Iran releases Oscar-winning film actress held over protests

Top News: US & International Top News Stories Today | AP News 

FILE – This May 21, 2016 file photo shows actress Taraneh Alidoosti during a photo call for the film “Forushande” (The Salesman) at the 69th international film festival, Cannes, southern France. Iranian authorities arrested Alidoosti, one of the country’s most famous actresses on charges of spreading falsehoods about nationwide protests that grip the country, state media said Saturday, Dec. 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran released a prominent actress from an Oscar-winning film on Wednesday, nearly three weeks after she was jailed for criticizing a crackdown on anti-government protests, local reports said.

Iran’s semi-official ISNA news agency said Taraneh Alidoosti, the 38-year-old star of Asghar Farhadi’s Oscar-winning “The Salesman,” was released on bail. Her mother, Nadere Hakimelahi, had earlier said she would be released in a post on Instagram.

Alidoosti was among several Iranian celebrities to express support for the nationwide protests and criticize the authorities’ violent clampdown on dissent. She had posted at least three messages in support of the protests on Instagram before her account was disabled.

One message had expressed solidarity with the first man to be executed on charges linked to the protests, which were triggered by the death of a woman in police custody and have escalated into widespread calls for the overthrow of Iran’s ruling clerics.

The protests mark one of the biggest challenges to the Islamic Republic since it was established after the 1979 revolution. Security forces have used live ammunition, bird shot, tear gas and batons to disperse protesters, according to rights groups.

Hub peek embed (Iran) – Compressed layout (automatic embed)

Mohsen Shekari was executed Dec. 9 after being charged by an Iranian court with blocking a street in Tehran and attacking a member of the country’s security forces with a machete. A week later, Iran executed a second prisoner, Majidreza Rahnavard, by public hanging. He had been accused of stabbing two members of the paramilitary Basij militia, which is leading the crackdown.

Activists say at least a dozen people have been sentenced to death in closed-door hearings over charges linked to the protests.

″His name was Mohsen Shekari,” Alidoosti wrote on an account with some 8 million followers before her arrest. “Every international organization who is watching this bloodshed and not taking action, is a disgrace to humanity.”

At least 516 protesters have been killed and over 19,000 people have been arrested, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group that has closely monitored the unrest. Iranian authorities have not provided an official count of those killed or detained.

Hengameh Ghaziani and Katayoun Riahi, two other famous Iranian actresses, were arrested in November for expressing solidarity with protesters on social media. Voria Ghafouri, an Iranian soccer star, was also arrested that month for ’’insulting the national soccer team and propagandizing against the government.” All three have been released.

The protests began in mid-September, when 22-year-old Mahsa Amini died after being arrested by Iran’s morality police for allegedly violating the Islamic Republic’s strict dress code. Women have played a leading role in the protests, with many publicly stripping off the compulsory Islamic headscarf, known as the hijab.

The protesters say they are fed up after decades of political and social repression. One of the main slogans has been “Death to the dictator,” referring to Iran’s 83-year-old Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has held the country’s highest office for more than three decades.

Iranian officials blame the protests on the U.S. and other foreign powers. State-linked media have highlighted attacks on security forces, while authorities have imposed heavy restrictions on coverage of the demonstrations, including periodically cutting off internet access.

Khamenei, who has said little about the protests, spoke about Islamic dress on Wednesday in a meeting with women, saying the hijab is necessary but that those who do not “completely observe” the practice “should not be accused of being non-religious or against the revolution.”

Even before the protests, many Iranian women wore the headscarf loosely, and authorities sometimes eased off on enforcing it, particulary during the presidency of Hassan Rouhani, a relative moderate who governed from 2013 to 2021. His successor, the hard-liner Ebrahim Raisi, had moved to tighten the restrictions.

Alidoosti had previously criticised the Iranian government and its police force before this year’s protests.

In June 2020, she was given a suspended five-month prison sentence after she criticized the police on Twitter in 2018 for assaulting a woman who had removed her headscarf.

Other well-known movies Alidoosti has starred in include “The Beautiful City” and “About Elly.”

 

Read More 

GREG GUTFELD: The nuts are being seen for what they truly are

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Greg Gutfeld explains how things “went too far” in the past year and how 2023 has the opportunity to be a year to right the wrongs in the country on “Gutfeld!

GREG GUTFELD: PARENTS LAWYERS UP OVER TRANSGENDER TEACHER WITH GIANT INFLATABLE BREASTS

GREG GUTFELD: Hope you had a great New Year’s Eve. I don’t know if I did. Which means I did. Yes. Now, I’m not an optimist or a pessimist or even a gynecologist, despite what it says on my business cards. But I always see my glass half full, especially while I’m waiting for the pill to dissolve in my drink. Because that’s what America is. And I believe we have a lot of room for optimism because like a pervert with an iPhone at the bottom of an escalator, things can only look up because after all, right now, everything is down in the dumps. We’re talking lower than Don Lemon’s ratings or Nancy Pelosi’s neckline. And I know the economy, crime. How can this stuff get any worse? 

Oh, yeah Kilmeade’s today. Talk about getting off on a good foot, huh? But we do have reason to think positively for a whole bunch of things. You’ve heard of the slippery slope, and I don’t mean the ramp that slides UPS deliverymen into my basement. Slippery slope is when stuff keeps getting worse by virtue of it already being bad. Well, I believe 2023 is the year when the slope hits the wall, and that’s because stuff just went too far. We let the nuts take the driver’s seat and it’s time for the pendulum to swing back to some form of normalcy. The adults need to take charge and not ones in diapers

Here are my predictions, which are basically hopes. First, we’ll start treating crime like crime again. For so long, we let far-left radicals define crime as a response to injustice, like the unfairness of having to pay for deodorant instead of stealing it from CVS, or the inequity of some people not wanting to be stabbed. How dare they? Yet over time, social injustice and poverty decrease, but crime still doesn’t. Like Kilmeade’s next book, it only gets worse. 

Fact is, their radical theories were as corrupt as their radical solutions. But now it has to get better because it can’t get any worse. And what about biology? Once again, we’ve let the slippery slope turn into a 90 degree cliff where genital’s reality is so bent you think it has Peyronie’s disease. 

With men happily calling themselves women and other men who used to be women claiming to give birth while other women claimed to have penises and not the ones belonging to their husbands that they keep in their purses. For a while there we sat back and we were really polite, figuring we didn’t want to hurt the feelings of crazy people in public. But now that the insane has taken over not just the asylums, but school boards and hospitals and pediatric associations, I think parents have had enough and they’re speaking up and speaking out. And the nuts who identify as something else are being seen for what they truly are. Nuts. It’s not about drag queen story hour. 

It’s about genital mutilation, redefined as gender affirmation. Hopefully, parents in general will start taking their kid’s education more seriously, seriously enough to beat the left wing unions into retreat and send the green haired teachers babbling on TikTok back to where they belong. A therapist office. Other non-science seems to be hitting a wall, too. COVID hysteria is being driven out by good, old-fashioned American attitude. We canceled our lives, closed our businesses, and hunkered down at our homes while the big shots went on vacation or ate maskless in fancy restaurants. But we’re done here and it’s time to move on. It’s time to get masks out of schools and send them back to where they belong. At orgies for rich people. 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

Finally, it seems that cancel culture is on the ropes and it’s this show and it’s this audience that made that happen. Sure, the weasels will still come after us, howling from their social media perches desperately trying to reinvigorate the mob, all the while paying Elon eight bucks a month. But we got them where we want them. Now’s the time to send them grabbing their bags like they’re Sam Brinton at the Southwest carousel. I’m not going to lie. I miss him and his shiny head. This is the year to do it. So either you’re with me or against me. And frankly, I don’t know which one I’d like more. 

 

Read More 

 

Sean Hannity: Republicans need to heed Ronald Reagan’s advice amid speakership fight

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

Fox News host Sean Hannity asked what Ronald Reagan would do in the midst of the Republicans’ party split over who should be chosen as the next House speaker in Tuesday’s monologue. 

SEAN HANNITY: Now it is time to get serious with the small majority in the House. It’s critically important for Republicans to come together as an important check and balance to the Biden administration and the Democratic Socialist Party. And tonight we ask the question, how about this question? What would Ronald Reagan say? What would Ronald Reagan do? Now, as President Reagan famously told his staff, quote, The person that agrees with you 80% of the time is a friend and an ally, not a 20% traitor. Republicans, they would be wise to heed that advice. As of right now, 19 Republicans, they are determined to block McCarthy and that means lawmakers cannot be sworn in. Committee assignments are delayed. The Republican investigations are stalled. And now this is not a big deal as of today, if we lose a day or two. But if this fight goes on and on for day after day, week after week, and the Republican agenda totally stalls out, you can forget about holding Biden accountable pretty much for anything. And the country will be angry and frustrated and they will feel betrayed. 

MCCARTHY FALLS SHORT IN THIRD HOUSE SPEAKER VOTE AS JORDAN GAINS MOMENTUM

And you can forget about securing the border. You can forget about exposing the bias, the corruption. Has FBI the been politicized? Is the DOJ being weaponized? And by the way, you can forget about, you know, holding Dr. Fauci’s feet to the fire. I think the time has come for that. Even worse, some of the McCarthy holdouts, they are now even reportedly threatening, according to reports, to vote for Democrat Hakeem Jeffries if they don’t get their way. Needless to say, that would be a massive betrayal to every single person in the country that voted for a Republican as one party Democratic rule would then continue. At the end of the day, the American people, they voted for governance. They voted for oversight. They voted for checks. They voted for balances. They didn’t vote for Republicans to go to DC and waste time and bicker among themselves and grandstand and with the right to vacate and the motion to vacate available to them. 

CLICK TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

 

Read More 

 

Ant gets approval to expand its consumer finance business

US Top News and Analysis 

Regulatory scrutiny forced Hangzhou-based Ant Group to abruptly suspend its massive IPO plans in 2020.
Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

BEIJING — Ant Group’s consumer finance unit has received approval to more than double its registered capital, a sign of progress in resolving regulators’ concerns.

Since the abrupt suspension of its massive IPO in late 2020, Ant has been working with Chinese regulators to restructure its business. Alibaba owns 33% of Ant, which operates one of China’s two dominant mobile pay apps.

Alibaba’s Hong Kong-traded shares traded 8% higher Wednesday. Shares listed in New York closed 4.4% higher overnight.

Ant launched its consumer finance company in 2021 as part of the restructuring.

On Friday, the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission said it approved Ant’s request to increase the amount of registered capital for the consumer unit, to 18.5 billion yuan from 8 billion yuan.

Ant will still hold a 50% stake in the consumer finance company, according to the announcement. New investors in the other half of the company include an entity backed by the Hangzhou government and Sunny Optical Technology.

“This is a positive start of the steps that Ant Financial needs to go through [with] its restructuring process under the supervision of the CBIRC and PBOC,” said Winston Ma, adjunct professor of law at New York University.

VIDEO2:1002:10
Alibaba is one of our top picks this year, says asset management firm

It remains unclear what the timeline is, if any, for a revival of IPO plans. Ant has yet to receive a financial holding company license from the People’s Bank of China. The company did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

The consumer unit houses Ant’s credit businesses Huabei and Jiebei. So-called credit tech had contributed 28.59 billion yuan, or 39.4%, to Ant’s revenue in the first six months of 2020, according to a prospectus.

China’s banking regulator said the company had six months to complete the changes before the capital expansion approval became invalid.

Chinese media previously reported news of the approval, whose terms were previously released publicly.

— CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report.

Read More 

Musk's Twitter to lift ban on political ads 'in coming weeks'

Reversal of course: Twitter Safety’s account announced the changes in a tweet Tuesday evening, saying, “We believe that cause-based advertising can facilitate public conversation around important topics. Today, we’re relaxing our ads policy for cause-based ads in the US.”

The company also announced plans to expand political advertising, but didn’t set a specific time frame beyond “weeks.”

It’s the latest in a series of Musk moves that have reversed policies that were put in place under former CEO and co-founder Jack Dorsey. Dorsey banned all political ads in November 2019, saying in an October 2019 Twitter thread that paying for political reach “has significant ramifications that today’s democratic infrastructure may not be prepared to handle.”

Additionally, Twitter’s former Chief Financial Officer Ned Segal tweeted that political advertising accounted for less than $3 million in the 2018 midterm cycle. Twitter’s total revenue was $3 billion in 2018.

Twitter didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on why it reversed the policies.

Issue-based ads are OK: Twitter reversed Dorsey’s restrictions on issue-based (or cause-based) ads — set in November 2019 — that banned the promotion of such ads and required advertiser certification for ads that “educate, raise awareness, and/or call for people to take action in connection with civic engagement, economic growth, environmental stewardship, or social equity causes.”

Musk has radically reshaped the platform since he bought it for $44 billion, laying off thousands of employees, overseeing a mass exodus of top executives and earning a sharp warning from the FTC.

Prior to Musk’s takeover, 90 percent of Twitter’s revenue came from advertising, but major advertisers have backed away following Musk’s free-wheeling approach to content moderation. Musk launched a revamped version of a $8 monthly Twitter Blue subscription service late last year, and lifting political and issue-based ad bans could be another source of revenue for the company.


source

On this day in history, Jan. 4, 1965, LBJ touts utopian ‘Great Society’ in State of the Union address

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

President Lyndon B. Johnson proposed a utopian new vision for the United States under a vastly expanded federal government, which he dubbed the Great Society, on this day in history, Jan. 4, 1965. 

“We seek to establish a harmony between man and society, which will allow each of us to enlarge the meaning of his life and all of us to elevate the quality of our civilization. This is the search that we begin tonight,” the president declared to the nation in his State of the Union address.

It was the first televised State of the Union, delivered in primetime directly to the American people, not just to both chambers of Congress as the Constitution requires. 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, JAN. 3, 1987, ARETHA FRANKLIN IS FIRST WOMAN INDUCTED INTO ROCK HALL OF FAME

“The Great Society asks not how much, but how good; not only how to create wealth but how to use it; not only how fast we are going, but where we are headed,” the president added, while imploring all Americans to action.

The Great Society “will not be the gift of government or the creation of presidents,” he also said.

Johnson’s vision offered a helping hand to Americans most in need, proponents of the Great Society have argued over the years. 

His vision failed dramatically by any empirical measure and succeeded only in expanding the size and inefficiency of the federal bureaucracy and in institutionalizing generational poverty, its critics have noted.

Johnson assumed the Oval Office following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in November 1963. 

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, NOV. 22, 1963, JOHN F. KENNEDY, 35TH PRESIDENT, IS ASSASSINATED

LBJ was elected to the office a year later, soundly defeating challenger and Arizona Republican Barry Goldwater (486 to 52 votes in the electoral college), just nine weeks before the State of the Union.

He used his overwhelming victory as a mandate in the State of the Union to defend the need for enhanced U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War and to propose the federal government as an answer to a vast array of human ills and societal problems. 

“We are [in Vietnam] first,” he said, “because a friendly nation has asked us for help against the communist aggression … To ignore aggression now would only increase the danger of a much larger war,” he added. 

He then issued nine direct proposals, the foundation of the Great Society, to tackle everything from education and crime to the environment and urban renewal. 

His challenges included more obtuse objectives, too.

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY, JAN. 2, 1920, THOUSANDS DETAINED BY DOJ IN NATIONWIDE ‘PALMER RAIDS’

“I propose that we make an all-out campaign against waste and inefficiency,” Johnson said in announcing his federal government wish list. 

Johnson introduced the term “Great Society” on the campaign trail in 1964, a phrase coined by speechwriter Richard N. Goodwin. 

His 1965 State of the Union was followed by an intense flurry of legislative activity from Democrats on Capitol Hill, who were in the midst of a 26-year period of controlling both chambers of Congress (1955-81). 

“The 1965 State of the Union address heralded the creation of Medicare/Medicaid, Head Start, the Voting Rights Act, the Civil Rights Act, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the White House Conference on Natural Beauty,” writes History.com. 

“Johnson also signed the National Foundation of the Arts and Humanities Act, out of which emerged the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.”

The Great Society was, at its core, an effort to attack poverty in America and the challenges to education, health and opportunity that come with it. 

Johnson had introduced the “war on poverty” in his State of the Union a year earlier.

In this central goal — to reduce or even eliminate poverty — the Great Society has been a boondoggle by any empirical measure. 

EQUINOX’S ANTI-NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION CAMPAIGN CAUSES SOCIAL MEDIA UPROAR: TAKE IT ‘SOMEWHERE ELSE’

“The War on Poverty was destined to be one of the great failures of 20-century liberalism,” said historian and Rice University professor Allen J. Matusow, according to the Foundation for Economic Freedom. 

“Those who most directly benefited,” he continued, “were the middle-class doctors, teachers, social workers, builders and bankers who provided federally subsidized goods and services of sometimes suspect value.”

The foundation added, citing poverty researcher Michael D. Tanner of the Cato Institute: “Throwing money at the problem has neither reduced poverty nor made the poor self-sufficient. Instead, government programs have torn at the social fabric of the country and been a significant factor in increasing out-of-wedlock births with all of their attendant problems.”

It continued, “Most tragically of all, the pathologies they engender have been passed on from parent to child, from generation to generation.”

The quality of public education in America, meanwhile, has declined across all demographics and sectors of society since the 1960s, while the gap between the educational achievement of Black and White children is greater than ever, according to numerous educational studies.

The Great Society has succeeded in turning the federal government into an insatiable leviathan. 

The federal budget ballooned from $118.2 billion, when Johnson came to office in 1963, to $195.6 billion when he left in 1969, according to the American Presidency Project at University of California Santa Barbara. That’s an increase of 65.5%. 

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR LIFESTYLE NEWSLETTER

The federal budget last year was $6 trillion with a $1.8 trillion deficit, according to the same report.

“The hopes and promises articulated by Johnson were grandiose, and inevitably raised expectations (bringing an end to poverty and racism for example) that no president could realistically hope to achieve,” George Washington University historian and professor of political management Matthew Dallek wrote in 2015. 

“Though many of Johnson’s programs remain in place today,” writes History.com, “his legacy of a Great Society has been largely overshadowed by his decision to involve greater numbers of American soldiers in the controversial Vietnam War.”

 

Read More 

 

[World] It’s not over for Kevin McCarthy’s House Speaker bid – here’s why

BBC News world 

Image source, Getty Images

Republican Kevin McCarthy has lost three rounds of voting to become the next Speaker of the House of Representatives, the first time a nominee has been defeated in a century.

The House has now adjourned and will vote again on Wednesday.

The historic losses do not immediately end Mr McCarthy’s candidacy.

But it is unclear how he can convince 20 Republican rebels to back him.

There are only 222 Republicans in the chamber this year so the representative from California could only afford to lose four votes from his party. In each of the first two rounds he secured only 203 votes – and in the third round an extra Republican turned against him.

“We stay in until we win,” a defiant Mr McCarthy told reporters earlier in the day, insisting by nightfall that he would still become Speaker if he kept talking to his members and solved their “small problems”.

All 212 Democrats voted for their party leader, Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York.

What comes next?

The House will keep voting for Speaker until a candidate is elected – but after more than five hours of speeches and voting, members agreed to try again tomorrow.

The chamber cannot proceed with any other business until they have chosen a Speaker. That includes swearing in new members of Congress, and adopting new rules and legislations.

It’s not yet clear how many rounds of balloting it will take for members to decide the contest. The process could continue for days if no consensus is reached.

The last time a candidate for speaker failed to secure the necessary votes on the first round of ballots occurred in 1923. It took nine ballots and several days to select a Speaker.

Why is McCarthy facing opposition?

Past speakers have faced obstacles coming into a new Congress, but have managed to rally their caucus behind them by the time the official vote arrived. But Mr McCarthy has faced opposition from hard-right members of his own party ever since Republicans secured control of the House in last November’s midterm elections.

The holdouts oppose his speakership on ideological and personal grounds, and have spent weeks negotiating Mr McCarthy to win concessions, such as changes to a procedure to oust a sitting speaker.

The pack is led by Representative Andy Biggs of Arizona, who has put himself forward as an alternative if long-shot candidate, and Representative Matt Gaetz of Florida, who spent much of the last Congress under the spectre of a federal investigation. Mr Biggs received 10 votes in the first round, while nine Republicans backed other candidates.

In the second round, the 19 Republicans rallied behind Jim Jordan of Ohio; in a strange twist, Mr Jordan had himself nominated Mr McCarthy. In the third round, Mr Jordan’s tally actually increased to 20 raising the question.

Summing up the frustration with Mr McCarthy, popular right-wing cable news personality Tucker Carlson said: “McCarthy is not especially conservative. He’s ideologically agnostic. His real constituency is the lobbying community in Washington. If you’ve got sincere political beliefs, that’s infuriating.”

 

Read More 

Chrysler Previews 37.2-Inch Infotainment Screens For Next-Gen Electric Cars

Carscoops 

Chrysler will be the first Stellantis brand to introduce next-generation infotainment technology in North America, based on the upcoming Stellantis electric vehicle platform, STLA. That will include massive infotainment screens that span the entirety of a vehicle’s dash, in addition to autonomous technologies, and more.

The automaker is showcasing that technology with a two-seater cockpit concept that it is presenting at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2023, in Las Vegas this week. Although the showcase is presented without a body, its design and essence are based on the Airflow Concept, which Chrysler first showed a year ago at CES 2022.

Dubbed the Chrysler Synthesis cockpit (which people who can’t attend the show can play with online), it features 37.2-inches (94.4 cm) of screens for the front-row passengers on two large glass sections that span the entirety of the dashboard.

Read: Chrysler Airflow Concept Previews All Electric Future For Brand By 2028

Using advanced AI technology, Chrysler says that the infotainment system will learn owner preferences over time. Over-the-air updates, meanwhile, will allow the automaker to update the software contained within the “STLA Brain” over time to keep it up to date and exciting.

The system will also power a virtual assistant that can synchronize all aspects of an owner’s day. The assistant could work in the car and outside of it, looking at their calendar to suggest driving routes, recommend parking and charging locations, connect to a smart home, and assist with e-commerce services, Chrysler says.

The automaker promises that the STLA platform will offer level three autonomous driving. That will allow drivers to take their hands off the wheel and their eyes off the road, thanks to STLA AutoDrive technology.

The design of the cockpit, meanwhile, includes green materials, like recycled plastics, vegetable-tanned, suspended seats, and the exclusion of all chrome. That leads to intriguing and ecological material choices, like the heather dash pad and the textile-infused walnut flooring, which give the interior a modern and luxurious appeal.

At CES, visitors will be treated to a day in the life of a future Chrysler owner, starting with a “welcome” that plans an intelligent route for the day and handles autonomous driving, managing the charge status and the parking. Attendees can also experience the Chill, Zen, and Fun modes that create an in-car experience that allows occupants to create their own music while they are driven autonomously.

Chrysler plans to introduce its first all-electric vehicle in 2025 and will offer a fully-electrified lineup by 2028.

Read More 

Chevrolets, Nissans, Teslas, and More Qualify for the New 2023 Tax Credit

The New Year is here, and you know what that means, friends. Tax season is right around the corner.

Sorry, we didn’t mean to be rude. But it’s not all bad news, especially if you purchased an electric vehicle in 2022. 

As part of President Biden’s $430 billion Inflation Reduction Act, which passed last August, people who purchased an electric vehicle last year are eligible for a tax credit of up to $7,500.


source

JESSE WATTERS: 'Mini-Madoff' took millions in 'rat poison' and fed it to Joe Biden

Fox News host Jesse Watters warns Sam Bankman-Fried is in “trouble” if there is any similarity between his case and Bernie Madoff’s scheme involving the mob’s money on “Jesse Watters Primetime.”

A new Netflix documentary says Bernie Madoff was taking millions of dollars in from criminals – everybody from drug cartels to Russian mobsters. And when they all came knocking on Bernie’s door to have it back, he didn’t have it. Instead of paying up, the documentary says Madoff pled guilty to 150-year prison sentence so he wouldn’t get whacked. Remember, Madoff just confessed, said I did it, said send me away. If Madoff for years was able to get away with taking in mob money, drug money, right under the nose of the feds, just imagine what’s going on in crypto, the currency notorious with mobsters, sex traffickers and hackers. Warren Buffett’s right-hand man calls it “rat poison.” 

‘DIRTBAG’ SAM BANKMAN-FRIED IS ‘WORSE THAN MADOFF’ BUT LIKELY WON’T STAND TRIAL, PIRRO SAYS

Sam Bankman-Fried leaves Federal Court in New York City on Thursday, December 22, 2022. The former CEO of FTX and Alameda has been released on $250M bail.

Sam Bankman-Fried leaves Federal Court in New York City on Thursday, December 22, 2022. The former CEO of FTX and Alameda has been released on $250M bail.
(Charles Guerin/Abaca for Fox News Digital)

The Democratic Party must love them some “rat poison” because Sam “Mini-Madoff” took millions in rat poison and fed it to Joe Biden. Did drug money buy the Democrats the Senate? Oh, just look for yourself. $41 million right into the Democrats’ dirty war chest. Where’d the stolen crypto money come from? Well, if we’re learning anything from Bernie Madoff’s story, it’s that this is a lot of dirty, stolen money and people are dying over it. 

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

In the past few months, there’s been a slew of crypto executives dropping dead. Yeah. One died in his sleep, another died from a helicopter crash and the other one died drowning in Puerto Rico. Is this all a coincidence? Well, we don’t know. But we do know if Mini’s investors were cartels and mobsters, Mini’s in some trouble and so are all the other crypto brokers who lost the mob’s money.

source
Fox News

Fox News>