <<<YOOooooo>>>
    Who dares to talk to El Sombrero?
    dares: Ned
    does not dare: Julian shrinks in horror and warns others away

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dude@punditster@gmail.com to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Mon Aug 25 14:37:04 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter.
    It said he was being rCLremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyrCY rCo as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6,
    2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed
    the United States Capitol that day rCo assaulting police officers, vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment
    in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President TrumprCOs reframing of its violence as patriotic rCo and those who had prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the
    police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Noah Sombrero@fedora@fea.st to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Mon Aug 25 18:08:15 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another
    outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter.
    It said he was being oremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyo u as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6,
    2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed
    the United States Capitol that day u assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment
    in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to
    whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President
    TrumpAs reframing of its violence as patriotic u and those who had
    prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the >police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.
    --
    Noah Sombrero mustachioed villain
    Don't get political with me young man
    or I'll tie you to a railroad track and
    <<<talk>>> to <<<YOOooooo>>>
    Who dares to talk to El Sombrero?
    dares: Ned
    does not dare: Julian shrinks in horror and warns others away

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Wilson@Wilson@nowhere.net to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 12:14:28 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another
    outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter.
    It said he was being rCLremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyrCY rCo as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6,
    2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed
    the United States Capitol that day rCo assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment
    in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to
    whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President
    TrumprCOs reframing of its violence as patriotic rCo and those who had
    prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side. >>>> Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the
    police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire
    anyone there at will for any reason.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people
    who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after
    the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people.

    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those
    who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know
    there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea
    they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in
    jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend,
    for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people
    who did that deserve to be in jail.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Noah Sombrero@fedora@fea.st to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 12:47:17 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 12:14:28 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another
    outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter.
    It said he was being oremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyo u as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6,
    2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed >>>> the United States Capitol that day u assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment
    in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to
    whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President
    TrumpAs reframing of its violence as patriotic u and those who had
    prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the
    police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire >anyone there at will for any reason.

    The trouble comes when it is to discourage prosecution of poeple who
    broke the law when he approves of them doing that.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people
    who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after
    the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people.

    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those
    who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know
    there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea
    they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in
    jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend,
    for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people
    who did that deserve to be in jail.

    You are making excuses based on what you get from rightie new sources.
    The fact is that himbo is freeing criminals and firing the prosecutors
    who did their job. It is not the prosecutors' fault that judge and
    jury agreed with the evidence of guilt presented. This is himbo
    trying to squelch leagal proceedings that he does not like. It is
    very ominous, very troubling to see him get away with it.
    --
    Noah Sombrero mustachioed villain
    Don't get political with me young man
    or I'll tie you to a railroad track and
    <<<talk>>> to <<<YOOooooo>>>
    Who dares to talk to El Sombrero?
    dares: Ned
    does not dare: Julian shrinks in horror and warns others away

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dude@punditster@gmail.com to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 09:52:29 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On 8/26/2025 9:14 AM, Wilson wrote:
    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    -a-a Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another >>>> outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter.
    It said he was being rCLremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyrCY rCo as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6,
    2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed >>>> the United States Capitol that day rCo assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment
    in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to
    whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President
    TrumprCOs reframing of its violence as patriotic rCo and those who had >>>> prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take
    a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the
    police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    -a Free Palestine!

    fuck that.-a You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire anyone there at will for any reason.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people
    who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after
    the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people.

    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those
    who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know
    there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea
    they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in
    jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend,
    for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people
    who did that deserve to be in jail.

    It looks like the previous administration used setup the Capitol protest
    to turn the country into an anarchic mafia state, complete with their
    own riots, for political gain. Obviously it was a conspiracy at the
    highest levels.

    There's no telling how far the deep sate will go to prevent a populist
    carry out the will of the people.

    In the future there should be a special day when anyone on the planet is allowed to stand up in public for one minute and spew hate, as long as
    it is not intended to incite a riot.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Wilson@Wilson@nowhere.net to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 13:00:18 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On 8/26/2025 12:47 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 12:14:28 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another >>>>> outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness
    online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter. >>>>> It said he was being rCLremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyrCY rCo as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6, >>>>> 2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed >>>>> the United States Capitol that day rCo assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment >>>>> in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of
    two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the
    Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to >>>>> whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President >>>>> TrumprCOs reframing of its violence as patriotic rCo and those who had >>>>> prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even
    traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the
    police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire
    anyone there at will for any reason.

    The trouble comes when it is to discourage prosecution of poeple who
    broke the law when he approves of them doing that.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people
    who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after
    the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people.

    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those
    who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know
    there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea
    they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in
    jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend,
    for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people
    who did that deserve to be in jail.

    You are making excuses based on what you get from rightie new sources.
    The fact is that himbo is freeing criminals and firing the prosecutors
    who did their job. It is not the prosecutors' fault that judge and
    jury agreed with the evidence of guilt presented. This is himbo
    trying to squelch leagal proceedings that he does not like. It is
    very ominous, very troubling to see him get away with it.

    Ominous! Troubling! OMG!

    Who are you trying to convince?

    The Biden regime persecuted their political opponents. They even charged Trump's lawyers for representing him, which is unprecedented. The courts
    in DC are so biased that it's impossible to get a fair trial if you're a political dissident who supports Trump.

    Deny this reality all you want (and I know you will).
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Noah Sombrero@fedora@fea.st to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 13:20:32 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 13:00:18 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/26/2025 12:47 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 12:14:28 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>
    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another >>>>>> outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness >>>>>> online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter. >>>>>> It said he was being oremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyo u as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi,
    provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6, >>>>>> 2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed >>>>>> the United States Capitol that day u assaulting police officers,
    vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment >>>>>> in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of >>>>>> two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the >>>>>> Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to >>>>>> whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President >>>>>> TrumpAs reframing of its violence as patriotic u and those who had >>>>>> prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even >>>>>> traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the >>>>> police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire
    anyone there at will for any reason.

    The trouble comes when it is to discourage prosecution of poeple who
    broke the law when he approves of them doing that.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people >>> who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after
    the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people.

    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those
    who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know
    there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea
    they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in
    jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend,
    for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people
    who did that deserve to be in jail.

    You are making excuses based on what you get from rightie new sources.
    The fact is that himbo is freeing criminals and firing the prosecutors
    who did their job. It is not the prosecutors' fault that judge and
    jury agreed with the evidence of guilt presented. This is himbo
    trying to squelch leagal proceedings that he does not like. It is
    very ominous, very troubling to see him get away with it.

    Ominous! Troubling! OMG!

    Who are you trying to convince?

    The Biden regime persecuted their political opponents. They even charged >Trump's lawyers for representing him, which is unprecedented. The courts
    in DC are so biased that it's impossible to get a fair trial if you're a >political dissident who supports Trump.

    Deny this reality all you want (and I know you will).

    So once again, it is all biden's fault because himbo accuses biden of
    doing it first.
    --
    Noah Sombrero mustachioed villain
    Don't get political with me young man
    or I'll tie you to a railroad track and
    <<<talk>>> to <<<YOOooooo>>>
    Who dares to talk to El Sombrero?
    dares: Ned
    does not dare: Julian shrinks in horror and warns others away

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Wilson@Wilson@nowhere.net to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 13:40:20 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On 8/26/2025 1:20 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 13:00:18 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/26/2025 12:47 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 12:14:28 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>
    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another >>>>>>> outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness >>>>>>> online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter. >>>>>>> It said he was being rCLremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyrCY rCo as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi, >>>>>>> provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6, >>>>>>> 2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed >>>>>>> the United States Capitol that day rCo assaulting police officers, >>>>>>> vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment >>>>>>> in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of >>>>>>> two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the >>>>>>> Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to >>>>>>> whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President >>>>>>> TrumprCOs reframing of its violence as patriotic rCo and those who had >>>>>>> prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even >>>>>>> traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the >>>>>> police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire >>>> anyone there at will for any reason.

    The trouble comes when it is to discourage prosecution of poeple who
    broke the law when he approves of them doing that.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people >>>> who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after >>>> the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people.

    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those
    who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know >>>> there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea >>>> they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in >>>> jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend, >>>> for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people >>>> who did that deserve to be in jail.

    You are making excuses based on what you get from rightie new sources.
    The fact is that himbo is freeing criminals and firing the prosecutors
    who did their job. It is not the prosecutors' fault that judge and
    jury agreed with the evidence of guilt presented. This is himbo
    trying to squelch leagal proceedings that he does not like. It is
    very ominous, very troubling to see him get away with it.

    Ominous! Troubling! OMG!

    Who are you trying to convince?

    The Biden regime persecuted their political opponents. They even charged
    Trump's lawyers for representing him, which is unprecedented. The courts
    in DC are so biased that it's impossible to get a fair trial if you're a
    political dissident who supports Trump.

    Deny this reality all you want (and I know you will).

    So once again, it is all biden's fault because himbo accuses biden of
    doing it first.

    "No one is above the law!"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Noah Sombrero@fedora@fea.st to alt.buddha.short.fat.guy on Tue Aug 26 14:13:53 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.buddha.short.fat.guy

    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 13:40:20 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/26/2025 1:20 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 13:00:18 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote:

    On 8/26/2025 12:47 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Tue, 26 Aug 2025 12:14:28 -0400, Wilson <Wilson@nowhere.net> wrote: >>>>
    On 8/25/2025 6:08 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:
    On Mon, 25 Aug 2025 14:37:04 -0700, Dude <punditster@gmail.com> wrote: >>>>>>
    On 8/25/2025 2:10 PM, Noah Sombrero wrote:

    NY Times,

    Three weeks earlier, and just two days after receiving yet another
    outstanding performance review, he had been interviewing a witness >>>>>>>> online when a grim-faced colleague interrupted to hand him a letter. >>>>>>>> It said he was being oremoved from federal service effective
    immediatelyo u as in, now.

    Although the brief letter, signed by Attorney General Pam Bondi, >>>>>>>> provided no justification, Mr. Gordon knew the likely reason: Jan. 6, >>>>>>>> 2021.

    He was being fired for successfully prosecuting people who had stormed >>>>>>>> the United States Capitol that day u assaulting police officers, >>>>>>>> vandalizing a national landmark and disrupting that sacrosanct moment >>>>>>>> in a democracy, the transfer of presidential power.

    He was being fired for doing his job.

    The letter did more than inform Mr. Gordon, a 47-year-old father of >>>>>>>> two, that he was unemployed. It confirmed for him his view that the >>>>>>>> Justice Department he had been honored to work for was now helping to >>>>>>>> whitewash a traumatic event in American history, supporting President >>>>>>>> TrumpAs reframing of its violence as patriotic u and those who had >>>>>>>> prosecuted rioters in the name of justice as villains, perhaps even >>>>>>>> traitors.

    There are good people on both sides. There's equal blame. Don't take a side.
    Omenous. Vicious. Terror.

    Power to the people! Steal this book! Black lives matter! De-fund the >>>>>>> police! Open borders!
    Shit is passing through the fan.

    Free Palestine!

    fuck that. You heard me.

    Quit your crying. The president runs the executive branch and can fire >>>>> anyone there at will for any reason.

    The trouble comes when it is to discourage prosecution of poeple who
    broke the law when he approves of them doing that.

    The prosecution of the Jan. 6 protestors was heinous. The violent people >>>>> who broke things deserved jail. The people who entered open doors after >>>>> the riot was over with did not, and this included hundreds of people. >>>>>
    There was no riot on the other side of the building and many of those >>>>> who entered hours later and walked through open doors didn't even know >>>>> there had even been a riot, yet they were prosecuted. They had no idea >>>>> they were trespassing or breaking any law. They actually put people in >>>>> jail for years for simply walking onto the lawn.

    There were even people prosecuted who weren't even in DC that weekend, >>>>> for sending messages of support to people who were there.

    It was a deliberate persecution of political opponents. And the people >>>>> who did that deserve to be in jail.

    You are making excuses based on what you get from rightie new sources. >>>> The fact is that himbo is freeing criminals and firing the prosecutors >>>> who did their job. It is not the prosecutors' fault that judge and
    jury agreed with the evidence of guilt presented. This is himbo
    trying to squelch leagal proceedings that he does not like. It is
    very ominous, very troubling to see him get away with it.

    Ominous! Troubling! OMG!

    Who are you trying to convince?

    The Biden regime persecuted their political opponents. They even charged >>> Trump's lawyers for representing him, which is unprecedented. The courts >>> in DC are so biased that it's impossible to get a fair trial if you're a >>> political dissident who supports Trump.

    Deny this reality all you want (and I know you will).

    So once again, it is all biden's fault because himbo accuses biden of
    doing it first.

    "No one is above the law!"

    Except himbo is mostly untouchable.
    --
    Noah Sombrero mustachioed villain
    Don't get political with me young man
    or I'll tie you to a railroad track and
    <<<talk>>> to <<<YOOooooo>>>
    Who dares to talk to El Sombrero?
    dares: Ned
    does not dare: Julian shrinks in horror and warns others away

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2