Society's Child
By a 5-4 vote, the justices ruled that online sellers can be required to collect state and local taxes from customers even if the internet vendors have no physical presence, such as a store or factory, in that state.
Conservative groups decried the decision as a constitutional abomination, even though four of the five votes in the majority came from the right-leaning justices on the court.
"Today the Supreme Court said 'yes - you can be taxed by politicians you do not elect and who act knowing you are powerless to object,'" said Grover Norquist, President of Americans for Tax Reform.
"This power can now be used to export sales taxes, personal and corporate income taxes, and opens the door for the European Union to export its tax burden onto American businesses-as they have been demanding."
"My enemies managed to spike something that I ingested," McAfee wrote. "However, I am more difficult to kill than anyone can possibly imagine. I am back."
McAfee also issued a warning to those he alleges carried out the attempt on his life: "You will soon understand the true meaning of wrath. I know exactly who you are."
This happened in an area known as Glen Burnie, Anne Arundel County, Maryland. The ten indictments were issued on June 8th and by June 11th, the first business day after the indictments were issued, the criminals already knew of their pending arrests.
Holland was served an arrest warrant Wednesday and released on her own recognizance. No attorney is listed as representing her in court records.
Which is absolutely astounding! We often hear in America about how poorly black people are treated by the American justice system, but this woman is very close with the Sheriff, she was even working on his reelection campaign and she pretty much gets to walk away without even having to pay a bail?
"Editors, CEOs, shareholders and consumers alike are on notice: anyone relying upon and repeating its misrepresentations is complicit in the SPLC's harmful defamation of large numbers of American citizens who, like the undersigned, have been vilified simply for working to protect our country and freedoms," the signatories wrote.
The letter followed news - broken at PJ Media - that no fewer than 60 organizations are considering suing the SPLC following a groundbreaking settlement in which the organization formally apologized to a Muslim reformer, Maajid Nawaz, for branding him an "anti-Muslim extremist."
In 2016, the SPLC published its "Field Guide to Anti-Muslim Extremists," listing Muslim reformer Maajid Nawaz, a practicing Muslim, as one such extremist. The left-wing group listed various and changing reasons for including him, even at one point mentioning that he had gone to a strip club for his bachelor party. On Monday, the SPLC apologized and paid $3.375 million to settle a lawsuit Nawaz had filed.
"We haven't filed anything against the SPLC, but I think a number of organizations have been considering filing lawsuits against the SPLC because they have been doing to a lot of organizations exactly what they did to Maajid Nawaz," Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel, told PJ Media on Tuesday.
Representatives of the Family Research Council (FRC), the Ruth Institute, and Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) told PJ Media they were considering "legal options."
Comment: Another largely meaningless and defamatory epithet shamelessly thrown around by the SPLC: anti-Semitism. With any luck these groups will go through with their lawsuit and bankrupt the SPLC. They really deserve it.
The two, who did not give their surname, have made the journey from York in northern England for the tournament and regularly attend major footballing events, such as the previous World Cup in Brazil in 2014.
But they have made a promise not to watch England at Russia 2018. Speaking to RT, the pair, who are dyed-in-the-wool York City supporters, said that they had grown tired of the intimidating behavior of England fans abroad.
"We wouldn't want to do that, it's just awful isn't it," said son Simon, flanked by father Peter, who is deaf and was proudly wearing the colours of his beloved York. "Because of the aggressive fans who watch them and want to intimidate everyone.
According to a report from CBS San Francisco, the DNA of every person born in California since 1983 is stored in a state biobank. Police, the government, and outside researchers have access to it. While parents can request that their children's DNA samples be destroyed, the state is not obligated to honor the request or to report if it has been carried out.
In what may seem as far-fetched as NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden's revelation that the government is spying on all Americans, such DNA could potentially be used against children in a court of law, or be sold to potential bidders much like Planned Parenthood reportedly does with aborted baby body parts. What scientists can do with one's DNA is limitless.
Comment: What they're really doing with the DNA is up for debate but it's pretty much guaranteed that it's for nefarious purposes.
Fonda wasn't done though.
He threatened the children of border agents.
And called for mass protests against the "Giant A$$hole" President Trump.

Members of the Iraqi Hezbollah Brigades carry flags in front of portraits of fellow members who were killed in air raids four days earlier, during a memorial ceremony in Baghdad.
Iraq's Hezbollah Brigades militia has said 22 of its fighters were killed in an air strike Sunday on a military base in eastern Syria that reportedly killed more than 50 people.
Both Damascus and the Iraqi militia at first pointed the finger at the US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group in the area.
But a US official said there was cause to believe Israel carried out the deadly raid along the border with Iraq that hit forces battling on the side of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad.
Hezbollah Brigades spokesman Jaafar al-Husseini said it was still too early to say definitively whose forces carried out the strike, but insisted it "could only have been" the Americans or Israelis.
Consumers can expect to see sales tax charged on more online purchases - likely over the next year and potentially before the Christmas shopping season - as states and retailers react to the court's decision, said one attorney involved in the case.
The Supreme Court's 5-4 opinion Thursday overruled a pair of decades-old decisions that states said cost them billions of dollars in lost revenue annually. The decisions made it more difficult for states to collect sales tax on certain online purchases, and more than 40 states had asked the high court for action. Five states don't charge sales tax.
The cases the court overturned said that if a business was shipping a customer's purchase to a state where the business didn't have a physical presence such as a warehouse or office, the business didn't have to collect sales tax for the state. Customers were generally responsible for paying the sales tax to the state themselves if they weren't charged it, but most didn't realize they owed it and few paid.
Investigators say, 26-year-old Shawn Christy threatened the President's life and it's not the first time he threatened a public figure.
Eyewitness News Reporter Haley Bianco has been following this developing story all morning.
Law officers tell Eyewitness News they're taking this very seriously because of his past, harassing and threatening other leaders and police officers. At this moment, police are searching the nearby woods in McAdoo.
"Said he was going to shoot the President. And that's when I called the Secret Service," Craig Christy, father of Shawn Christy said.















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