Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 4:50 a.m. No.22927920   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7922 >>7926 >>8143 >>8366 >>8503 >>8588 >>8595 >>8676 >>8696 >>8707

>>22925168 KiIIer Karmelo Anthony’s press conference starts by ATTACKING victim Austin Metcalf’s father for showing upPN

 

Nick Sortor

@nicksortor

 

WTF?! KiIIer Karmelo Anthony’s press conference just started off by ATTACKING victim Austin Metcalf’s father for showing up

 

“It is disrespectful of him coming here.”

 

MORE DISRESPECTFUL THAN STABBlNG HIS SON TO DEATH?!

 

End Wokeness

1:19 PM · Apr 17, 2025

·

2.6M

Views

 

https://x.com/nicksortor/status/1912918971407343747

 

They are normalizing black kids killing white kids for no reason at all.

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 5:08 a.m. No.22927938   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7947 >>8014 >>8060 >>8143 >>8349 >>8366 >>8503 >>8613 >>8688 >>8707

I Meme Therefore I Am 🇺🇸

@ImMeme0

 

Leon County Sheriff Walt McNeilrevealed shared the information about the FSU shooter:

 

“The shooter is 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner, and he’s a son of a Leon County Sheriff deputy. Our deputy, Deputy Ikner, has been with the Leon County Sheriff’s Office for over 18 years. She has a tremendous job that she’s done. Her service to this community has been exceptional. Unfortunately, her son had access to one of her weapons, and that was one of the weapons that was found at the scene.”

 

(The mother and son have the same weird smile)

 

https://x.com/ImMeme0/status/1912985491642655110

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 5:50 a.m. No.22928064   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8066 >>8087 >>8143 >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

‘Assad knew everything’: Syrian gravedigger reveals horrors in first-ever unmasked interview 1/2

 

Key witness in landmark case against Syrianofficials tells MEE hundreds of bodies were regularly delivered in refrigerator trucks for burial in mass graves

A Syrian gravedigger whose testimony helped secure the conviction of two Assad officials in thefirst international trial on Syrian state torturehas spoken exclusively to Middle East Eye after revealing his identity.

 

Muhammad Afif Nafieh was forced todig mass graves for authorities under Bashar al-Assad from 2011 until early 2018when he fled with his family to Germany.

 

He testified against Syrian officials convicted of crimes against humanity in a German courtin Koblenz, and has also shared his experiences with the US Congress, on the sidelines of the United National General Assembly, and at the British Foreign Office.

 

Speaking to MEE last week, Nafieh described arelentless seven-day working week in which he oversaw the burial of an increasing stream of bodies.

 

It would last seven years. The bodies were frequently delivered in 16-metre refrigerator trucks, which could carry up to 400 corpses at a time, and showed signs of torture.

 

All the tools and methods of torture were used on the executed,” he said.

 

“When I saw them, I’d imagine in my mind how much pain this person had endured to get to the point of execution, how much he died before he reached us.He died a hundred deaths before reaching that final one.”

 

Before the war in Syria, Nafieh was a Damascus governorate municipal worker. He was responsible for arranging burials,but said he never dealt with bodies in that capacity, nor had he seen a corpse before.

 

That changed one day in 2011 when intelligence officers arrived at his office and put him in charge of recording the burial of bodies that would start arriving.

 

Nafieh suspects he was chosen because he had always been committed to his job.

 

“I never took time off. I was never late… even on my days off, I’d come in,” he said.

 

'No' was forbidden

 

“I couldn’t say no in such an oppressive regime. The word ‘no’ was forbidden. Saying you are tired? Forbidden. Saying you are sick? Forbidden. Saying anything of the sort was completely banned. It was a totalitarian regime.”

 

He said he couldn’t believe what he was seeing the first time the refrigerator trucks arrived at Najha, the first mass grave location where he worked.

 

“I was shocked. Why are they entering the cemetery?” he said.

 

“They opened the refrigerator truck and that was the catastrophe, one my mind couldn’t comprehend.The sheer number of bodies. More than 300 or 400 corpses.”

 

Nafieh’s job was to document the burial of the bodies, including noting which security branch they had come from and how many were put into the ground.

 

Four copies were made of each report he did, with one copy sent to the presidential palace, the official residence of the then president Bashar al-Assad.

 

“Bashar al-Assad knew everything that was going on in the branches,” Nafieh said.

 

Once Najha was filled up, Nafieh said he was taken by two intelligence officers to an arid piece of land in Qutayfah, another location on the outskirts of Damascus, and asked if he thought it would make a good cemetery.

 

It was further away from residential areas than Najha, away from prying eyes, and Nafieh said he was directed by one of the officers to bring his team from Najha to Qutayfah.

 

“In Qutayfah we would get one or two refrigeration trucks a week. Then it became two trucks, twice a week. We’d get four trucks,” he said.

 

Bodies were also coming from Sednaya prison, where he said people were executed at midnight and then buried at 3am, and from various hospitals in the Damascus area.

 

He said he was allowed to go home once a monthto see his wife and children and that he was significantly impacted by the work, losing a lot of weight and crying by himself.

 

“I couldn’t sleep at night. I would scream. I would feel like the people I buried were watching me,” he said.

 

Eventually, Nafieh said he started to plan his way out. He said he told intelligence officers he was ill.

 

He said he paid off one officer so that he could be relieved of his work and paid again in 2018 before he flew out of Syria for good.

 

“I wanted to finish this,” he said. Nafieh resettled with his wife and three children in Germany where he testified in a national court in Koblenz in2018 in the first ever international trial on Syrian state torture which resulted in the conviction of two Syrian officials.

 

“I vowed that the oppression in Syria would not go unanswered,” he said.

 

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/assad-knew-everything-syrian-gravedigger-reveals-horrors-first-ever-interview-without-mask

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 5:51 a.m. No.22928066   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8143 >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

>>22928064

2/2

 

Fall of Assad

 

As well as testifying in Koblenz,Nafieh has worked with the Syrian Emergency Task Force, a US-based advocacy organisation established in 2011which campaigns for a democratic transition and justice and accoutability in Syria.

 

Nafieh’s testimony, along with othersincluding that of ‘Caesar’, a former Syrian forensic officer who smuggled tens of thousands of photos of bodies showing evidence of torture, helped bring about the economic sanctions imposed by the US on Syria in 2019.

 

In April 2023 he addressed the US Congress's House Committee on Foreign Affairs where he urged lawmakers to help pressure regional Arab countries from normalising with the Assad government.

 

Now he’s calling for international sanctions on Syria to be lifted.

 

"I want to demand from the American government to lift the sanctions on Syria. Because Syria is a country whose regime has fallen," he said.

 

"I want to demand from the United States in my name, in the name of the free S,yrians and in the name ofeveryone who gave testimony for humanity, to lift the sanctions. Syria doesnt need this."

 

Nafieh has previously kept his identity hidden for his and his family’s safety. But following the fall of Assad in December, he said he was now ready to go public.

 

“Before the fall of the regime, I never showed my face becauseeven without revealing my identity or showing my face, my in-laws were arrested, their wives were arrested, and my sisters were arrested.

 

“So now, after the fall of the regime, it was a great joy. I wanted to reveal my identity.”

 

https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/assad-knew-everything-syrian-gravedigger-reveals-horrors-first-ever-interview-without-mask

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 6:01 a.m. No.22928089   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8095 >>8143 >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

Target CEO Cornell meets with Sharpton to discuss DEI rollback as civil rights leader considers boycott

1/2

PUBLISHED THU, APR 17 20257:00 AM EDTUPDATED THU, APR 17 20254:59 PM EDT

 

WATCH LIVE

KEY POINTS

• Target CEO Brian Cornell met with civil rights leader the Rev. Al Sharpton to discuss the company’s decision to roll back DEI programs.

• The discussion comes as the big boxretailer faces calls for a boycott and a slump in foot traffic that began soon after it announced plans to walk away from some DEI initiatives.

• Sharpton has not called for a boycott of Target, but said he’ll consider it if the company doesn’t reaffirm its commitment to Black businesses, employees and consumers.

Target

CEO Brian Cornell met with the Rev. Al Sharpton in New York on Thursday as the retailer faces calls for a boycott and a slowdown in foot traffic that began after it walked back key diversity, equity and inclusion programs, the civil rights leader told CNBC Wednesday.

 

The meeting, which Target asked for, comes after some civil rights groups urged consumers not to shop at Target in response to the retailer’s decision to cut back on DEI. While Sharpton has not yet called for a boycott of Target, he has supported efforts from others to stop shopping at the retailer’s stores.

 

“You can’t have an election come and all of a sudden, change your old positions,” Sharpton told CNBC in a Wednesday interview ahead of the meeting. “If an election determines your commitment to fairness then fine, you have a right to withdraw from us, but then we have a right to withdraw from you.”

 

The civil rights leader said he would consider calling for a Target boycott if the company doesn’t confirm its commitment to the Black community and pledge to work with and invest in Black-owned businesses.

 

“I said, ‘If [Cornell] wants to have a candid meeting, we’ll meet,’” Sharpton said of the phone call Target made to his office. “I want to first hear what he has to say.”

 

A Target spokesman confirmed to CNBC that the company reached out to Sharpton for a meeting and that Cornell will talk to him in New York this week. The company declined further comment.

 

On Thursday afternoon, Sharpton issued a statement after the meeting, calling it “constructive and candid.”

 

“I am going to inform our allies, including Rev. Dr. Jamal Bryant, of our discussion, what my feelings are, and we will go from there,” said Sharpton.

 

Bryant, a pastor in the Atlanta area, organized a 40-day boycott of Target that began in early March. The pastor has weighed whether to extend it and Sharpton had considered taking the boycott national. Sharpton’s civil rights organization, the National Action Network, said Sharpton is going to spend the Easter holiday consulting with NAN’s board of directors “to determine any next steps with Target” and other companies that have scaled back DEI programs or pledges.

 

In January, Target said it would end its three-year DEI goals, no longer share company reports with external diversity-focused groups like the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equity Index and end specific efforts to get more products from Black- and minority-owned businesses on its shelves.

 

Just days after the announcement, foot traffic at Target stores started to slow down. Since the week of Jan. 27, Target’s foot traffic has declined for 10 straight weeks compared to the year-ago period, according to Placer.ai, an analytics firm that uses anonymized data from mobile devices to estimate overall visits to locations. Target traffic had been up weekly year over year before the week of Jan. 27.

 

The metric, which tallies visits to brick-and-mortar locations, does not capture sales in stores or online, but can indicate which retailers are drawing steadier business. While Target has been struggling to grow its sales for months as shoppers watch their spending, the stretch of declining visits came as some civil rights groups and social media users criticized the DEI decision and urged shoppers to spend their money elsewhere.

 

Target declined to comment on the figures, saying it doesn’t discuss third-party data.

 

At the NAN’s convention earlier this month, Sharpton said the group would call for a boycott of PepsiCo

if the company didn’t agree to meet with the organization within 21 days. In February, the food and beverage company behind brands like Doritos and Mountain Dew announced it would end its DEI workforce representation goals and transition its chief DEI officer role into another position, among other changes.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/17/target-ceo-to-meet-with-al-sharpton-after-dei-rollback.html

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 6:03 a.m. No.22928095   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8143 >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748 >>8764

>>22928089

2/2

This week, leaders from Pepsi met with Sharpton and his team. He did not confirm whether Pepsi made any commitments, but did say it was encouraging that Pepsi’s CEO Ramon Laguarta attended. He added that the two will continue their discussions.

 

Sharpton’s meetings with companies including PepsiCo and Target — and his openness to boycotts — mark one of the first meaningful efforts to push back against the war conservative activists like Robby Starbuck have waged on DEI. Starbuck, a movie director-turned-activist, has urged companies to drop DEI policies in part by sharing what he considers unflattering information about their initiatives with his social media followers. He has successfully pressured a wide range of corporate giants to rethink their programs.

 

Target joins wider DEI retreat

 

With its decision to roll back DEI efforts, the cheap chic retailer ==Target joined Walmart

, McDonald’s

, Tractor Supply

and a slew of others that scrapped at least some DEI initiatives== as they grew concerned that the programs could alienate some customers or land them in the crosshairs of President Donald Trump, who has vowed to end every DEI program across the federal government.

 

Target’s decision contrasted with Costco

, which shook off pressure from conservative activists to maintain its DEI programs. Shareholders of the membership-based wholesale club soundly rejected a proposal in late January that requested a report on the risks of DEI initiatives.

 

NAN has called for so-called “buy-cotts” at Costco, and has brought people to stores in Tennessee, New York and New Jersey. It gave them gift cards to shop with at the warehouse club.

 

In the month of March, Target’s store traffic declined 6.5%, while the metric rose 7.5% year over year at Costco, Placer.ai data show.

 

Target’s challenges run deeper than DEI backlash, and resistance to its policy change only added to its issues.The discounter’s annual revenue has been roughly flat for four years in a row as it’s struggled to drive consistent sales gains.

 

Margins have been under pressure, as consumers buy more of groceries and necessities and less of more profitable categories like home goods and clothing. And the company has pinned its problems on a laundry list of problems in recent years, including having the wrong inventory; losing money from theft, damaged goods and other types of inventory losses; backlash to its collection for Pride Month and pricier costs from rushing shipments.

 

Competition has grown fiercer too, as big-box rival Walmart

has remodeled stores, launched new private brands and attracted more high-income shoppers.

 

In February, Target gave weak guidance for the first quarter and said it expected sales to grow 1% for the full year.

 

‘What changed?’

 

In his meeting with Cornell, Sharpton said he will ask for Target to follow through on pledges it made after police killed George Floyd in the company’s hometown of Minneapolis.

 

“You made commitments based on the George Floyd movement … what changed?” said Sharpton. “Are you trying to say … everything’s fine now, because the election changed? That’s insulting to us.”

 

In the wake of Floyd’s murder, Cornell said the event moved him.

 

“That could have been one of my Target team members,” Cornell said in 2021 at an event hosted by the Economic Club of Chicago, recounting his thoughts as he watched the video of Floyd taking his final breaths.

 

At the time, he said it motivated him to step up Target’s efforts to fight racial inequities.

 

“We have to be the role models that drive change and our voice is important,” he said at the event. “We’ve got to make sure that we represent our company principles, our values, our company purpose on the issues that are important to our teams.”

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/17/target-ceo-to-meet-with-al-sharpton-after-dei-rollback.html

 

Blackmailed by Black Mafia

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 6:30 a.m. No.22928162   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8170 >>8172 >>8366 >>8440 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

UnitedHealth’s stock is plunging on higher medical costs. That may mean trouble for more insurers

THU, APR 17 202510:34 AM

 

KEY POINTS

• UnitedHealth Group’s stock sank after the company slashed its annual profit forecast, citing higher-than-expected medical costs in its privately run Medicare plans.

 

• Those bleak results from a health-care giant seen as the insurance industry’s bellwether could potentially be a warning sign for other companies with so-called Medicare Advantage plans, according to some Wall Street analysts.

 

• UnitedHealth’s first-quarter results reveal “ominous signs” of an accelerating medical costs trend in Medicare Advantage businesses, some analysts said. (Because they were denying treatment and now they have to pay.Their stock price was only high because they denied claims and killed a lot of members.)

 

UnitedHealth Group’s stock sank 20% on Thursday after the company slashed its annual profit forecast, citing higher-than-expected medical costs in its privately run Medicare plans.

 

Those bleak results from a health-care giant seen as the insurance industry’s bellwether could be a warning sign for other companieswith so-called Medicare Advantage plans, according to some Wall Street analysts. It comes after a turbulent 2024 for health insurers, hurt by lower government payments, soaring medical costs and public backlash after the murder of UnitedHealthcare’s top executive, Brian Thompson.

 

UnitedHealthcare, the insurance arm of UnitedHealth Group, is the nation’s largest provider of those plans. ==Shares of competitor Humana fell 5%, while Elevance Health dropped more than 1% and CVS

tumbled 2%. Cigna has no Medicare Advantage business. Its stock was up almost 1% on Thursday.==

 

UnitedHealth’s first-quarter results reveal “ominous signs” ofaccelerating medical costs in Medicare Advantage businesses, TD Cowen analyst Ryan Langston said in a note Thursday. He added that the company “correctly foreshadowed” increasing medical costs back in 2023, so Thursday’s comments “will call into question” the full-year outlooks for every insurer. (They only accelerated because all the companies were denying claims and treatments, until UHC got caught. Seniors are not getting sicker, they just can’t deny claims are kill them now)

 

Higher medical costs have dogged the entire insurance industry over the past yearas more seniors return to hospitals to undergo procedures they had delayed during the Covid-19 pandemic, such as joint and hip replacements. But the issue had previously not been as significant at UnitedHealthcare.

 

Barclays analyst Andrew Mok said UnitedHealth’s problems may be less of an issue for companies that made “significant” exits from some Medicare Advantage markets, including Humana and CVS, according to a note Thursday.Many insurers last year exited unprofitable Medicare Advantage marketsdue to higher medical costs and lower reimbursement rates from the federal government.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/17/unitedhealths-guidance-cut-may-mean-trouble-for-more-insurers.

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 6:33 a.m. No.22928172   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

>>22928162

2/2

Meanwhile, the issue could be a bigger deal for companies that gained greater market share in Medicare Advantage, such as Elevance Health and Alignment Health, according to Mok.

 

UnitedHealth said the rise in care use, or utilization, in its Medicare Advantage business came in far above what the company planned for the year, which was for care activity to increase at a rate consistent with what it saw in 2024. But trends that became apparent toward the end of the first quarter suggest that care activity increased “at twice” that level, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty said during an earnings call on Thursday.

 

The jump was particularly notable in doctor and outpatient services, which do not involve overnight hospital stays, he added.

 

“It’s very, very unusual,” Lance Wilkes, Bernstein senior equity analyst, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday. He said rising utilization is “really surprising” coming off the high level of care activity that the industry saw over the past year.

 

Wilkes added that UnitedHealth and the broaderindustry may be “pulling back” the “intensity of some of the activity they do to manage utilization,” (fraudulent AI diagnosis is what they used. Also UHC is notorious for denying claims, forcing hospitals to resubmit claims because UHC didn’t get the claims and all kinds of other shitty tricks=.) which causes dissatisfaction among patients==. For example, some insurers require prior authorization, which makes providers obtain approval from a patient’s insurance company before administering specific treatments. (All hospital treatment requires PA, and some in office, they are lying about the problem)

 

“I think it’s probably United pulling back because of the policy headwinds and the scrutiny on the company,” Wilkes said. “I do think the horrible thing that happened to Brian Thompson and the company is a part of this, and I think it’s reflective of also the Department of Justice scrutiny on United over the last couple years.” (UHC has been sued by the government for more than 10 years for all their illegal processes)

 

UnitedHealth is reportedly grappling with a government investigation of its Medicare billing practices.

 

Also on Thursday, UnitedHealth pointed to issues related to changes in the profile of patients treated under its Optum health-care unit. That segment includes its pharmacy benefit manager, which negotiates drug rebates with manufacturers on behalf of insurers and maintains formularies, among other responsibilities. (The RX division is probably the worst and insurance companies should not own industry related companies, it’s a conflict of interest, and easier to cheat.)

 

But Witty said the company is taking action to improve results and considers the issues related to Optum and elevated medical costs “highly addressable as we look ahead to 2026.” (Once again Not True, they just denied claims for a long time.)

 

If nothing else, insurers are set to get a boost next year. The Trump administration in April said it would substantially increase reimbursement rates for Medicare Advantage insurers, hiking an earlier proposal from the Biden administration.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/17/unitedhealths-guidance-cut-may-mean-trouble-for-more-insurers.html

 

As an Insurance Broker for 29 years, this article is bullshit what caused this. They were greedy to get their stock price up so the denied 100s of 1,000s of claims of the members, using fraudulent AI models. All of them should get prosecuted. Plus the Congress should make a law that Health Insurance cannot be on the Stock Market, it’s a conflict of interest

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 6:36 a.m. No.22928184   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8213 >>8214 >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

Shannon Bream

@ShannonBream

 

BREAKING: Justice Kagan just denied emergency request from four people in the US illegally who are set to be deported. They lost before Bd of Immigration Appeals, 9th Cir affirmed. They asserted that they were victims of cartel violence and face explicit death threats. #SCOTUS

3:57 PM · Apr 17, 2025

·

384.5K

Views

 

They were all taught to lie about cartel violence.

 

https://x.com/ShannonBream/status/1912958594590351709

Anonymous ID: 31e335 April 18, 2025, 6:38 a.m. No.22928196   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8203 >>8366 >>8503 >>8707 >>8748

El Salvador president mocks Dem senator's meeting with deported MS-13 suspect

 

Fox News' Madeleine Rivera provides details on Sen. Chris Van Hollen's, D-Md., meeting with Kilmar Abrego Garcia in El Salvador and the response from President Nayib Bukele. 'Fox & Friends' co-hosts react.

 

6:47

https://youtu.be/igL7h3Gc7j0