💰 Grifter "Mad at the Internet" - a/k/a My Psychotherapy Sessions

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What show/comic is this? The background music makes me hate it even more -- leftist killing fantasy has no concept of gravitas that should come with death, but instead gets some children's song as if killing someone is equivalent to playground revenge.
It’s called Creature Commandos, it’s a follow up to suicide squad, and James Gunn is the one behind it.
 
@Null more news.

A German national in the US with an H1B visa got into a shootout with Border Patrol. Killed an agent and was killed. He was a cracked software dev and an International Olympiad in Informatics gold medalist: https://x.com/deedydas/status/1882104649668530586

And here's the twist, Felix here was actually Ophelia! https://x.com/jessi_cata/status/1882182975804363141

Here is this being confirmed by the same person: https://x.com/jessi_cata/status/1882186245654339611

He was apparently involved in some kinda rationalist adjacent deathcult called Ziz. I know nothing about it but here are links : http://sinceriously.fyi/
Apparently it's down regularly: https://sinceriously.blog-mirror.com/
It's described as "anti-familial. Dedication to universal ethics. Utilitarianism including non-human animals. Ziz was perhaps involved in homicide of parent of person involved."

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I also came across this image while looking at the replies of the previous post. Haven't verified though

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Also, I am a retard and would appreciate if someone else could make archives of the tweets.

Edit: Info on the cult, I haven't verified anything, I am just curating tweets right now: https://x.com/Kenku_Allaryi/status/1700065676344377747
 
Tranny makes a mockery of motherhood by making a video about adopting some freeloading manchildren.


Some timestamps
0:50
4:35
15:15
26:41 (his "kids" dont know how to how to do basic car shit)
30:44 good look at the inside of his car.
 
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Going with the theme today of school shooters, and I having already posted one story about the mainstream YouTube real-crime channel Explore With Us... This weeks video posted 4 days ago is about a school shooter. But not just any school shooter. A pooner shooter! Who in the video, during interrogation, admits that their poonerness is why they wanted to shoot people.

This channel has 6 million subscribers, and is saying what used to be the quiet part out loud on YouTube.


Memorable moments:

5:25 "Oh shit I've been exposed... I'm trans, and my breasts just flew everywhere" when being searched by police.
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16:46 talks about being transgender
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If you dont remember the case, this was in 2020 https://abc7.com/alec-mckinney-school-shooting-transgender-stem-highlands-ranch/6334269/

The pooners have ben the shooters longer than todays media cares to admit.
 
What are the rules for donations? I want to send a youtube link, but I can't find how much I'm supposed to donate
So far the rules are 10$ for videos, and no religious texts.
I think they should be codified somewhere for easy checking.
 
The song isn't original to the clip,but the real clip is even worse, the first guy he shoots has been taking care of the robot for a long time and was trying to befriend/recruit him but the robot just wilds out and goes on a murder spree the second he sees a swastika.
Not to mention there’s like, straight up old dudes in walkers trying to shuffle away. Like it’s something out of those 80s Archie comics where he prays and god strikes someone down with lighting.

The level of power fantasies going on would make the average harem anime fan feel emberassed.

Also, we need to compare that Black Academic manifesto to the latest one. Would be an interesting perspective to see. Does anyone remember what that guy was called? SEO is fucked atm.
 
Also, we need to compare that Black Academic manifesto to the latest one. Would be an interesting perspective to see. Does anyone remember what that guy was called? SEO is fucked atm.
Matthew Harris? Are you thinking of mister Unbreaded?
 
Ross pretty clearly deserved to enjoy prison. He also pretty clearly was way over sentenced.
The judge sentenced him more harshly because he was white.

white.jpeg

The Obama appointee judge
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There was all sorts of federal misconduct involved. The investigating federal agents went to jail for corruption. I think one of them stole the bitcoin from the silk road and the FBI sold off the rest. He had 144,000 bitcoins at the time. The murder for hire was never substantiated and was dropped (but was still used for sentencing)
 
NYT wrote an article on how actually, making it illegal to trade with Mexican cartels is actually a bad thing

How Labeling Cartels ‘Terrorists’ Could Hurt the U.S. Economy

Isolating U.S. companies from cartel activities could be almost impossible given that the criminal groups operate in sectors like agriculture and tourism, leaving some American businesses vulnerable to sanctions.
President Trump's executive order designating Mexican cartels and other criminal organizations as foreign terrorists could force some American companies to forgo doing business in Mexico rather than risk U.S. sanctions, according to former government officials and analysts — an outcome that could have a major effect on both countries given their deep economic interdependence.
The executive order, which Mr. Trump signed on Monday, is intended to apply maximum pressure on Mexico to rein in its dangerous drug trade. The designation, more generally, also gives his administration more power to impose economic penalties and travel restrictions, and potentially even to take military action in foreign countries.
Yet, disentangling cartel operations from U.S. interests in Mexico could be immensely complicated. Mexico is the United States' largest trade partner of goods, and many American companies have manufacturing operations there.
Even more complicated, these criminal networks have extended their operations far beyond drug trafficking and human smuggling. They are now embedded in a wide swath of the legal economy, from avocado farming to the country's billion-dollar tourism industry, making it hard to be absolutely sure that American companies are isolated from cartel activities.
"This has come up in previous administrations across the political spectrum and from members of Congress who have wanted to do it," said Samantha Sultoon, a senior adviser on sanctions policy and threat finance in the Trump and Biden administrations.
"But no one has done it because they have looked at what the implications would be on trade, economic and financial relationships between Mexico and the United States," she added. "They have all come away thinking that such a designation would actually be super shortsighted and ill-considered, though prior administrations viewed the U.S.-Mexico relationship far differently than the incoming Trump administration appears to."
The foreign terrorist designation could lead to severe penalties — including substantial fines, asset seizures and criminal charges — on companies and individuals found to be paying ransom or extortion payments. U.S. companies could also be ensnared by standard payments made to Mexican companies that a cartel controls without the American companies' knowledge.
Some extortion payments, even if made under duress, could be considered "material support" to cartels, said Pablo Zárate, senior managing director at FTI Consulting, an American firm that released a report laying out some of the risks of the terrorist designation.
Former U.S. officials and analysts pointed out that it would be nearly impossible to identify which business may employ or be affiliated with cartel members given the tens of thousands of people involved and operating in various industries, including the hotel and agriculture sectors. Cartels use the legal economy to launder money, which could mean that unwitting employees working at a resort or an avocado packing company could technically be on the cartel payroll but not know it.
As a result, companies in the risk-averse American financial sector may simply refuse to wire money to a Mexican factory, for example, to facilitate cross-border production and trade, or to wire money between personal accounts.
"Banks may turn away customers, because they may not think they are worth the risk if they have links to Mexico," said Eric Jacobstein, a former State Department official in the Biden administration.
Banks could ultimately decide to avoid entire sectors perceived as high risk, said Fabian Teichmann, a Swiss lawyer and expert on terrorist financing. Mr. Teichmann singled out Mexico's avocado trade, where cartels have drastically expanded their operations, as one area that could come under greater scrutiny.
"Banks might say, 'We don't want to be anywhere close to those who are considered to be terrorists, so we want to avoid that risk,'" Mr. Teichmann said. "From a banking perspective, that will be a very reasonable decision."
Other types of financial institutions that facilitate payments between the United States and Mexico could also be affected, such as Venmo or PayPal, which Mr. Trump's close confidant Elon Musk helped found.
The terrorist label could also push big parts of Mexico's economy further into the shadows, where cash is used instead of electronically traceable transactions, making it harder for investigators to examine the cartels' financial structures, Mr. Teichmann said.
"If people can't bank legitimately, they escape to so-called underground banking systems," Mr. Teichmann said.
In 2024, the American Chamber of Commerce in Mexico surveyed 218 companies and found that 12 percent of respondents said that "organized crime has taken partial control of the sales, distribution and/or pricing of their goods."
The multinational banana producer Chiquita Brands was found liable in 2024 for killings by a Colombian right-wing paramilitary group that was designated as a terrorist organization. Chiquita Brands said that it had been extorted by the paramilitary group and forced to make payments to protect its Colombian employees. Plaintiffs, however, argued that the company had paid the paramilitary group to run out residents to buy land at depressed values.
The terrorist designation would also hurt American companies that are firmly north of the border but rely on Mexican labor. The designation is so broad and vague that ranches in Texas or farms in California could be swept up by the penalties if their employees send remittances to family members in Mexico who are involved in organized crime.
If money transfer companies like Western Union also stop transactions to Mexico over worries about properly vetting Mexican clients, it could affect the remittances the country relies on. That would be devastating for the Mexican economy, which received $63.3 billion in remittances in 2023, nearly 5 percent of the country's gross domestic product.
The foreign terrorist designation could also pave the way for the United States to deploy forces inside Mexico against criminal organizations without the Mexican government's consent, as it did in Afghanistan and Syria.
But Afghanistan was occupied by the United States, and Syria's government lost control over much of its territory in recent years. That gave Washington some cover under international law for the American military to deploy troops and launch special-forces operations to kill or capture terrorist leaders in those countries.
Mexico, however, has built up cooperation with the United States for over 30 years to counter the cartels. Mexico could threaten to halt cooperation if the United States is seen to be violating Mexico's sovereignty. When the U.S. federal prosecutors office arrested Mexico's former defense secretary during Mr. Trump's first administration, the Mexican government halted all cooperation with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
"Unilateral action would be catastrophic," said Craig Deare, a former U.S. military attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico in the 1990s.
Article above if anyone cares to read it. However funny it is to see the news media decide that the murders, drug smugglers, human traffickers, rapists, and literal terrorists are actually a good thing because Orange Man said they were bad, that's not what I'd like to focus on. I want to direct your attention to one quote, that will possibly strike the average MATI listener as particularly funny.
"If people can't bank legitimately, they escape to so-called underground banking systems," Mr. Teichmann said.
Possibly debanking cartels as a 2nd order effect of declaring them terrorists is somehow worse than all of the legal business activity that do get debanked for whatever arbitrary reasons. Thanks NYT, very cool. *sigh*
 
Niggercell Manifesto in full, provided by the Endingpointer X account. Real? Not real? You be the judge and sweep accordingly.
I knew someone who was actually this crazy. He could have written something like this.
 
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