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Is China Interfering in the US Election? The Mysterious Lincoln Project Causing Trump Problems

londoncabby

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Really amazed to see Char Kway Teow on the menu in so many places worldwide, even Orlando, Flordia! :smile:

I think I am settled on vacating there with a mind to relocate to Florida one day. :wink:

We have several Malaysian, Singapore food all over Florida. Singaporeans/Malaysians are everywhere. We are spending December here in Florida where its much warmer than NY area. Last year my wife was at Supermarket and someone asked her if she is from Singapore after hearing her talk to me on cell phone. So we have met about 20 or 30 of them here in Florida alone. Mainly we each go to each other's home and cook. Our favorite Chinese in the area is owned by Malaysian Chinese lady from Johor.

Small world we live in
 

kiketerm

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We have several Malaysian, Singapore food all over Florida. Singaporeans/Malaysians are everywhere. We are spending December here in Florida where its much warmer than NY area. Last year my wife was at Supermarket and someone asked her if she is from Singapore after hearing her talk to me on cell phone. So we have met about 20 or 30 of them here in Florida alone. Mainly we each go to each other's home and cook. Our favorite Chinese in the area is owned by Malaysian Chinese lady from Johor.

Small world we live in

Sounds idyllic. But I dont know myself If I would want to mix in with other Singaporeans. I dont like their attitudes.:o-o:
 

londoncabby

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Sounds idyllic. But I dont know myself If I would want to mix in with other Singaporeans. I dont like their attitudes.:o-o:

We love it here in Florida. Its 20 Degrees in New Jersey but 70 Degs where we are. There are many groups here but I notice in recent years we have a large number of Indians now. We have a small group for get togethers one woman is from Johor, one Professor is is Malaysia a few Singaporeans, one is a Dentist, but we mostly do our own thing.

We have recently made friends with a couple at our Tennis Club who are from Germany, so there are a mix of people. Tell you the truth I prefer to not mix with too many Singaporeans myself, they tend to all behave the same.
 

kiketerm

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We love it here in Florida. Its 20 Degrees in New Jersey but 70 Degs where we are. There are many groups here but I notice in recent years we have a large number of Indians now. We have a small group for get togethers one woman is from Johor, one Professor is is Malaysia a few Singaporeans, one is a Dentist, but we mostly do our own thing.

We have recently made friends with a couple at our Tennis Club who are from Germany, so there are a mix of people. Tell you the truth I prefer to not mix with too many Singaporeans myself, they tend to all behave the same.

LOL! If Florida has a CECA problem, I hope these Indians have come to enjoy the ridiculous Florida politics with Desantis, Rick Scott, Marco Rubio, and Matt Gaetz. :roflmao:

Still the Sunshine, Low Taxes and enviable lifestyle makes the state attractive to me. I plan on visiting at some point. I just wont like the politics there. :confused:

Singaporeans behave badly no matter where they go. Just look at this forum, its a good reflection of Singapore Society :tongue::tongue::tongue:
 

londoncabby

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LOL! If Florida has a CECA problem, I hope these Indians have come to enjoy the ridiculous Florida politics with Desantis, Rick Scott, Marco Rubio, and Matt Gaetz. :roflmao:

Still the Sunshine, Low Taxes and enviable lifestyle makes the state attractive to me. I plan on visiting at some point. I just wont like the politics there. :confused:

Singaporeans behave badly no matter where they go. Just look at this forum, its a good reflection of Singapore Society :tongue::tongue::tongue:

People from India coming in large numbers to both Florida and Texas. They come for the weather, and lower cost of living compared to New York, California. Here in Florida their numbers are increasing, now we can see Indian Supermarkets next to the Chinese/Oriental ones.

You can see many more on the roads, they usually for some reason all drive Toyotas.

I dont really get involved in Politics, as whenever I vote for a candidate who promises to lower my taxes, I usually end up paying even more.

We will be going back to New Jersey end Feb, enjoying the weather down here.
 

Hypocrite-The

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21 Men Accuse Lincoln Project Co-Founder of Online Harassment
John Weaver, a longtime G.O.P. operative who advised John McCain and John Kasich, made sexual overtures to young men, sometimes offering to help them get work in politics.




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John Weaver in 2016, when he worked on John Kasich’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination.

John Weaver in 2016, when he worked on John Kasich’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination.Credit...Charles Krupa/Associated Press
Maggie Astor Danny Hakim
By Maggie Astor and Danny Hakim
  • Jan. 31, 2021
John Weaver, a longtime Republican strategist and co-founder of the prominent anti-Trump group the Lincoln Project, has for years sent unsolicited and sexually provocative messages online to young men, often while suggesting he could help them get work in politics, according to interviews with 21 men who received them.
His solicitations included sending messages to a 14-year-old, asking questions about his body while he was still in high school and then more pointed ones after he turned 18.
These messages from Mr. Weaver, 61, who helped run John McCain’s presidential campaigns in 2000 and 2008 and John Kasich’s in 2016, did not lead to physical encounters except in one consensual case, and none of the men accused Mr. Weaver of unlawful conduct. Rather, many of them described feeling preyed upon by an influential older man in the field in which they wanted to work, and believing they had to engage with his repeated messaging or lose a professional opportunity.
Mr. Weaver sent overt sexual solicitations to at least 10 of the men and, in the most explicit messages, offered professional and personal assistance in exchange for sex. He told one man he would “spoil you when we see each other,” according to a message reviewed by The New York Times. “Help you other times. Give advice, counsel, help with bills. You help me … sensually.”
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Lincoln Project leaders, in their first extended comments about Mr. Weaver, said they had not been aware of such allegations until this month, when articles in The American Conservative and Forensic News, and an open letter on Twitter from a data analyst named Garrett Herrin, accused Mr. Weaver of grooming young men online.

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Steve Schmidt, a co-founder of the group, said its leaders had learned last summer from social media posts that Mr. Weaver, who has a wife and two children, might be involved in relationships with men, but emphasized, “There was no awareness or insinuations of any type of inappropriate behavior when we became aware of the chatter at the time.” Mr. Weaver denied the claims, Mr. Schmidt said in an interview.
In mid-January, after the allegations gained public attention, Mr. Weaver issued a statement acknowledging he had sent “inappropriate” messages and apologizing “to the men I made uncomfortable,” while saying he had believed all of his interactions to be consensual. He said he would not return to the Lincoln Project from a medical leave that began in the summer.
Interviews with the 21 young men, as well as a review of screenshots of dozens of messages he sent them over the last five years, show that his online behavior was in many cases aggressive and unwanted.
Cole Trickle Miele was 14 when he followed Mr. Weaver on Twitter in 2015 and quickly received a direct message from him. At first, he did not think anything was amiss.
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“I remember being a 14-year-old kid interested in politics and being semi-starstruck by John Weaver engaging in a conversation with me,” said Mr. Trickle Miele, now 19. At the time, he supported the Republican Party and was a fan of Mr. Kasich, the Ohio governor whom Mr. Weaver was helping prepare to join the presidential race.
But as the messages kept coming, he became uncomfortable.
In June 2018, Mr. Weaver asked, “Are you in HS still?” — referring to high school — and Mr. Trickle Miele said that he was, and that he would be 18 the next spring. “You look older,” Mr. Weaver replied. “You’ve gotten taller.”
In March 2020, when Mr. Trickle Miele was 18, Mr. Weaver wrote, “I want to come to Vegas and take you to dinner and drinks and spoil you!!,” and in a follow-up message used a term that in sexual banter refers to one’s body: “Hey my boy! resend me your stats! or I can guess! if that is easier or more fun!”
Mr. Weaver, in response to questions about specific allegations, reiterated his statement from earlier this month and said: “I am so disheartened and sad that I may have brought discomfort to anyone in what I thought at the time were mutually consensual discussions. In living a deeply closeted life, I allowed my pain to cause pain for others. For that I am truly sorry to these men and everyone and for letting so many people down.”
Mr. Weaver was one of a handful of veteran Republican operatives who formed the Lincoln Project because, they said, they considered Mr. Trump a danger to the country. With mocking ads that often went viral, the group became a highly visible opponent to the Trump presidency.
Mr. Schmidt said in the interview that the Lincoln Project did not have an office when Mr. Weaver was involved, so the founders and staff were not together. He said the group was “outraged and horrified” to learn of Mr. Weaver’s behavior. After this article was published on Sunday, the Lincoln Project released a statement condemning Mr. Weaver and calling him “a predator, a liar and an abuser.”
Last year, when Cody Bralts was a recent college graduate looking for a job in politics, he replied to one of Mr. Weaver’s tweets and, to his surprise, received a direct message from him. After Mr. Weaver said he traveled to Chicago sometimes, they discussed meeting to talk politics; at one point Mr. Weaver asked what Mr. Bralts did in his free time.
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When Mr. Bralts said he ran marathons, Mr. Weaver replied, “At least I know that whatever we end up doing, you could do it multiple times in a row,” with a winking emoticon.
“It just seemed like he was exploiting his power,” Mr. Bralts said. “He was someone very important and high up in a field I want to go into.”
Kyle Allen, 23, said that from 2016 to 2018, Mr. Weaver asked about his height, weight, what he was wearing and whether he was circumcised. He also pushed repeatedly for an invitation to speak at the University of Ottawa, where Mr. Allen was studying, using sexually explicit language to express his eagerness to visit.
“I would try to veer the conversations toward politics, and he would always find a way to bring it back to sexual stuff,” Mr. Allen said.
In at least two cases, Mr. Weaver offered young men work with the Lincoln Project while sending suggestive messages.
One of those men, Anthony Covell, 22, said Mr. Weaver had begun messaging him in July 2019. That exchange tapered off, but on Dec. 3, 2019 — two weeks before the Lincoln Project was publicly announced — Mr. Weaver invited him to join the new initiative.
“He said he was looking for young people who were creative and invested in this upcoming election,” Mr. Covell said, adding, “I was obviously interested.”
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Mr. Weaver suggested that Mr. Covell “post a thirst trap” or “send me a pic,” then asked him to call for more details on the project.
“Something inside me was saying, ‘No, don’t do this, he seems kind of sketchy,’” Mr. Covell said.
He decided not to call.
 

Hypocrite-The

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Lincoln Project founders have ties to Russia and tax troubles, docs reveal
By Ebony Bowden
July 21, 2020 | 11:35am | Updated


Enlarge Image

Steve Schmidt, from left, John Weaver, Rick Wilson and George Conway

Steve Schmidt, from left, John Weaver, Rick Wilson and George ConwayGetty Images (3); AP

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WASHINGTON — The founders of the Lincoln Project, a headline-grabbing anti-Trump political action committee formed by GOP operatives who describe the president as a “crook” and “huckster,” have their own checkered dealings with Russia and the tax man, documents obtained by The Post reveal.
Since its inception last November — announced with a blistering New York Times op-ed — the brainchild of George Conway, Steve Schmidt, Rick Wilson and John Weaver has raked in more than $19.4 million, according to FEC filings, and has needled President Trump repeatedly with provocative TV ads.
But the group — which the National Review on Monday dubbed “The Grifter Project” and Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) last week dismissed as a “cabal of political consultants all in it for the money” — don’t exactly practice what they preach.
Co-founder Weaver, a political consultant known for his work on John McCain’s and John Kasich’s presidential campaigns, registered as a Russian foreign agent for uranium conglomerate TENEX in a six-figure deal last year, filings with the Department of Justice show.
TENEX’s parent company is Rosatom, a Russian state-owned corporation that also owns Uranium One — the company that paid Bill Clinton $500,000 in speaking fees and millions to the Clinton Foundation after then-President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton signed off on the controversial merger in 2010.
Weaver backed out of the lobbying gig in May 2019 and called it “a mistake” in a tweet in which he denied having taken any money from TENEX.
Enlarge ImageFormer Ohio Gov. John Kasich (right) talks to his chief strategist, John Weaver, in 2015.Brian Snyder/Reuters
Still, that hasn’t stopped him from ironically railing against Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and his “rogue ties to Putin backed thugs in Ukraine & elsewhere.”
According to IRS filings exclusively obtained by The Post, the Republican operative — who has also repeatedly called Trump a “tax fraud” and a “tax crook” on Twitter — also has an outstanding $313,655 federal tax lien against his Austin, Texas, home.
This March, an Austin shopping mall also filed a lawsuit against the children’s clothing store that Weaver and his wife own, according to court documents obtained by The Post, just months after Weaver mocked the president’s own string of failed businesses.
Weaver’s fellow Lincoln Project founder Wilson also has an interesting financial past. According to IRS documents, the GOP strategist has an outstanding $389,420 federal tax lien against his Tallahassee, Florida, home, and his bank moved to foreclose on the property in 2016.
Wilson, a best-selling author with 1 million Twitter followers, has never disclosed the money woes publicly, allowing him to sneer online about Trump’s decision never to release his own taxes — at one point calling him “Brokeahontas,” despite the fact that American Express had taken Wilson to court for his own unpaid $25,729 credit card bill the year before, documents show.
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Trump rips Lincoln Project 'loser types' over coronavirus attack ad

“It’s very clear that this isn’t about Trump and Republicans,” one GOP source told The Post. “It’s about making money to help pay off their massive personal debts.”
Voter records on the Utah Lieutenant Governor’s website also show veteran Republican strategist Schmidt, another Lincoln Project boss, hasn’t recently voted himself — with his home state listing him as an “inactive voter.”
An inactive voter is someone who has not voted in two general elections and has failed to respond to letters from the county clerk, according to Utah’s voter registration website.
Schmidt, a communications strategist who has worked with George W. Bush, McCain and Arnold Schwarzenegger, disputed this account, telling The Post he voted by mail in 2016 and 2018 and registered as an Independent in 2018.
The devastating National Review piece dismissed the outfit as “little more than the most brazen election-season grift in recent memory” and a “ragtag band of three otherwise unemployed strategists plus one lawyer.”
The group has also drawn the ire of Republican lawmakers such as Cornyn after it began spending money targeting vulnerable GOP members, including Sen. Cory Gardner of Colorado, who faces a tough re-election bid.
A spokesman for the Lincoln Project declined to comment. Conway, Wilson and Weaver did not immediately return calls for comment.
Enlarge ImageGeorge ConwayRobert Alexander/Getty Images
The Lincoln Project, named after Abraham Lincoln, has made a huge splash in the short time it has been in existence — a lot of that due to the fact that one of its creators, anti-Trump Republican George Conway, is married to White House adviser Kellyanne Conway.
Trump went off on the group in May, after it ran an attack ad faulting his handling of the coronavirus pandemic, referring to its members as “loser types.”
“Lincoln Project is a disgrace to Honest Abe,” Trump tweeted.
“I don’t know what Kellyanne did to her deranged loser of a husband, Moonface, but it must have been really bad,” the president continued.
“They’re all LOSERS, but Abe Lincoln, Republican, is all smiles!”
 

QANONSG

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We are aware of the success of the Lincoln Project. We have installed our operatives inside to smear the group with a sex scandal. As you can see, Weaver must be a democrat because only they are capable of sex crimes. We will continue to attack the Lincoln Project as they are a threat to our messiah Trump and QANON, the true army of darkness.

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