February 27, 2017
Hollywood elite gather to do what they do best... Deceive. Hollywood is slitting its own throat, assuming by the authority of their own arrogance that Americans actually care what it thinks.
Source: Jon Bowne, Infowars.com
Watch the videos of the Oscars in the link below.
Bill Clinton Called Out On Twitter | Juanita Broaddrick To Chelsea Clinton: Your Father Is "Horrifying, Sick And Awful"
February 18, 2017
Juanita Broaddrick told Chelsea Clinton that her father is “horrifying, sick and awful.”
Source: Kaitlan Collins, The Daily Caller
“I need a thesaurus,” Clinton tweeted this week with a link to a story about an illegal immigrant who was detained while trying to obtain a protective order against her domestic abuser. “What’s another word for horrifying? Sick? Awful? Running out of adjectives these days that mean unconscionably terrible.”
Broaddrick — the Arkansas woman who claims Bill Clinton raped her in 1978 — responded, “Well, since you asked, Here’s my definition of horrifying, sick & awful. Answer: Your father, Bill Clinton.”
Though Broaddrick later claimed that Clinton deleted her tweet, it was still up when this article was posted.
January 01, 2020
Source: Elizabeth Nolan Brown, Reason.com
On Wednesday, actor Ashton Kutcher testified before the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations on behalf of Thorn, an anti-sexual exploitation organization he co-founded with Demi Moore. Thorn's main project is Spotlight, a cloud-based data-collection and analysis tool that purportedly helps police find sex traffickers. According to Kutcher's testimony before Sen. John McCain and other U.S. lawmakers, the app—funded by the McCain Foundation—has helped save more than 6,000 U.S. sex-trafficking victims, including 2,000 minors, in the past 12 months.
But there's something fishy about these and other stats put forth about Spotlight. According to Cloudera, the company behind Spotlight's technology, the app was used in 8,305 criminal investigations into sex trafficking between September 2015 and September 2016, identifying 4,624 adult victims and 2,025 minor sex-trafficking victims (defined in the U.S. as anyone under age 18 engaging in prostitution).
These numbers wildly outpace the average number of new criminal investigations into sex trafficking opened in the U.S. each year or average number of victims identified by U.S. law enforcement. For instance, between late 2009 and late 2015, FBI agents working with state and local police across America identified an average of just 175 minor victims per year, according to the Attorney General's 2015 Annual Report to Congress and Assessment of U.S. Government Activities to Combat Trafficking in Persons.