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HellToupee

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Everything posted by HellToupee

  1. 10 years ago in Trump history Fun fact Obama didn’t have the stones to accept the challenge
  2. HellToupee

    Trump Coin

    This needs to happen!!!!
  3. Thats a bit much for me but it does solve the problem. Not something I would do
  4. Seeing the Comey perp walked will be good for the soul. Lock him up
  5. HellToupee

    Starbucks Dress Code

    what a look
  6. Same ed Krassenstein , little squissy is a big fanboy https://x.com/edkrassen/status/1923129202426974425?s=61&t=oX9G006TUZ9alBtC5c4uMQ
  7. In a heartbeat. It’s hilarious the lgbtqers align with them
  8. HellToupee

    Trial of Karen Read - Thoughts?

    The video in the garage was flipped so Proctor was on the side of the broken taillight
  9. HellToupee

    Trial of Karen Read - Thoughts?

    Thats Michael Proctor who was a MA state trooper who was in charge of the investigation. He also lives in Canton and has ties to the Alberts, Colin was his flower boy. Proctor was fired by the state police the FBI was/is(?) investigating the DA office
  10. HellToupee

    Another Import Success Story *Minnesota*

    These Somali imports are the grift that keeps on grifting Somali-American Refugee’s Medicaid Firm Submitted Fraudulent MaineCare Claims for Years, Former Employees Allege Summary Former employees of Gateway Community Services, a migrant-run social services agency in Maine, allege the company artificially inflated Medicaid billing for at least seven years. The allegations, if true, implicate the company and its leadership in multiple state and federal crimes, including Medicaid fraud and wire fraud. The allegations are similar to those made by the FBI against Minnesota-based autism care providers. Steve RobinsonMay 14, 2025 Former employees of Gateway Community Services, a migrant-run social services agency with offices throughout Maine, have alleged in interviews with The Robinson Report that the company artificially inflated Medicaid billing for at least seven years. The whistleblower allegations surfaced after a report by the Maine Wire on March 21 revealed that Gateway Community Services had previously been audited by the Maine Department of Human Services (DHHS) and received a Notice of Violation stating the company had over-billed MaineCare, Maine’s version of Medicaid, by close to one million dollars from 2015-2017. As of at least 2022, that sum had not been repaid, according to state records. The report also disclosed that Abdullahi Ali, the CEO of Gateway Community Services and a celebrated Somali-American refugee, claimed to be financing Somali paramilitary groups during his unsuccessful 2024 campaign for an elected office in Somalia. At the same time he claimed in Kenyan TV interviews to be funding Somali militia as part of his campaign to become the next president of Jubaland, he was receiving millions in taxpayer-funded Medicaid payments and other government payments, according to government records. Now, three former employees, including one who has come forward publicly and reported his allegations to the Office of the State Auditor, have revealed details of Ali’s roughly $5 million per year MaineCare business that paint a picture of systematic abuse of the taxpayer-funded program. From 2019 to 2024, the company billed MaineCare for a total of $28.8 million, according to DHHS records. In addition, the company has received multiple other contracts from the Mills Administration in recent years for community health outreach work. The allegations submitted to the Office of the State Auditor, if true, would implicate Gateway Community Services and its leadership in multiple state and federal crimes, including Medicaid fraud, wire fraud, forgery, and other criminal offenses.
  11. He’s definitely a bit touched touched Share definition Another way to say that someone is not quite "right" in the head. Usually accompanied by a knowing look and a nod along with the hand lightly tapped to the forehead. Fred would say about Lamont "That boy is touched" if he hooked up with a white girl.
  12. ICE has been all over Massachusetts and now today they were down the street from here taking bad hombres off the street . Love it
  13. HellToupee

    Trial of Karen Read - Thoughts?

    The Jen McCabe testimony about the FBI visiting her was interesting. FBI approaches her outside he house asking if she owns the house and she says no and tells them she’s her sister. Then comes clean but she needs a few minutes to brush her teeth etc. Then she calls her husband which is normal behavior but then calls 4 others, Brian Albert, Kerry Robert’s ,Peggy O’Keefe and the district attorney’s office. This is how the DA learned they were under investigation by the feds. Then she tells the fbi she only called her husband but later calls them to tel them she forgot about the other calls.. She also terminated the interview a few minutes after it started
  14. HellToupee

    Trial of Karen Read - Thoughts?

    One butt dial happened while he was having sex
  15. HellToupee

    Who is the best TV chef ever?

    I’ve been a fan of Glen & friends YouTube channel for awhile now. Canadian but I don’t hold that against him. Most of what he does is from very old cookbooks
  16. HellToupee

    Trial of Karen Read - Thoughts?

    Are you up to speed on the 2nd trial or just watching one of the docs?
  17. what a POS organization “The Episcopal Church's refugee program was getting over $50 Million per year under Biden, and they claim to have resettled 6,533 people from 48 different countries in the U.S. during 2024 alone. Being asked to resettle <50 white people from South Africa is too much though...” Episcopal Church refuses to resettle white Afrikaners, citing moral opposition Summarize Jack JenkinsMay 12, 20252:45 PM ET White South Africans demonstrate in support of President Trump in front of the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria, South Africa, on Feb. 15. Jerome Delay/AP In a striking move that ends a nearly four-decades-old relationship between the federal government and the Episcopal Church, the denomination announced on Monday that it is terminating its partnership with the government to resettle refugees, citing moral opposition to resettling white Afrikaners from South Africa who have been classified as refugees by President Trump's administration. In a letter sent to members of the church, the Most Rev. Sean W. Rowe — the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church — said that two weeks ago, the government "informed Episcopal Migration Ministries that under the terms of our federal grant, we are expected to resettle white Afrikaners from South Africa whom the U.S. government has classified as refugees." The request, Rowe said, crossed a moral line for the Episcopal Church, which is part of the global Anglican Communion, which boasts among its leaders the late Archbishop Desmond Tutu, a celebrated and vocal opponent of apartheid in South Africa. "In light of our church's steadfast commitment to racial justice and reconciliation and our historic ties with the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, we are not able to take this step," Rowe wrote. "Accordingly, we have determined that, by the end of the federal fiscal year, we will conclude our refugee resettlement grant agreements with the U.S. federal government." Rowe stressed that while Episcopal Migration Ministries will seek to "wind down all federally funded services by the end of the federal fiscal year in September," the denomination will continue to support immigrants and refugees in other ways, such as offering aid to refugees who have already been resettled. The announcement came just as flights with Afrikaners were scheduled to arrive at Washington Dulles International Airport, outside Washington, D.C. — the first batch of entries after Trump declared via a February executive orderthat the U.S. would take in "Afrikaners in South Africa who are victims of unjust racial discrimination." The South African government has stridently denied allegations of systemic racial animus, as has a coalition of white religious leaders in the region that includes many Anglicans. "The stated reasons for [Trump's actions] are claims of victimisation, violence and hateful rhetoric against white people in South Africa along with legislation providing for the expropriation of land without compensation," read the letter from white South African religious leaders, which included among its four authors an Anglican priest. "As white South Africans in active leadership within the Christian community, representing diverse political and theological perspectives, we unanimously reject these claims." In addition to ties with Tutu, the Episcopal Church has a long history of advocating against apartheid in South Africa. It first began altering its financial holdings in the region in 1966, and by the mid-1980s, the church voted to divest from companies doing business in South Africa. Rowe noted his announcement comes as the Trump administration has otherwise all but frozen the refugee program, with Afrikaners among the few — and possibly only — people granted entry as refugees since January. Shortly after he was sworn in, Trump signed an executive order that essentially halted the refugee program and stopped payments to organizations that assist with refugee resettlement — including, according to one group, payments for work already performed. That change has left refugees — including Christians fleeing religious persecution — without a clear path forward and has forced the 10 refugee resettlement groups, seven of which are faith based, to lay off scores of workers while still trying to support refugees who had recently arrived. Four of the faith groups have since filed two separate lawsuits, one of which recently resulted in a ruling that should have restarted the program. However, refugee groups have accused the government of "delaying compliance" with the court order. A representative for Church World Service, which is among the groups currently suing the administration, said the organization "has agreed to support one family through remote services," but pointed to an additional statement from last week that voiced ongoing frustration with the government's actions. "We are concerned that the U.S. Government has chosen to fast-track the admission of Afrikaners, while actively fighting court orders to provide life-saving resettlement to other refugee populations who are in desperate need of resettlement," Rick Santos, head of Church World Service, said in a statement last week. "By resettling this population, the Government is demonstrating that it still has the capacity to quickly screen, process, and depart refugees to the United States. It's time for the Administration to honor our nation's commitment to the thousands of refugee families it abandoned with its cruel and illegal executive order." Matthew Soerens, vice president of advocacy and policy at World Relief, an evangelical Christian group that helps resettle refugees, said in an email that his group anticipates "serving a small number" of the arrivals who qualify for Office of Refugee Resettlement-funded services. But he said the situation is "complicated by the reality that the government is not bringing them to the US through the traditional State Department initial resettlement process, where World Relief has historically been one of the ten private agencies that implement this public-private partnership, because that process remains suspended." He added: "Our primary response to this situation is to continue to urge the administration to resume that initial resettlement process for a broad range of individuals who have fled persecution on account of their faith, political opinion, race or other reasons outlined under US law — and to highlight the support for doing so from the evangelical Christians who are World Relief's core base of support, including some very conservative evangelicals who see refugee resettlement as a vital tool to protect those denied religious freedom abroad."
  18. HellToupee

    Episcopal Church 👎 Afrikaners need not apply

    And look at these AfriKaners waving American flags while arriving .
  19. Every time I read a story about ICE raids I get a full head of steam in my pants. I love it. I voted for this!
  20. I was expecting it to be a boy
  21. The juicers deserve to get in first, imo
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