Anonymous ID: f46805 July 25, 2019, 4:33 p.m. No.28478   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8479

WTH is this crap

 

"Q Busted! White House Insiders/Comey Controlled Spy Qult"

 

starts in 1 hr

 

Will check back when awake. Some paytriot (Home of the Best Survival Food and Water Filtration.

EMF & Radiation Meters.)shite no doubt.

Anonymous ID: f46805 July 25, 2019, 4:43 p.m. No.28481   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8694

>>28479

>The losers will stop at nothing to insult our movement. Even when they have clearly lost. They're too stupid to comprehend how stupid they are.

 

They've deleted (mutually by the looks of it) some messages from the chat section already - pretty sure one was 'I told you this but you wouldn't listen' (or close) sorry, didn't think to screencap prior.

 

Some rest for me, goodnight anons.

 

WWG1WGA WW

Anonymous ID: f46805 July 26, 2019, 4:08 a.m. No.28790   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>28773

 

>>>28745

>

>MZ Mark Zuckerburg

 

Mort Zuckerman

 

Media mogul, billionaire, and former owner of the New York Daily News and the Atlantic Mort Zuckerman invested with Epstein in the gossip magazine Radar in 2004, spending around $10 million to get the first issue up and running. According to Gawker, Zuckerman promptly bailed on the project when he found out about allegations against Epstein, and the magazine shut down just 14 months after its inaugural issue in 2005.

Anonymous ID: f46805 July 26, 2019, 4:49 a.m. No.28796   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Why one billionaire is calling out Silicon Valley’s favorite philanthropic loophole

 

One of the country’s most intriguing billionaire philanthropists is sounding the alarm about a highly controversial tax loophole that has advantaged his class of donors over the last decade.

Donor-advised funds are the philanthropic middlemen that house over $100 billion in assets nominally slated for charity — well, eventually. Rich people cut a check to a DAF to avoid paying a capital gains tax today — and then theoretically donate the money stored in the DAF over a long period of time. But critics say that DAFs are effectively a tax scam because the wealthy don’t actually give enough to charity to merit the tax break.

 

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/why-one-billionaire-is-calling-out-silicon-valleys-favorite-philanthropic-loophole/ar-AAERMs2

 

Interesting that a billionaire is calling out foundations?