‘Trump commutes Esformes’ 20-year sentence in massive Medicare fraud case in Miami’

From the Miami Herald:

Philip Esformes, a former Miami Beach healthcare mogul convicted of playing a central role in one of the nation’s biggest Medicare fraud cases and using his ill-gotten millions to pay bribes for favors, won a commutation of his 20-year sentence from President Donald Trump Tuesday night.

Esformes, convicted of paying bribes, money laundering and other charges, was also ordered to pay $44 million to the taxpayer-funded Medicare program and the U.S. government after a grueling 2019 trial prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami and Justice Department. Trump’s commutation did not overturn that restitution order.

A handful of former federal prosecutors in South Florida questioned Trump’s clemency decision.

From the Chicago Tribune, Sept. 13, 2019:

Former Illinois and Florida nursing home mogul Philip Esformes wept and pleaded for mercy Thursday before being sentenced to 20 years in prison for what the U.S. Justice Department called the largest single health care bribery and kickback scheme in American history.

Esformes, who once controlled a network of more than two dozen health care facilities that stretched from Chicago to Miami, garnered $1.3 billion Medicaid revenues by bribing medical professionals who referred patients to his Florida facilities then paid off government regulators as vulnerable residents were injured by their peers, prosecutors said.

He housed elderly patients alongside younger adults who suffered from mental illness and drug addiction — sometimes with fatal results. In Esformes’ Oceanside Extended Care Center in Miami Beach, “an elderly patient was attacked and beaten to death by a younger mental health patient who never should have been at (a nursing facility) in the first place,” prosecutors wrote in a pre-sentencing memo.

As he handed down the sentence, Judge Robert N. Scola Jr. said the length and scope of Esformes’ criminal conduct were “unmatched in our community. … Mr. Esformes violated the trust of Medicare and Medicaid in epic proportions.”

But Scola meted out a punishment significantly less than the 30 years prosecutors requested, saying Esformes also had an extraordinary history of helping people in need. Attorneys for Esformes had described him as a selfless philanthropist who had donated more than $15 million to synagogues, schools and needy individuals, often anonymously.

Said Scola: “I think he should get some consideration for his philanthropy, although it’s dangerous to say because he was stealing money from Medicare, so people might say he was giving that money to charity. But the vast majority of the money he made, he made legitimately. More importantly he was a true friend to people known and unknown to him, and that is worthy of mitigation.”

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The end of the liberal international order (12-22-20)

00:00 The arc of history does not bend towards democracy
03:10 Michael Malice On Biden And The New Right
07:00 John Mearsheimer: The end of the liberal international order
36:30 A Lot of Friends Fell Down the Racist Rabbit Hole | Michael Malice
44:00 Michael Malice: Anarchy, Democracy, Libertarianism, Love, and Trolling, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BIk1zUy8ehU
50:25 Colin Liddell: The decline of the Alt-Right into Alt-Liteism and Stormertardery, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4_rdkJo0GjY
1:13:20 Dana White says the show will go on for UFC
1:19:00 The greatest livestream of the decade, Baked Alaska meets Sammy, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njVye0I9AUU
1:21:00 YOBA, Year of Baked Alaska, https://dailygroyper.com/2020/09/25/baked-alaska-saves-schizophrenic-trailer-park-trash-human-trafficking-victim-from-pink-eye/
1:27:00 Jared Taylor racist in Japanese
1:29:00 Jared Taylor racist in French
1:33:40 Greg Johnson on Covid-19 and excess deaths
1:45:40 Redbar Destroys A Florida Homeless Man (Mersh), https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UlbEzurJ-zg
2:16:00 RED BAR RADIO S13E20 Mexicans Rant July 8, 2015
2:30:30 Andy Warski on Redbar supercut
2:37:00 Redbar – Know More News – Hypocrisy & Lies!
2:43:00 Nathan Cofnas on the origins of Covid-19 (more likely lab than wet markets), https://twitter.com/nathancofnas/status/1341533156038471683
2:47:00 Jared Taylor on Black Lives Matter
2:52:10 Donald Trump’s four-minute talk today is reminiscent of Trump 2016
2:55:00 Yes, the new federal budget includes $500 million for Israel. No, that isn’t a surprise., https://www.jta.org/2020/12/22/israel/yes-the-new-federal-budget-includes-500-million-for-israel-no-that-isnt-a-surprise#.X-I5dYhXpeo.twitter
2:59:20 Tucker Carlson on covid relief bill
3:12:00 Millenniyule 2020: Josh Neal
3:16:00 ‘Life In A Northern Town’ (Dream Academy) – Pub Choir in Brisbane, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OF5o7iFyBZs

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Making Sense Of Race (12-21-20)

00:00 DB: Tucker Carlson Tells His Giant Fox Audience Not to Trust COVID Vaccines, https://www.thedailybeast.com/tucker-carlson-tells-his-giant-fox-audience-not-to-trust-covid-vaccines?jwsource=twi
14:00 WSJ: A Pandemic of Misinformation
The media’s politicization of Covid has proved deadly and puts Americans’ freedoms at risk, https://www.wsj.com/articles/a-pandemic-of-misinformation-11608570640?mod=hp_opin_pos_1
21:00 Your defense mechanisms, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2XuzSm6o6Y
51:40 MATT PARROTT – UBI – RADIO FREE INDIANA – DEC. 14, 2020, https://www.bitchute.com/video/HnoSyrn8Im6a/
1:04:50 Jews rise up against white nationalism & fascism
1:09:20 Millenniall Woes defends Richard Spencer,https://trad-news.blogspot.com/2019/01/millennial-woes-destroys-own-brand-by.html
1:18:00 NWG opposes Richard Spencer
1:32:00 NEW on recovering from the National Socialist path
1:33:00 The Great Conjunction of Jupiter & Saturn
1:43:50 Hispanic dude: Black males are jealous of Hispanic men
1:48:40 Black Men Dating Latinas
1:57:50 Will Richard Spencer study Torah and study love?
1:59:30 RICHARD SPENCER & ED DUTTON | Making Sense of Race | McSPENCER GROUP PODCAST | 2020-12-20
2:04:00 Bashar Al Assad makes a compelling case against neo-liberalism, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bashar_al-Assad
2:11:00 Chivo exposes black self hater, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYEahEi1BkY
http://dissident-mag.com/2020/07/07/america-first-fed-problem/
2:21:20 Redbar radio said Alex Jones is trying to get away from the Qanon/altright crowd, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GVAXUiqJPt0
2:26:00 Joe Rogan tired of Covid hysteria
2:31:20 Year of Baked Alaska, YOBA
2:33:00 Nick disavows Kami giving Hitler speeches
2:35:30 Great Conjunction of Jupiter & Saturn | December 21 2020 | Griffith Observatory, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uiABtFyGPY
3:29:00 The Zebra Killers, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zebra_murders
3:32:00 Jimmy Dore: AOC’s Gas Lighting Gets Called Out On Twitter!, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbZFO-pmJMo
3:37:12 Tucker Carlson on the US Military pushing diversity, https://www.unz.com/isteve/thanks-trump-administration-the-great-reset-comes-for-the-military/
3:46:00 The Great Reset comes to the Dalton School, https://www.unz.com/isteve/the-great-reset-comes-for-the-dalton-school/

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Your Top 12 Defense Mechanisms

When Fox News called Arizona for Joe Biden at 8:20 PM CA time on election night, it was clear that Joe Biden was going to become the next president of the United States. However, it took me about four more days to accept that reality. Why so long? Because I was denying reality.

The weekend after the election, I read some books on voter fraud. The best two were Election Meltdown: Dirty Tricks, Distrust, and the Threat to American Democracy by Richard Hasen (published in February 2020) and The Myth of Voter Fraud by Lorraine C. Minnite (published in 2010). After reading these books, I realized that Republicans had been complaining about voter fraud since the Motor Voter Law of 1993 but that they never bothered to present strong evidence that it led to massive voter fraud. Hence, I immediately became skeptical when Republicans complained that massive voter fraud cost them the presidency in the 2020 election. So when I heard new claims of massive voter fraud, I wanted to see evidence and I was never impressed by what I saw, and I was similarly not impressed by pundits who proclaimed voter fraud in 2020 was substantial when they had no compelling evidence. I then deepened my contempt for every pundit who makes his living talking about things he knows little about, and I was re-affirmed in my preference for the scholarship of those who devote much of their adult life to certain specialties.

LCSW Kati Morton in this 2019 video says: “A defense mechanism is an unconscious psychological response that prevents us from feeling any anxiety or upset that can arise from difficult or harmful stimuli. Research shows us that these defenses happen when our amygdala is firing. Remember our amygdala, it’s that bean-shaped part of our inner brain that acts as our fire alarm and aids us in fight, flight, and freeze. So when we feel in danger, our defense mechanisms come to our aid! Even if the threat is something we are imagining.
In a way, our defense mechanisms keep us safe and happy because they prevent us from having to deal with anything that has the potential to be upsetting. But as I am sure you can see, life cannot be completely free from anxiety or upset. Life comes with its ups and downs, and we can’t just avoid everything and think it’s going to be okay. That’s why these defense mechanisms quickly become unhealthy coping skills, that after keeping us safe that one time, now just hold us back, hurt our relationships, and isolate us from our loved ones.”

So our defense mechanisms shield us, at least temporarily, from anything that might upset us such as a Joe Biden victory. I don’t want to avoid reality because these mechanisms are not helping me in the long-term. They isolate me and make me less effective. Most everything, it seems, that immediately makes one feel better is bad for you.

Mechanism 1: Denial. We refuse to acknowledge that something has happened. This is particularly common among addicts. People like to deny reality so that they can avoid doing something about it.

2: Displacement. When we redirect our upset on to another person.
3. Intellectualization. Instead of dealing with something difficult, we focus on fixing a problem or analyzing a problem instead of giving ourselves the time to feel.
4. Repression. When we take difficult feelings and push them into our subconscious. They become a black hole. This often happens as a result of trauma. This is why we have flashbacks and body memories later in life.
5. Projection. When we place our emotions or thoughts on to somebody else. We might even become upset at others when nothing is actually happening.
6. Over-compensation. When we over-compensate in one part of our life to make up for lack in another area instead of being OK with not being wonderful at everything.
7. Regression. Reverting to childhood. Name-calling and throwing tantrums.
8. Reaction formation. When we act in contrast to how we feel.
9. Rationalization. We come up with excuses. We explain away our bad behavior.
10. Sublimation. When we channel anything upsetting into something more acceptable.
11. Dissociation. When our situation becomes too much to deal with and so we either disconnect from ourselves (depersonalization) or from reality (derealization).
12. Passive aggression.

I notice a lot of my friends on the right are declaring that they are becoming non-political and yet they are still active on social media, they still listen to talk radio and watch the news and retain a passionate interest in politics. In other words, they’re fooling themselves about reality and about themselves to cope.

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Conspiracy Theories

Novelist James Meek writes for the London Review of Books:

* In the spring​ of 2020, while the world stayed indoors to suppress Covid-19, arsonists attacked mobile phone masts in Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Australia and New Zealand. They set fire to nearly a hundred masts in the UK, or tried to; there were twenty attacks over the Easter weekend alone, including one on a mast serving a Birmingham hospital. The arsonists believed that the latest mobile phone technology, 5G, was the real cause of the pandemic. They imagined a worldwide conspiracy: either the unexpectedly genocidal effects of the 5G rollout were being covered up by faking a pandemic, or 5G was being used deliberately to kill huge numbers of people and help enslave whoever was left. In the actual world, 5G’s feeble radio waves aren’t capable of any of this – you’d get more radiation standing near a baby monitor – but the fire-setters are unheedful of that world.

* Covid-19 and government efforts to control it – an extreme event, accompanied by what can seem baffling and intrusive restrictions – appear, in the conspiracist mind, as the most open moves yet by a secret group of sadistic tyrants who want to reduce the human population and enslave those who remain. The pandemic and official countermeasures are interpreted as proof, and Covid becomes the string on which any and all conspiracy theories may be threaded. Seen through the conspiracist filter, by forcing us to wear masks, by closing bars and isolating the frail elderly, by trying to terrify us over, as they see it, a dose of flu, or by microwaving us with 5G, the secret elite has shown its hand.

Now that its existence, nature and power have been proved to us, why shouldn’t we believe that the members of this group arranged 9/11? Or that Bill Gates is planning to kill us with vaccines, or inject us with nanochips hidden in vaccines, or both? Why shouldn’t the entire course of world events have been planned by a group of elite families hundreds, even thousands, of years ago? Why shouldn’t there be a link between the bounds to individual freedoms that governments have drawn up to slow climate change and the restrictions they’re carrying out in the name of beating Covid? Surely these two hoaxes are cooked up by the same firm, with the same agenda? Why, as followers of the American conspiracy theory known as QAnon insist, shouldn’t a group of politicians, tycoons and celebrities be kidnapping and torturing children on a massive scale?

A large survey in May conducted by researchers in Oxford found that only about half of English adults were free of what they termed ‘conspiracy thinking.’

* A friend, a BBC journalist, told me about a conversation he’d had with an acquaintance who began talking about the dangers of 5G and claimed that ‘every time a new kind of electromagnetic energy is invented, it causes a new kind of disease, like the invention of radar caused Spanish flu.’

‘But Spanish flu happened in 1918, and radar wasn’t invented till the 1930s,’ my friend said.

‘You would say that, wouldn’t you?’ This was uttered without a trace of a smile.

* [David] Icke was a BBC sports presenter in the 1980s, smooth, bland and remarkable only for a certain glassy coldness of manner. Before that he’d been a professional footballer. At a time when Britain had a handful of TV channels, everyone knew his face. Shortly before he left the BBC in 1990 he experienced a metaphysical epiphany in a newsagent’s on the Isle of Wight. Not long afterwards, via sessions with the late Betty Shine, a self-proclaimed psychic and bestselling writer of New Age books, and a transcendental episode in a storm on a hilltop in Peru, he declared he’d been chosen by a benign godlike agency as a vehicle for the revelation of truths essential to the survival of Earth and humanity. In an appearance on Terry Wogan’s chat show – notorious for Icke’s turquoise tracksuit and Wogan’s observation to his guest, about the sniggering audience, ‘They’re laughing at you, they’re not laughing with you’ – he denied claiming to be Jesus Christ, insisting he was merely the latest in a line of prophets that numbered Jesus as one of its more distinguished old boys.

That was in 1991. Since then, Icke has worked on his material and his brand, developing his following, writing books, and giving lectures and interviews around the world. Last year he was banned from entering Australia but in 2018 he was still welcomed by large audiences in municipal venues in English towns, where his fans sat peaceably as slides showed George Soros with reptilian eyes, in a corona of hellfire, with the caption: ‘George Soros: Personification of Evil.’ Covid-19 has boosted his profile. In May, following an appeal from the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, which pointed out that millions of people had been exposed to online material in which he blamed Jews for the pandemic, denied the reality of Covid-19, played down the infectiousness of viruses in general and lent support to 5G conspiracists, both Facebook and YouTube – though not Twitter – took down Icke’s pages. The action had no appreciable effect on his profile, except perhaps to give him the lustre of the martyr. YouTube, and YouTube wannabes like BrandNewTube, are still thick with Icke interviews by small-time videocasters. Google will point you to them. And although he has been banned from Facebook, his fans haven’t, nor have links to his material. The first thing I saw when I last checked the TruthSeekers UK Facebook group was a video interview with him. Amazon still distributes his books.

The conspiracy narrative Icke began to weave in the early 1990s is a sprawling affair that changes to follow the headlines, veers off on tangents and is full of internal inconsistencies, but some core elements remain. Icke’s story bears similarities to the influential American conspiracist text Behold a Pale Horse by William Cooper (which was published at about the time Icke reinvented himself as a prophet), and to the pseudo-leaks that drive QAnon, though QAnon tends to avoid the extraterrestrial. A cursory and much rationalised summary of Icke’s conspiracy theory goes like this: thousands of years ago, a race of reptilian beings from another world drew up a marvellously slow plan for the enslavement of humanity, to be carried out by a tiny elite of either – the exact mechanism varies – human proxies of surpassing wickedness, or reptiles in human form. (‘I once had an extraordinary experience with former prime minister Ted Heath,’ Icke told the Guardian in 2006. ‘Both of his eyes, including the whites, turned jet black.’)

* Earlier this year the young German journalist Alexander Eydlin wrote an article for Die Zeit about how he became a conspiracy theorist, and how he stopped being one. The latest survey by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation suggests that in Germany, as in Britain, as in the US, about half the population tends to the view that malign secret organisations are directing events. Eydlin, who describes himself as ‘a politically left-leaning secular Jew from the upper middle class with educated parents and a healthy social network’, said he had been looking for something to believe in, and was enchanted by the explicatory beauty and alternative value system outlined by his conspiracist friends. ‘Before the Enlightenment, evil was clearly located,’ he writes. ‘In the form of the devil, the satanic, it took on an understandable form and could be fought. Now we suspect that we cannot know what evil is or whether it even exists. Not everyone can bear the idea of a life that cannot be defined as unilaterally good or even just.’

Eydlin counsels against treating conspiracy theorists as political extremists: that will only make them see the concept of extremism itself as another of the lies told by the evil conspirators. Nor is there any point in trying to tear down their ideas with factual arguments, because the belief system being attacked is also an identity. ‘In the end,’ Eydlin writes, ‘I wasn’t convinced by the stubborn arguments of people who wanted to prove to me that I was wrong. Instead it was the lasting friendships with people who didn’t share my strange ideas and yet saw me as something more than just a nutcase. They argued with me, but only after they had taken the time to understand my crude ideas.’

* The​ Icke style of conspiracist discourse is never lost for words or answers. It is mimicked by foot soldiers like Martin, whom I met in Trafalgar Square. Like Dominic, Martin didn’t match the cliché of conspiracy theorists as unkempt eccentrics, hippies, stoners, ragged and unbarbered and decked with badges. He was a graphic designer from Swindon, he had a degree, he was neatly and conventionally dressed; he’d recently lost his job when the pandemic forced his main client, P&O Cruises, to tie up its fleet. We spoke for about forty minutes. I peppered him with questions, but he never hesitated, acknowledged a non sequitur or expressed the slightest doubt that he saw the truth. Calmly, with a tone of stubborn and righteous annoyance such as an Englishman might use to complain about a neighbour’s plans for a new conservatory, he led me on. The New World Order planned to reduce the world population to 500 million slaves; the BBC reported the collapse of Building 7 of the World Trade Centre on 9/11 before it happened; the police helicopter overhead was an obvious tactic by the conspirators to drown out the rally speakers; Prescott Bush created communism and financed Nazism; apparent Covid deaths in China and Iran were organised attacks; Covid vaccines would sterilise recipients and implant tracking devices; soon everyone would be forced to have a chip implanted in their hand; the conspirators simultaneously wanted to keep their plans secret and let everyone know about them; central banks needed to be destroyed because they were creating money for themselves; the elite bloodlines of the Rothschilds and Rockefellers and a few others adopted Jewish personas so they couldn’t be criticised without their detractors being accused of antisemitism; these elite bloodlines were psychotic, psychopathic and Satan-worshipping; they went back to Babylon; it was all in scripture, not that he was religious, because all religions were run by the Synagogue of Satan; the conspirators want people to be left-wing because left-wing people liked controlling governments; the gender signs on the traffic lights at Trafalgar Square showed the hand of the Illuminati at work, as did mass immigration.

* The danger of conspiracy theories is not that they promote action to tear down society but that they delegitimise, distract and divert: they divert large numbers of people from engaging in political action, leaving the field clear for the cynical, the greedy and the violently intolerant. They distract them from questioning authority about society’s real problems by promoting a gory soap opera as if it were real and the result of ‘research’. And they delegitimise the idea that institutions – courts, parliaments, the education system, the salaried media – can be anything other than malign.

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