Never ever trust a Jew tied to Trump and MAGA and Israel . . . and that’s not antisemitic, but just plain old prepping, plain old survival technique #999.
Mar 16, 2026

And some of us want them DEAD (so arrested, tried, convicted and sent to prison, now is that the death we hope for?): Our lathered up in ACID.
When Jared Kushner formed Affinity Partners in 2021 and then raised most of his first fund from Middle Eastern sovereigns, he took great pains to say that the endeavor was conceived after he left the White House.
- He bristled at suggestions of quid pro quo, but also understood that the whiff was strong enough that it had to be addressed.
- Kushner also insisted that his government days were in the past, even if his father-in-law regained power. Full-time private equity guy in Miami, not a D.C. denizen hoping to boomerang.
But it hasn’t quite worked out that way, resurrecting old questions as Affinity begins premarketing its second fund.
- Kushner has spent the vast majority of his time since last summer on geopolitics, as a volunteer at the behest of President Trump. First on Israel/Gaza. Then on Russia/Ukraine. And most recently, a trio of meetings with Iran, prior to the war.
Tar and feathers, then?


Jew on the left and Catholic on the right: Yep, they would be best as night earth, DOA. You might wipe that smirk off his face with some high-grade acid.

VD Vance defended President Donald Trump’s decision to go to war (murdering thousands and displacing a few million who will die, some of them, and be permanently scared and disabled for life) with Iran on Monday, accusing the media of trying to drive a wedge between the president and vice president, a longtime skeptic of foreign interventionism.
Vance — who served in Iraq with the Marine Corps — was a vocal skeptic of U.S. military engagement overseas during his time in the Senate. The White House has repeatedly batted down speculation of a rift between Vance and the president.
DON’T FUCKING LECTURE ME ABOUT HOW FUCKING PSYCHO MY WRITING IS . . . OR THE FUCKING IMPLICATIONS OF AN ACID BATH FOR A FEW MILLION like Trump and Kushner and Ackman and Altman and Adelson and Ellison(s) and FInk and Schwartzman and Brin and Page and Zuckerberg and Karp and . . . . Note: all or part of this hyperbole from Paulokirk’s RANT is all fiction!!!
So they just get to beddy-bye at night, no repercussions?

BECAUSE WE KNEW ABOUT THIS FUCKING YEARS AGO . . . Report: Counties that spray the most glyphosate have higher non-Hodgkin lymphoma rates
Iowa lawmaker launches pesticide exposure study

Yeah, you want to deal with lymphoma cancer? Acid to the face of Semen Drip Trump and the Epstein Class, too harsh? Fuck YOU.

Will these two countries get balls? Every day, more than $4 billion worth of goods cross the United States’ borders with Canada and Mexico – U.S. auto parts headed for car factories in northern Mexico, cartons of Mexican avocados bound for California supermarkets, Canadian aluminium destined to become cans of Campbell Soup.
Much of this bustling cross-border commerce is duty-free, thanks to the US-Mexico-Canada Agreement, or USMCA, that President Donald Trump negotiated with America’s northern and southern neighbors during his first term.

But the future of the USMCA , which took effect July 1, 2020, is cloudy as the three countries begin what could be a tempestuous attempt to renew the pact this year. The United States is demanding changes to the treaty, and the top U.S. trade negotiator told Politico in December that Trump would be willing to pull the United States out of the pact if he can’t get the deal he wants. Trump also suggested last fall that the United States could negotiate separate deals with Canada and Mexico, ending the three-country North American bloc that previous administrations saw as crucial to competing economically with China and the European Union.

ACID, come on millionaires and billionaires, ACID TO YOUR FUCKING UGLY FACES.
Companies such as Atlassian, Block and Amazon have announced they would lay off thousands of employees due to increased reliance on AI.
The narrative these companies offer is consistent: AI is making human labour replaceable, and responsible management demands adjustment.

Oh, the fucking Jew Sachs, man, sacks of fucking empty testicles:
A 2025 Goldman Sachs report estimated that if AI were used across the economy for all the things it could currently do, roughly 2.5% of US employment would be at risk of job loss.
That’s not a trivial number. However, the report notes that workers in AI-exposed occupations are currently no more likely to lose their jobs, face reduced hours, or earn lower wages than anyone else.
The report does note early signs of strain in specific industries. Goldman Sachs identifies sectors where employment growth has slowed that align with AI-related efficiency gains. Examples include marketing consulting, graphic design, office administration and call centres.
In the tech sector, US workers in their 20s in AI-exposed occupations saw unemployment rise by almost 3% in the first half of 2025. Anthropic’s research also found that job-finding rates (the chance of an unemployed person finding a job in a one-month period) for workers aged 22–25 entering AI-exposed occupations have fallen by around 14% since the launch of ChatGPT in 2022. This is a tentative but telling signal about where the pressure is being felt first.
These are meaningful signals, but they are sector-specific and concentrated – not the evidence of sweeping displacement that corporate announcements often imply. That gap between the evidence and the rhetoric raises an obvious question: what else might be driving these decisions?

Jew Bait . . . ‘The guy’s a piece of s–t’: SBF’s pardon push falls flat in Congress. ACID-WASHED Fried.

Sam Bankman-Fried, who was convicted in 2023 on fraud charges after his FTX crypto exchange collapsed, has been heaping praise on President Donald Trump.

More ACID WASHING: Russian state sources have reported that Ukrainian authorities are using construction work as a cover for the recruitment of Colombian nationals for combat operations, citing documents found on the phone of Colombian military contractor Jose Luis Pocheco Navarra, who recently surrendered to Russian forces. The document is reported to have contained a request by the head of the Zaporozhye Region’s military administration, Ivan Fyodorov, that Colombian citizens be engaged in construction and restoration works in the region. “There’s a need for unskilled workers, including general labourers and spare hands, in order to speed up work, which requires a request to facilitate the entry to Ukraine for Colombian nationals,” the document is reported to have read.

EVERYTHING AMERICANOS TOUCH turns sour:
Thirty years ago, a single light bulb would illuminate the mezcal distillery owned by Gladys Sánchez Garnica’s family in rural Oaxaca, where the agave-based spirit was made through the night. As drops dripped from a clay oven, Garnica and her siblings listened to stories told by their parents while neighbors arrived by horse to get a taste of a drink known for its smoky flavor.

“We were taught when to harvest agave, how to care for the soil, and how much we could ask of the forest,” said Garnica, 33, speaking from a women-owned distillery in San Pedro Totolapam, a town of just over 3,000 residents in Mexico’s Oaxacan Central Valleys, where much of the economy depends on mezcal.

Today, that small-scale tradition exists alongside a global boom that has transformed mezcal into a major industry dominated by international brands. As mezcal has spread to bars around the world, so has its footprint on the land. Along the road to communities like San Luis del Rio, where celebrity brands such as Dos Hombres, created by actors Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul from the hit series “Breaking Bad,” are made, agave plantations now blanket hillsides that were once forest. While the boom has brought economic benefits for many local producers, it’s also led to rising environmental costs

In Oaxaca, much land is communally owned and managed through local systems of self-governance. Converting forest into agave plantations requires federal approval from Mexico’s Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources.
The permitting process is so slow and bureaucratic that some communities choose to bypass it, said Helena Iturribarria from Tierra de Agaves, a conservation project to reforest parts of Oaxaca’s valleys and promote sustainable agave production.
The Secretary of Environment said in a statement it had not received requests for forest clearing for agave cultivation in the past three years in Oaxaca. The agency also said it was investigating nine public complaints filed since 2021 over illegal land clearing for mezcal production.

In 2018, Garnica founded a collective of women called the “Guardians of Mezcal.” The group is promoting mezcal produced by women using sustainable practices, including using only fallen trees for firewood and planting agave alongside other crops.
With help from Tierra de Agaves, Guardians of Mezcal and local community officials from Santa Maria Zoquitlan secured projected status for 26,000 hectares of forest surrounding the town.
“Mezcal is a way of life, like a form of work that our parents taught us, so it really means a lot,” Garnica said. “If there is a funeral, a wedding, a party, mezcal is a drink you are going to share with others, and above all many families depend on it.”

The price is right, and the biodiversity can just fucking cock off:
The U.S. Forest Service on March 5 announced it plans to soon approve the nation’s first critical minerals mine, South32’s Hermosa project, when it released the final environmental impact statement, which was permitted under a streamlined process. The federal government called it “a strategic investment in America’s energy future” that “directly supports U.S. energy and security needs.”

But in Patagonia, Arizona, residents and environmentalists are preparing for the impacts the project will bring to a world-renowned biodiversity hotspot, as the town, the nearby city of Nogales and Santa Cruz County inch closer to signing a community benefit agreement with the Australian mine company, South32, to mitigate and help address the impacts it is already bringing.
South32’s $2 billion Hermosa project would extract zinc, lead and silver, all deemed critical minerals by the administration of President Donald Trump. A second mineral deposit contains manganese, another critical mineral, though a decision to move forward with extracting it is pending. South32 is also evaluating a copper deposit found on site.

How many Epstein jugs of acid will it take to ACID WASH the TECH CUNTS?
Your garbage, not mine: Thailand to return 284 tonnes of e-waste to America.

My oh my, Zelensky and a million fucking NAZI’s and AZOV storm troopers and rapists and paedophiles need some acid treatment. Are you tired of this fucking coke head Jew yet?

Ukraine has no good options to replace a crucial cash package from the European Union, which Hungary continues to block, leaving Kyiv hurtling towards a hole in its finances as it awaits a solution to the impasse.
The loan, agreed unanimously by EU countries at a summit in December, would provide 90 billion euros ($103 billion) to Ukraine over 2026–2027, covering two-thirds of the country’s financial and military needs. But Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orban has since U-turned, ostensibly over a dispute pertaining to Russian oil transit through Ukraine.

You fucking dirty Latin American cunts, those so-called leaders. FUCK YOU, & ACID to your FUCKING FACES and your CHILDREN’S FACES:

Cubans say there is little food, power, fuel or relief amid worsening conditions
As the U.S. and Cuba hold conversations to decide the island’s fate, basic necessities are scarce or unaffordable, and simple tasks like cooking are burdensome.

And these stories are what make the West, AmeriKKKa, the broke back mountaineers society. Fucking HELL. US judge dismisses $100,000 suit over spiciness of New York taqueria’s sauce

A German tourist filed a lawsuit claiming he felt unpleasant symptoms after eating tacos with salsa at Los Tacos No 1.

How quickly that fucking Boy Scouts’ fruit salad on his left chest would melt like butter and sink into his fucking skin with some high-grade ACID.
And this is how we end this ACID BATH review: General Greg Guillot, the commander of the US Northern Command, said that if given the order to strike anyone that the Trump administration labels a “domestic terrorist”, he would carry out the order.
Footnote: Of course, all this trigger warning crap applies here to the Secret Service. All ideas expressed here are speculative, thought experiments, and there is no way in hell a dude like me would every carry out any of this shit, and for any of this shit to work, it would take thousands of guerrilla warriors on the streets of the USA, and we know there ain’t no revolution at Costco or with the Incel-class, so, cock off:
Key points regarding this legal boundary include:
- Definition of “True Threats”: The Supreme Court has established that speech is not protected if it constitutes a serious expression of an intention to inflict bodily harm or take the life of the president.
- Federal Law (18 U.S.C. § 871): Knowingly and willfully making threats to kill or kidnap the President, Vice President, or former Presidents is a federal felony.
- “True Threat” vs. Hyperbole: Courts look at whether a reasonable person would view the statement as a serious expression of intent to harm, rather than just “political hyperbole” or satire (e.g., Watts v. United States).
- Recklessness Standard: In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that for a statement to be a “true threat,” the speaker must at least act recklessly, with a conscious disregard that their words would be viewed as threatening violence.
- Investigation: The U.S. Secret Service investigates threats to determine if they are serious, and individuals making such threats can be prosecuted even if they did not intend to carry them out, provided a reasonable person would interpret the speech as a serious threat.
While hateful speech or expressing a desire for a president’s death as a political opinion might sometimes be protected if it is deemed merely emotional, hyperbolic, or speculative, crossing the line into a direct threat or a call for violence removes that protection.
