LAT: Trump says former Miss Universe was tied to a murder attempt. So what did happen in Venezuela?

Los Angeles Times:

Trump supporters revived reports that Machado drove a getaway car for her then-boyfriend during a 1998 murder attempt in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas. Old claims that she later made a threatening call to a judge in the case have also been circulating.

In an interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, Machado conceded that she was “no saint girl” but said that was not the point. “He was really aggressive. He was really rude. He was a bad person with me,” she said of Trump.

So what really happened?

Machado did act in a racy 2005 reality show broadcast on Spain’s Antena 3 TV network, scenes from which have gone viral on YouTube. The show, titled “Farm of the Famous,” is said to have shown Machado having sex with a former Mr. Spain, Fernando Acaso.

Although neither Machado nor Acaso appeared nude in the show, Machado later admitted in various interviews that she had sex with the Spanish actor during filming.

The accusation that she was an accomplice to an attempted murder stems from her involvement with Juan Rodriguez Reggetti, now a well-known Caracas attorney.

According to media reports at the time, the controversy began after Regetti’s sister, eight months pregnant and the mother of an 11-month-old boy, committed suicide.

Reggetti is alleged to have fired two shots at his sister’s husband, Francisco Sbert Moukso, as he was leaving a memorial service.

During the subsequent police investigation, Machado was mentioned as having driven the getaway car. She denied the accusation, saying she was filming a soap opera at the time. A judge later said there was insufficient evidence to arrest her.

The beauty queen also denied having made the threatening call to the judge, and since it came down to her word against his, the allegation went nowhere…

Machado posed twice for Playboy magazine, mockingly dedicating an appearance to Trump.

She is also said to have had a romance with an alleged Mexican drug trafficker, Gerardo Alvarez Vazquez, who goes by the alias “El Indio” or “El Chayan.” Mexican tabloids, citing prosecutors’ investigations, reported that Vazquez is the father of Machado’s daughter, who was born in Miami in 2008.

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Michael Barone: Voters reject John Lennon’s “world as one”

Comments at Steve Sailer:

* Man is a product of evolution. When pacifism arises among us, it’s often killed off by non-pacifists. So it doesn’t get passed on much. It’s still very much a man-shoot-man world.

Having read a lot about the Beatles, I know that Lennon was by far the biggest jerk among them. He did not behave like someone who believed in most of the things he wrote about in that song.

* Imagine as an elegy.

An elegy for nations, for peoples, for distinct cultures, for race, for family, for particularism.

It is almost certainly not what the musicians intended.

But it works.

Do we really want to live in a world in which there is “nothing to kill or die for”?

* Lennon was simply expressing a sadness about the state of the human spirit; he wasn’t naively suggesting that all of our troubles could be easily erased. On the contrary. And this idea that “we’ve tried and it hasn’t worked” is complete nonsense. Neoliberal globalization/financialization of the world in which the elite destroy the middle class through policies of war and third-worlding manufacturing is hardly what Lennon was advocating. To put his name on this crap is disgraceful. Lastly, Lennon was the first person to wind up saying that he was very much a work in progress throughout his life and he wasn’t asking people to model their lives on his.

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Steve Sailer: How to Keep an NFL Team Out of Jail

Steve Sailer writes:

Here’s an interesting article in the Washington Post by Kent Babb about the NFL Dallas Cowboys’ team fixer, a big black ex-cop and ex-bail bondsman who is on friendly terms with everybody who works at the courthouse in Dallas. He gets paid by the Cowboys to make drunk driving and domestic violence arrests of Cowboy football players disappear before they get into the newspapers.

He is, like the “Pulp Fiction” character Winston Wolf [played by Harvey Keitel], a fixer who exists on the margins and functions without ceremony. He considers the angles, contemplates the ifs, solves the most complicated problems. No wonder the Cowboys, known for acquiring players on their second or third chances, have come to trust Wells implicitly with their most valuable and unpredictable assets. Whatever route a player is trying to find through the system — from simple help with a driver’s license to thorny entanglements involving criminal charges — there’s always one more option to help find a way: Call in the Wolf.

“I haven’t had a question that Dave couldn’t answer, I can tell you that,” said Adam “Pacman” Jones, the Bengals cornerback.

“Whenever something is messed up and you need to go outside the lines a little bit,” former Kaufman County, Tex., district attorney Rick Harrison said, “he’s your guy.”

“A tremendous asset to the franchise,” Jerry Jones said. “. . . I won’t get into detail of the kinds of things [Wells does], because he does everything.” …

Said longtime attorney Anthony Lyons: “There are going to be times that David comes up with a result that you’re just not going to ask him about.” …

Almost nothing is as valuable to an NFL front office as discretion, nothing as threatening to a season or brand as a “distraction.” Forbes says the Cowboys are worth $4.2 billion, a value that in part depends on the team’s ability to keep star players on the field, contend for championships and maintain its global popularity. For every incident that generates a negative headline, Wells said, 10 are handled without the public’s knowledge.

Considering how many scandals involving football players wind up in the press, the notion that another order of magnitude incidents actually happen is, well, eye-opening.

COMMENTS:

* There are two current examples of fixers in Showtime shows. Ray Donovan, and Billions.

I’m not sure this means there’s another order of magnitude of incidents though. Dallas has long had a particularly trashy team in contrast with, say, the New York Giants. The Giants have generally had a low tolerance for off-the-field nonsense, quickly cutting players that embarrass them. Whether that’s due to the character of the owners or the higher visibility of being in a media capital, I don’t know.

* I would venture that Mr. Wolf acts mainly as a conduit through which sufficient hush money is funneled to the potential plaintiffs (and others) to make them “forget” the incident.

* Sad anthropological observation: this guy is basically a substitute dad.

* There is a female free agent fixer who works for NFL players. It sounds like she has a good gig going, and stays very busy.

Men’s Journal:

Then there are the jobs that she hates like poison but have become a staple of her practice: the late-night distress calls from players. “I had a very well-known star, one of the nicest you’ll ever meet, get jammed up in a strip club at 2 AM.” A dancer there took him to a bathroom in back, promising a blow job on the house. “He thinks he’s getting serviced, but she has a change of heart, so he says, ‘No worries,’ and goes back out to watch her dance,” White says, conceding that this was the player’s version and that she never got to hear the dancer’s side. “Later that night he gets a call from the cops: She claims she was sexually assaulted by him.”

This happened 12 years ago and served as White’s window into the netherworld of hustlers gaming athletes. “You find them in every town with at least one major sports team: women at crappy strip joints and hotel bars, or loudmouths trying to start trouble in clubs, hoping my guy hits them so they can sue. I had a recent case where the player showed restraint, but then someone in his party hit the guy. Well, the person goes out and gets an attorney, saying he’s now disabled for life. But he didn’t sue the friend, of course: He sued the player, and will probably get a check when it’s all done.”

In the strip-joint matter, no charge was ever filed; the police and the district attorney deemed the charges baseless. But word leaked to the local media that something had happened, and the player’s reputation hung by a thread when White called all the outlets in town. “I said, ‘There’s nothing to this story, but it’ll hurt him if it airs; run it, and he’ll never speak to you again.’ ” Every outlet fell in line except for one local affiliate, which floated a mention of the claim. No rivals took the bait, though, and the story drifted away, never casting shade on the player. Meanwhile, the stripper hired a bottom-feeding lawyer: His office was one door down from where she danced. “We ended up paying her a little to stay out of court, but it never made the papers or happened again” to her client. In the end he bought himself a dear lesson cheaply: “Nothing good can happen in a nightclub or strip joint after midnight – nothing,” says White, who bemoans the time and labor she’s wasted tamping down those 2 AM eruptions.

She won’t say how many claims she’s paid out or even ballpark the size of the checks players have written – “I’m not giving those girls one drop of extra incentive,” she sniffs – but over time it has become a steady sideline operation.

Whether guiding her clients through paternity dramas – “First rule: Always take the swab-kit test; 60 percent of the time the kid is someone else’s” – or walking them through the minefield of jilted girlfriends who threaten to go public with charges, White spends many mornings armed for battle, going from skirmish to skirmish. “She’s the world’s most expensive babysitter, because some dudes keep repeating childish things,” says Salaam. “And trust me when I tell you, she steps to them strong, but there’s that handful of guys who don’t hear it first time out. Or the third or fourth time, either.”

* It is often asserted that the justice system is unfair to blacks — that their conviction rate reflects more than their offending rate. However, there reasons why the opposite may be true:

(1) The fraction of murders cleared in black areas is lower, since blacks are less likely to report crimes to the police. (I think this is true — can someone supply supporting evidence?)
(2) Some blacks who are good at sports at the college and pro level have fixers.

In many schools there is pressure to equalize discipline rates by race, which leads to under-punishing of black delinquents.

* The incoming state rep for Ferguson Missouri just accused an incoming state rep for a St Louis district of rape.

They are both light-skinned blacks and both certain to win as they are in safe democratic seats and already won their primaries.

* Seems like it was just yesterday when Pacman Jones was “being rebellion” and beating up women at “scrip” clubs. (LINK) (LINK)

“A tremendous asset to the franchise,” Jerry Jones said. “. . . I won’t get into detail of the kinds of things [Wells does], because he does everything.” …

Jerry is not going to be around forever folks; treasure him while he is still here.

* Cris Carter’s advice was to have a fall guy in the crew who would take the blame and be arrested in lieu of the NFL player.

* I would imagine that NFL players talk their way out of drunk driving arrests a lot.

My cousin who had been merely a minor league baseball player, but was a big charismatic guy, talked his way out of a lot of tickets when we shared an apartment.

* “Hush” money, especially for savagery associated with sexual assaults, spousal abuse, drunk driving, wild parties, drug use, doping. But who gets the “hush” money to motivate people (including the media and authorities) to look the other way? The victims, victim’s relatives, media reporters, cops on the beat, the friendly sergeant at the station house? Money talks. I’m reminded of how easily JFK over his life avoided publicity about his sexual misadventures and how easily Michael Jackson was able to avoid being charged with pedophilia.

We’re acquainted with a “fixer” in our local community … although her specialty is “damage control” over industrial accidents and deaths to avoid negative publicity for clients ranging from local businesses to major corporations. It’s fascinating to hear her talk about it.

We occasionally meet for lunch. She gives us the rundown on the latest industrial accidents and deaths in the community. Yes, we’re always surprised; one in ten appears in the media! She brings together victims (if they survive), victim’s relatives, insurance companies, management, cleanup crews. She is responsible for drafting statements to the media when necessary. Her objective is to get things back to normal with as little damage as quickly as possible. She is very good at it.

The strangest thing is that our friend is always busy. Sometimes our lunches are short. She has to get back to the scene. The bottom line is that “fixing” works.

* Every NFL team has this sort of (usually) black guy on the payroll. His job is to deal with the players’ chaotic personal lives, whether crazy girlfriends or wives, crazy mothers, run-ins, child-support, you name it. I don’t think he’s so much a surrogate father as a buffer to permit coaches and general managers to have some level of plausible deniability when dealing with the (rare) press coverage of how truly degenerate most of their players are. Probably a lot of the big college programs also have this sort of consigliere type figure.

Here’s a report of one of them in action last year.

And here’s the link to the fixer’s responsibilities.

* For all of Jerry Jones reclamation projects, the Cowboys have won how many Superbowls since he canned Jimmy Johnson? The Giants won two under authoritarian Tom Coughlin, sorely missed. The Patriots under Bill Belichick have skated the edge in coaching but ruthlessly discard players who create problems (Hernandez) and even those who bump up against the salary cap.

The problem with guys like Jones is that their indiscipline off the field infects them on the field, negating raw athletic talent. The Patriots tend to get guys with only one athletic talent, devise schemes where that’s all they do — maximize that one particular talent, and make it clear any screw ups and they will be replaced instantly with just another guy with that same talent.

Just as a guess, I’d bet that the Cowboys are among the worst along with the Seahawks and a few others, the Patriots the least bad (I would not say “best”) and many other teams somewhere in between.

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Is Milo Hurting The Alt-Right?

Brett Stevens writes:

Yiannopoulos is a provocateur who delights in offending everyone as a means of subverting the culture of offense, or the idea that any speech which disturbs someone or anyone is bad and should be banned. He is the manifestation of the old ANUS motto “Say FVCK for FREEDOM” which was symbolic more than literal: whatever the herd fears must be spoken, loudly, to prevent the herd from demonizing it fully and banishing it from discussion.

He is granted this privilege by the fact that he is immune from attack. As a part-Jewish flamboyant gay man, he comes from two protected minority groups and can speak his mind without someone accusing him of being a privileged white male. He has minority privilege instead, which counts for a lot: Thomas Sowell wrote many things that a white man could not have written without ending his career. Yiannopoulos is bullet-proof and he uses that to divide the Left.

He does not claim to be Alt Right; he claims to be a cultural libertarian or some variation of the above, and yet he introduces gateway ideas that lead people to the Alt Right with every one of his speeches or writings. Some of these are quite advanced and combine conservative and libertarian thought. Often, he expresses a spectrum of Social Conservative through Traditionalist and Reactionary thought.

In other words, he does not attempt to speak for any group, but serves as a wedge splitting apart the Leftist lock on public discourse, and then kicks the Alt Right through that gap. He is a sapper, an advance vanguard, and on the whole, he has helped the Alt Right far more than he has hurt it.

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The Los Angeles Connection To The 9/11 Attacks

Wherever you have Muslims, you have increased support for Islamic activity, which includes terrorism.

Wherever you have Jews, you have increased support for Zionism.

If there had not been a Saudi-funded mosque in Culver City and a Halal restaurant on Venice Blvd in Culver City, there might not have been a 9/11 attack.

Why are these institutions that played a role in the 9/11 attacks still allowed to operate with impunity and to facilitate more attacks on us?

Los Angeles Times:

The California connection involves Nawaf Hazmi and Khalid Mihdhar, two Al Qaeda veterans of conflicts in Bosnia and Afghanistan. They flew into Los Angeles International Airport as students in January 2000 and prayed at a Culver City mosque built by the Saudi royal family and frequented by a Saudi consular official.

They later moved to San Diego where they tried to improve their English and took flying lessons at the Sorbi Flying Club.

Their move to San Diego later drew the interest of FBI agents searching for any evidence of Saudi support for the attacks, according to the 9/11 Commission report and to recently declassified material from the congressional inquiry.

While eating at a halal restaurant on Venice Boulevard in Culver City, near the blue-tiled dome of the King Fahad Mosque, the two men’s Gulf Arabic drew the attention of a Saudi named Omar Bayoumi, who had a no-show job with a Saudi defense contractor in San Diego, investigators found.

Bayoumi offered to let the newcomers stay in his apartment in San Diego for a few days and later helped them pay the deposit for an apartment.

The FBI suspected that Bayoumi, who bureau informants considered a Saudi intelligence operative, was sent to meet the pair by a Saudi consular official named Fahad Thumairy, who also led prayers at the Saudi-funded mosque.

When retracing Bayoumi’s steps, FBI agents found that he had visited the Saudi consulate in Los Angeles and saw Thumairy on the same day he met Hazmi and Mihdhar.

Whether those meetings were coincidence or a link that proves official Saudi complicity in the plot is key to the families’ claims against the kingdom.

“No one ever said Bayoumi or Thumairy were senior government officials, but a government is responsible for lower level officials who cause death or injury to people under the cause of their employ,” said Jack Quinn, one of the lawyers for more than 2,000 family members of Sept. 11 victims.

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