« First « Previous Comments 28 - 67 of 78 Next » Last » Search these comments
Why does he need to differentiate dinner from pizza?
Not sure when John gets home
But we have Alan signed up for dinner on the 23rd.
If you will be around for dinner or pizza on Sunday would love to see you and hear about addis and California.
Let me know
T
Tony Podesta
I've only seen real governments in small towns. In NH, they have real governments.
Following two weeks of Jeffrey Epstein news, the Wall Street Journal ran another shocking exposé yesterday, headlined “Instagram Connects Vast Pedophile Network.”
The story checks off yet ANOTHER misinformation conspiracy theory. Just wait, you won’t believe this one.
It’s not just that Instagram (owned by Facebook) allowed perverted users to post horrific subhuman child pornography on its system, the software even encouraged debased criminal users by helping them connect with each other, helped them trade highly-illegal CSAM, and even suggested ways for them to avoid getting caught.
Facebook blames all of that on surprising side-effects from their A.I., which sure gives us a glimpse into the near future. Get ready to hear “AI made me do it” a lot. Anyway, Facebook claimed they’ve promptly taken action, deleted accounts and illegal images, limited search tags, fixed the AI, and so forth. So don’t worry.
You might fairly be wondering what, exactly, Facebook’s swarms of social media police do all day long. I’ll tell you. They keep anti-vaxx memes off the platform, make sure nobody blames the pandemic on a lab leak, erase evidence about election cheating, and delete incriminating Hunter Biden’s laptop content. But what they DON’T DO is combat any real-life crimes...
No response for months. But Michelle got banned once — in under ten minutes! — for simply posting that she wanted to “punch Joe Biden in the throat.” (It was uncivil, true, but there was mitigating context. She was provoked.) The point is, everyone has their priorities, and clearly, protecting children is not one of Facebook’s.
The appalling content and the disgraceful features helping pedophiles trade, buy and sell illegal content were recently uncovered by three independent Stanford researchers. The team said after they set up a single account and connected it to a couple other child porn collectors within a loose social network, they were immediately buried with “suggested for you” recommendations of thousands of child-sex-content sellers and buyers. They were also, oddly, offered links to off-platform CSAM trading sites.
Following just a few of the recommendations flooded their test account with underaged sexual content.
It’s a long article. But this one paragraph especially jumped out at me, and at other close observers of the captured media:
The pedophilic accounts on Instagram mix brazenness with superficial efforts to veil their activity, researchers found. Certain emojis function as a kind of code, such as an image of a map🗺️—shorthand for “minor-attracted person”—or one of “cheese pizza” 🍕, which shares its initials with “child pornography,” according to Levine of UMass. Many [Instagram perverts sickeningly] declare themselves “lovers of the little things in life.”
Wait, go back. Did they just say, “cheese pizza?” Pizza? Wasn’t that the obvious code word all over Hilary Clinton’s leaked emails? But … I thought the pizza thing was all debunked conspiracy theory misinformation. They mocked the very idea, laughingly labeling it “pizza gate” and darkly hinting that anyone who believed that stuff was dangerous and should be on the no-fly list or something.
Ironically, Facebook busily banned any accounts that discussed PizzaGate or used the PizzaGate hashtag, while at the same exact time it was helping pedophiles build a vast criminal network using that very same code word.
The Wall Street Journal, with its teams of award-winning reporters and layers of editors and fact-checkers, failed to make that connection. Just … nothing. You’d think PizzaGate might’ve earned a single sentence in the extended article. But no. Not one word about what now must be considered another established conspiracy fact.
I suppose the Journal deserves credit for running the story at all. Still, it ended on a down note, quoting the Stanford researchers who tested Instagram after Facebook reported its repairs. The researchers said Instagram is, once again, helping the network rebuild itself. One of them thinks the entire platform should be shut down...
Qui bono?
Reading between the lines, the paragraph above shows that the Journal gave Facebook time to clean up its act before running the story. Why? Do people without government connections get the same consideration before an exposé is published? Just asking.
So that’s one conspiracy theory confirmed. But there’s another one today, too.
Following two weeks of Jeffrey Epstein news, the Wall Street Journal ran another shocking exposé yesterday, headlined “Instagram Connects Vast Pedophile Network.”
This Coffee and Covid guy is really good, I have faith the article exists.
Et voila:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/instagram-vast-pedophile-network-4ab7189
Isn't it weird there is no search engine where you can say "exclude this site"? Odd, there is no blacklist, greylist, and whitelist for sites isn't there? NO search engine does this...
richwicks says
Isn't it weird there is no search engine where you can say "exclude this site"? Odd, there is no blacklist, greylist, and whitelist for sites isn't there? NO search engine does this...
On Qwant (and probably others) you can search for links on specific sites by including the "site:SITE_FQDN" qualifier and it also works in reverse by putting a dash in front: -site:SITE_FQDN
In youtube, for example, when I do a search trying to find information (or I used to do this, youtube is largely useless now for it), I didn't want to see ANYTHING from corporate news. That would be great to have.
Comet Ping Pong Pizza is certainly an interesting name for a restaurant. It reminded some people of an old clip of Andrew Breitbart with Greg Gutfeld on Fox News Channel’s Red Eye, in which the topic of ping pong had been raised. Breitbart had joined the show to celebrate his vindication after accusing former Congressman Anthony Weiner of sexual misconduct. Weiner was married at the time to Hillary Clinton’s confidante Huma Abedin, and the Clinton machine had attacked Breitbart with their typical viciousness after he claimed to have proof of Weiner’s indiscretions. Breitbart complained that his critics had gone silent since the revelation of the proof that he was right. At one point, Gutfeld said that it was hard to play ping pong without an opponent. Breitbart paused, threw Gutfeld a suspicious look and asked, “Why would you change the subject to the sport of ping pong?… You’re weird like that.”
Breitbart’s appearance on Red Eye was aired five years before the Podesta emails kicked off PizzaGate, and five months after he publicly lobbed an even more serious accusation against John Podesta himself. In a February 2011 tweet, Breitbart wrote: “How prog-guru John Podesta isn’t a household name as a world-class underage sex slave op cover upper defending unspeakable dregs escapes me.” Breitbart, of course, was a well-known conservative bomb thrower, but this was heavy ordnance even by his standards. An accusation like that, against someone with Podesta’s status and connections, could have landed Breitbart in court, facing life-ruining libel charges, if he could not back it up. But it turned out that Podesta did not have to take him to court, since Breitbart mysteriously died on the street near his home a short time later. The coroner who performed the autopsy was himself found dead of arsenic poisoning soon after examining Breitbart’s body, and a spokesman for the coroner’s office subsequently announced that Breitbart had died of “natural causes.”
Late last month, NBC News ran a rather shocking story headlined, “Former ABC investigative journalist pleads guilty to child pornography charges.”
ABC’s senior, Washington DC-based investigative reporter, James Gordon Meek, 53, used to cover national security issues for the network until he resigned last year after his arrest. Meeks notably won an Emmy for his 2017 reporting on the Pulse gay nightclub shooting. Late last month, he pleaded guilty to illegal possession and transportation of child pornography.
Most ironically, and most relevant for the bigger story, Mr. Meek was the reporter who captained the charge to “debunk” the so-called Pizzagate ‘conspiracy theory,’ which arose out of leaked emails from Clinton-advisor John Pederast, I mean Podesta, and claimed that high-ranking democrat officials, including members of Hillary Clinton's campaign, were involved in a child sex trafficking ring operating out of a highly-sketchy pizzeria called Comet Ping Pong located in Washington, D.C.
In Washington, D.C. — coincidentally right where debunking reporter and chronic pedophile Meeks lived.
I made a horrible mistake by pulling up Meek’s case in PACER (the federal court system database), in order to read the arresting FBI agent’s original affidavit. I won’t subject you to the pure, unadulterated evil described in that appalling document, except to say I pray for the FBI agent who had to review the evidence and draft it.
But to give you a general sense of what we’re talking about, among many other awful things, Mr. Meek’s personal iPhone contained a video of the forcible sodomy of a screaming and crying infant girl, along with the reporter’s unbelievable descriptions of his extreme sexual arousal and grotesque, infuriating rape fantasies of repeating the same act himself.
It also included screenshots of reporter Meek’s chats on kids’ social media platforms, where he was coercing children into sending him naked photos. And that’s probably enough to brief you in.
Significantly, FBI agents found child sexual abuse images and videos going back to at least 2014 — well before Meeks “debunked” the Comet Ping Pong story. In other words, he was doing exactly what he debunked at the time he was debunking it.
(On an aside, in his upcoming sentencing, Meeks faces less prison time than does President Trump.)
I was on the fence about whether to include this story at all, when I did a routine cross-reference search for “ABC child charges.”
I found an epidemic.
Here are just a few of this week’s headlines that one single search returned:
There were more. Maybe a lot more. I don’t even know how many more, I had to stop scrolling due to running out of time.
In a sense, in hindsight, the Comet Ping Pong conspiracy hypothesis was undoubtedly right. Setting aside the fact it was only “debunked” by people like Meeks with obvious motives to bury the story, in a broader perspective, there clearly is a BIG problem. Is this epidemic of pedophilia the temptation created by (apparently) easily-available CSAM (child sexual abuse material) online? Is it naked trans men at the White House? Is it the legalization and acceptance of atypical sexual practices?
The answer is yes – pedophiles do like to advertise that they’re pedophiles. In fact, they actually often brazenly flaunt and brag about their criminal sexual perversion to children. Bright also described himself on his Twitter profile as “pervy”. These details are important to point out and remember in order to understand how these predators have operated so long unnoticed. You must look into their psychology. Child sex offenders have been throwing their crimes against kids in our faces for ages. They think the public is too stupid to catch on to their underground networks and secret language. So they arrogantly gaslight and mock anyone who dares to call them out. I’m singling this incident out because it’s a microcosm of the bigger picture. These tactics are the norm for these criminals. We see this kind of behavior with not only low-profile predators but also with some of the most powerful abusers out there including politicians, celebrities and many other elites.
People who engage in this have small eyes. They say eyes are the window to the soul. In that case we may have visible evidence of their soul's being ripped apart by their atrocities.
« First « Previous Comments 28 - 67 of 78 Next » Last » Search these comments
Our pizza logo
Are you around this sunday
-----Original Message-----
From: James Alefantis [mailto:jamesacorp@gmail.com ]
Sent: Friday, March 18, 2016 5:30 PM
To: Tony Podesta ; Norah Cox-Peled
Subject: Ha
My graphics guy sent this
Do not forward 😄
view pdf