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A Railway Defense Counsel ensures that the safeguards of Article 311 and the rule of audi alteram partem are meaningfully enforced at the departmental stage itself. Through appeal, revision, review, and remedies such as Review under Rule 25A of the RS(D&A) Rules, 1968, unlawful dismissals can be corrected early, sparing employees years of avoidable litigation and ruinous hardship. High Courts are meaningless when everything is in the hands of the administrative.
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"We sued the HHS & after a year of litigation they ADMITTED NOT A SINGLE PLACEBO SAFETY TRIAL has been done on ANY of the 72 mandated childhood vaccines." RFK jr. The pharmaceutical industry is not a health industry, it's a profit generating industry.
Science is not trustworthy because a scientist wears a lab coat, has a PhD, or holds a prestigious position. Science is trustworthy because claims are transparent, testable, and supported by evidence.
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Replying to @JoyceWhiteVance
Forget about what's in the Epstein Files that hasn't been released. LET'S BE HONEST KOMRADES. WE ALL KNOW THAT THE CONGRESSIONAL DEM & ALT-LEFT MEDIA HYSTERIA OVER "EPSTEIN FILES" IS ABOUT GETTING TRUMP, LACKING EVIDENCE, BY INNUENDO. ⭐ Survivors with lawyers file lawsuits when they have a claim Every Epstein survivor is represented by: high‑profile civil attorneys firms specializing in sexual abuse litigation lawyers who have sued billionaires, institutions, and governments * These lawyers: filed against Epstein filed against Ghislaine Maxwell filed against Prince Andrew filed against Wexner‑linked entities filed against schools, banks, and corporations ^ If any survivor had a claim against Trump, their lawyers would file immediately. 👉 They don’t need “Epstein files.” 👉 They don’t need Congress. 👉 They don’t need DOJ. They need one thing only: A client with a claim. * THEY DON'T HAVE ONE.
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. ********************************************************* A Robin Reynolds Exclusive Reveal ********************************************************* . THE MILLER DOSSIER Stephen Miller was born into everything he's spent his life trying to destroy . There is a question that follows Stephen Miller everywhere, asked by classmates, colleagues, journalists, and his own family, and it has never been answered satisfactorily. How does a Jewish kid from a wealthy liberal family in Santa Monica, California, the grandson of refugees who fled antisemitic pogroms in Belarus, the product of a country that opened its doors to his ancestors when they had nothing, become the most powerful anti-immigration official in the history of the United States government? The answer is not complicated. It is just ugly. This is his file. . THE FAMILY HE CAME FROM Stephen Nathan Miller was born August 23, 1985, in Santa Monica, California. He grew up the middle child of three in a five-bedroom home valued at approximately $1 million in the North of Montana neighborhood —one of the wealthiest enclaves in greater Los Angeles. His father Michael, a Stanford-educated lawyer, cofounded a corporate and real estate law firm and helped reconstruct the world-famous Santa Monica Pier. His mother Miriam, a Columbia University School of Social Work graduate, worked with troubled teens before pivoting to the family real estate business. Together they own and operate approximately 2,500 residential units in California under the name California Villages. His uncle David Glosser, a retired neuropsychologist who would later become one of the most important witnesses to who Stephen Miller actually is, described the household plainly in a PBS Frontline interview: Stephen grew up in a privileged family. He certainly never wanted for anything. He never had any part-time jobs as a kid. There was household help. It was an upper-middle-class-aspiring lifestyle. That household help was provided by Latin American immigrants. The family history Miller built his career destroying is specific and documented. His mother's ancestors —Wolf Lieb Glotzer and his wife Bessie —immigrated to the United States from the Russian Empire's Antopol, in what is present-day Belarus, arriving in New York on January 7, 1903, escaping the antisemitic pogroms that were systematically murdering Jewish communities across Eastern Europe. They arrived at Ellis Island with $8. They came through exactly the kind of chain migration —family members sponsoring subsequent arrivals —that Stephen Miller has spent his entire career trying to destroy. In 2018, his uncle David Glosser published a scathing op-ed in Politico calling Miller an immigration hypocrite and writing: "I have watched with dismay and increasing horror as my nephew, who is an educated man and well aware of his heritage, has become the architect of immigration policies that repudiate the very foundation of our family's life in this country." Had Miller's own policies been in effect at the turn of the century, Glosser wrote, their family would have been wiped out. Miller has never publicly responded to his uncle's op-ed. He is, as his uncle noted, an educated man. He knows exactly what he is doing. That is the point. . THE CHILD HE WAS Miller attended Franklin Elementary School, Lincoln Middle School, and Santa Monica High School —known locally as SAMOHI. He was bar mitzvahed at Beth Shir Shalom and confirmed at the Santa Monica Synagogue. The first documented signs of what he would become appeared early and are specific. Before entering high school, Miller told a childhood friend named Jason Islas that they could no longer be friends because Islas was Latino. No argument. No drift apart. He was 14 years old. The friendship ended because of the other boy's ethnicity. A classmate who knew him in those years described him in a book: "He was off by himself all the time. His desk was a mess with stuff mashed up, and he would pour glue on his body, then peel it off, and eat it." By high school the glue was gone. The isolation had found an ideological costume. As a freshman, Miller wrote a letter to a local website complaining: "When I entered Santa Monica High School in ninth grade, I noticed a number of students lacked basic English skills. There are usually very few, if any, Hispanic students in my honors classes, despite the large number of Hispanic students that attend our school." In the same piece, titled "Political Correctness Out of Control," he lamented the school's promotion of safe sex and claimed an LGBT club was "fostering" homosexuality. He likened classmates who opposed the Iraq War to terrorists. He wrote that Osama Bin Laden would feel very welcome at Santa Monica High School. He was sixteen. During his junior year, he gave a campaign speech for a student government position that was perceived as so racist and classist by the diverse student body that he was thrown off the stage. He appeared on conservative talk radio while still in high school, citing Rush Limbaugh as a formative influence. He challenged Latino students to speak English in the hallways. He fought against bilingual school announcements. His classmates' collective memory of him is unambiguous. "We didn't like him," former classmate Natalie Flores said. "He was rude, he was racist, he was a misogynist, he was absolutely obnoxious." Class student body president Justin Brownstone told reporters: "I never thought I'd have to remember things about Stephen Miller." . DUKE UNIVERSITY —WHERE THE IDEOLOGY HARDENED Miller enrolled at Duke University in 2003. What happened there completed the transformation from angry teenager to ideological operative. At Duke, Miller became acquainted with Richard Spencer —a white supremacist who would go on to become a central figure of the deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville in 2017, and the man who coined the term "alt-right." Spencer told Mother Jones in 2016 that he acted as a mentor to Miller. Miller organized an event at Duke featuring white nationalist Peter Brimelow, founder of the white nationalist website VDARE. He remained in contact with both Brimelow and Spencer throughout his time at Duke and beyond. At Duke, Miller was a columnist for The Chronicle and president of the Duke chapter of Students for Academic Freedom —a David Horowitz organization. He used the column, called Miller Time, to advance the same arguments he had been making in high school, now polished into something that could be mistaken for political philosophy. He graduated in 2007 with a degree in political science. . THE CAREER —BUILDING THE MACHINE After graduating, Miller worked as press secretary for Representatives Michele Bachmann and John Shadegg. In 2009 he joined the staff of Alabama Senator Jeff Sessions, where he worked on immigration policy and helped defeat the Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act of 2013 —a bipartisan immigration reform bill that would have provided a path to citizenship for millions of undocumented people. While working for Sessions, Miller was simultaneously operating as an ideological influence broker inside the conservative media ecosystem. From March 2015 to June 2016, Miller sent over 900 emails to Breitbart News editors —specifically to Katie McHugh, then a Breitbart editor who has since publicly renounced her white nationalist ties. The emails, leaked to the Southern Poverty Law Center's Hatewatch by McHugh in 2019, document Miller promoting white nationalist literature, racist immigration narratives, and extremist conspiracy theories to shape Breitbart's coverage and, through it, the broader conservative media conversation. The specific contents of those emails are damning in their specificity. Miller recommended Breitbart write about The Camp of the Saints —a racist French novel popular among neo-Nazis and white nationalists depicting the violent destruction of Western civilization by non-white immigrants. He promoted American Renaissance, a white nationalist publication he referred to by its insider abbreviation "AmRen." He promoted VDARE, Peter Brimelow's white nationalist website. He suggested stories about interracial crime. After the Umpqua Community College mass shooting, Miller emailed McHugh asking: "He is described as 'mixed race' and born in England. Any chance of piecing that profile together more, or will it all be covered up?" McHugh later told the SPLC: "What Stephen Miller sent to me in those emails has become policy at the Trump administration." He was not wrong about that. . THE FIRST TERM —POLICY AS IDEOLOGY Miller joined the Trump campaign in 2016 and became its chief speechwriter and policy architect on immigration. He wrote Trump's inaugural address —the "American carnage" speech. He became Senior Advisor to the President. . What he built in the first term: The Muslim travel ban —executive orders barring entry from majority-Muslim countries, struck down twice by courts before a modified version survived Supreme Court review. The family separation policy —the deliberate separation of migrant children from their parents at the southern border as a deterrent. The policy caused what the Department of Health and Human Services' own Inspector General described as "intense trauma" in children. Thousands of children were separated. Hundreds were not reunited with their families for years. Some have still not been reunited. The Remain in Mexico policy —forcing asylum seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases were processed in U.S. immigration courts, leaving them in dangerous border cities with no legal status or protection. Drastic reductions in refugee admissions —the annual refugee ceiling was cut from 110,000 to 18,000 during Miller's tenure. His name appeared on American Renaissance as an author. A piece he wrote for FrontPage Magazine in 2005, titled "Santa Monica High's Multicultural Fistfights," was republished by the white nationalist website. . THE INTERREGNUM —AMERICA FIRST LEGAL During the Biden years, Miller did not go quietly. He founded and led America First Legal, an organization that launched dozens of lawsuits against Democratic policies, targeting DEI programs, vaccine mandates, and Biden administration immigration policies. It became the legal infrastructure of the MAGA movement during the out-of-power years —a litigation machine designed to tie Democratic governance in knots and generate the base-energizing content that kept Miller's political network warm and ready. He was back in the building before the inauguration was over. . THE SECOND TERM —UNLEASHED In Trump's second administration, Miller serves as Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Homeland Security Adviser. Neither position required Senate confirmation. He was announced before traditional national security roles —before the Attorney General, before the Secretary of State, before the National Security Adviser. That sequencing was a signal about who actually runs policy. He is among an exclusive group the president trusts absolutely. In the first term, the policies he devised were considered too extreme and many were reversed by courts. Now, with the president emboldened by his second election win, Miller has found his moment. In May 2025, when normal immigration law enforcement was not producing the results he desired, Miller demanded ICE hit an arrest quota of a minimum of 3,000 people per day. That demand produced the dragnet approach, the school and church raids, the terrorization of communities, the violent sweeps of hard-working parents and grandparents, that has characterized immigration enforcement in 2025 and 2026. Inside the administration, Miller is known by nicknames including "the REAL Attorney General," "Shadow Sec Def," "Prime Minister Miller," and "President Miller" —suggesting colleagues believe it is Trump doing Miller's bidding, not the other way around. Trump reportedly gossips about Miller behind his back over his intense and awkward manner. During Miller's earlier years on Capitol Hill working for Jeff Sessions, Republican staffers were so widely and deeply contemptuous of him that they invented a rumor he liked to play with porcelain dolls —specifically to embarrass him. The rumor spread widely enough that the current White House felt compelled to issue a formal denial. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated for the record: "Stephen Miller does not play with dolls." . THE WIFE —AND WHAT SHE REVEALS ABOUT HIM Stephen Miller met Katie Waldman in 2018 in the Roosevelt Room of the White House, when he was senior adviser and she was on DHS's public affairs team. Her description of how they bonded: "Where does all true love happen? Over border security." At the time, Katie Waldman was the DHS spokesperson defending family separation —the policy her future husband had designed. When an MSNBC journalist asked her in 2018 whether having children of her own might change her view of family separation, she replied: "My family and colleagues told me that when I have kids I'll think about family separation differently. But I don't think so." They married on February 17, 2020 at Trump International Hotel in Washington. Trump attended and spoke at the ceremony, reportedly telling guests: "He is the only one who could have a damn wedding in the middle of Presidents' Day weekend." The wedding itself was at a Trump property under active scrutiny for emoluments clause violations. The man who designed the Muslim ban was married at a hotel that foreign officials were booking specifically to curry favor with the president. They have three children and are expecting a fourth. In 2026, when Fox News host Jesse Watters asked Katie what it was like being married to a "sexual matador" —a designation Watters had previously bestowed on Miller, apparently without irony —she replied: "He is an incredibly inspiring man who gets me going in the morning with his speeches being like, 'Let's start the day. I am going to defeat the left, and we are going to win.'" He wakes up and gives speeches. To his wife. In the morning. About defeating the left. . AMERICAN PSYCHO A colleague once described Miller as a "proud sartorialist" who regularly dispensed advice on fabric weights, lapel widths, and the correct tie for the season. Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, was photographed lint-rolling his suit before an on-camera interview. In December 2018, Miller appeared on CBS's Face the Nation with what viewers immediately identified as spray-on hair —a hair loss concealment product applied so visibly that one person described it as looking like black mold on his head. Vanity Fair described it as looking like "a rug crafted from artificial weasel fur," and a hair transplant clinic in London published a clinical analysis of his hairline using the Norwood Scale. Stephen Colbert and Trevor Noah both devoted segments to it. After a Vanity Fair photoshoot at the White House, Miller approached the photographer and said: "You know you have a lot of power in the discretion you use to be kind to someone in your photographs." The man who designed family separation wanted the photographer to be nice to him. Readers of a certain literary inclination will recognize the profile. Patrick Bateman, Bret Easton Ellis's fictional Wall Street sociopath, is similarly preoccupied with business card stock, the precise shade of his suits, and the hierarchy of his peers' aesthetic choices —while conducting industrialized violence that nobody around him notices or acknowledges. Ellis wrote that as satire. Miller is living it as biography. The cruelty and the vanity are not in contradiction. They are the same personality, expressed through different instruments. . THE PORTRAIT Stephen Miller is a man who grew up in a wealthy liberal Jewish family in one of the most progressive cities in America, attended elite institutions, built his ideology on the backs of the Latin American immigrants who cleaned his family's house and mowed their lawn, used that ideology to gain access to the most powerful man in the world, and then spent a decade converting that access into the systematic persecution of people whose only crime was wanting what his own great-great-grandfather wanted when he arrived at Ellis Island with $8 in his pocket. His uncle said it best. If Miller's own policies had been in effect when Wolf-Leib Glosser fled the pogroms of Belarus, the Miller family would have been wiped out. Miller knows this. He has always known this. His uncle said so explicitly —that Stephen is an educated man and well aware of his heritage. He chose this anyway. That is the thing that makes him different from a merely cynical political operative. He is not cynical. He believes it. He has believed it since he was fourteen years old and told Jason Islas they couldn't be friends anymore. That belief —nurtured in a million-dollar house in Santa Monica, mentored by a white nationalist at Duke, sharpened in the offices of Jeff Sessions, and finally handed the full machinery of the United States government to express itself —is now law. It is policy. It is the 3,000 arrests per day. It is the children who still haven't been reunited with their parents. It is the schools and the churches and the workplaces and the communities terrorized in the name of a ideology that was born in a privileged teenager's contempt for the people who served his family's dinner. He poured glue on his body. He peeled it off. He ate it. And now he runs immigration policy for the most powerful country on earth. . SOURCES Miller biography, birth, family background —EBSCO Research Starters; Britannica; Wikipedia; Grokipedia. Miller family wealth, North of Montana neighborhood, $1 million home —The Nation, March 10, 2025. Jean Guerrero, Hate Monger: Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, and the White Nationalist Agenda. Wolf-Leib Glosser immigration history, 1903 Ellis Island arrival —Geneastar family tree; Washington Post; CBS News. David Glosser PBS Frontline interview on Miller family wealth and upbringing —PBS Frontline transcript. David Glosser op-ed, "Immigration Hypocrite" —Politico, August 13, 2018. Republished and cited in HuffPost, Washington Post, CBS News, The Guardian, Irish Star. Jason Islas friendship ended over Latino heritage —EBSCO; Democracy Now; The Left Hook Substack, April 2026. Glue-eating classroom behavior —Jean Guerrero, Hate Monger. Goodreads quotes compilation. High school letters, "Political Correctness Out of Control" —TheWrap; Newsweek; AOL/The Independent. Student government speech thrown off stage —Univision exclusive investigation, February 14, 2017. Talk radio appearances, Rush Limbaugh influence —Democracy Now; Univision. Classmate Natalie Flores quote —TheWrap, March 26, 2017. Justin Brownstone quote —TheWrap, March 26, 2017. Richard Spencer as mentor at Duke —Mother Jones, 2016; SPLC Hatewatch; It's Going Down. Peter Brimelow event at Duke —SPLC Hatewatch report. Sessions staffer, immigration bill defeat —Wikipedia; Britannica. 900 emails to Breitbart, Katie McHugh —SPLC Hatewatch five-part series, November 2019; Newsweek; ABC News; The Guardian. Camp of the Saints recommendation —Newsweek; SPLC. American Renaissance promotion —SPLC; It's Going Down. Umpqua shooting email —Newsweek. McHugh quote on emails becoming policy —SPLC Hatewatch. Miller's piece republished on American Renaissance —SPLC Extremist File. Family separation, "intense trauma" finding —HHS Office of Inspector General report, cited in Britannica. Refugee ceiling reduction, 110,000 to 18,000 —State Department Refugee Admissions Program data. America First Legal —The Hill, November 11, 2024. Deputy Chief of Staff appointment, no Senate confirmation required —Britannica; USA Today; CNN; The Hill. 3,000 arrests per day ICE quota —Monocle, February 28, 2026. Nicknames: "REAL Attorney General," "President Miller" etc. —Rolling Stone profile, September 2025; Nicki Swift, February 2026. Trump gossips about Miller —Rolling Stone profile, September 2025. Porcelain dolls rumor, White House denial —Rolling Stone, September 2025; The Daily Beast, September 15, 2025; The Independent, September 15, 2025. Katie Waldman meeting over border security —The List, November 10, 2025; Alex Marlow Show interview. Katie Waldman family separation comment —Jacob Soboroff, Separated: Inside an American Tragedy; The Guardian. Wedding at Trump International Hotel, Trump attendance —USA Today; Yahoo News; New York Times; Newsweek. Trump wedding quote —Philip Wegmann, RealClearNews; Twitter/X post by Reince Priebus. "Sexual matador" dating advice —Jesse Watters Primetime, Fox News, October 8, 2024; The Independent; New Republic; Yahoo Entertainment. Katie Miller "sexual matador" Fox News appearance —The Independent, 2026; AOL; HuffPost, May 6, 2026. Miller fashion obsession, sartorialist —The Atlantic profile, cited in The Independent and AOL, January 7, 2026. Sean Spicer lint-rolling Miller's suit —Reuters photograph, February 2017; cited in The Atlantic and multiple outlets. Spray-on hair incident —CBS Face the Nation, December 16, 2018; Vanity Fair; The List; Nicki Swift; Treatment Rooms London clinical analysis. Miller to Vanity Fair photographer —Christopher Anderson, photographer; cited in The Independent. Patrick Bateman/American Psycho reference —Bret Easton Ellis, American Psycho, Vintage Books, 1991. SPLC Extremist File on Miller —SPLC, updated 2025. Visa waiver program overruled —Factually. co analysis, October 22, 2025. . Copyright © 2026 by Robin Riley Reynolds / All Rights Reserved .
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It's uterly criminal to blend then...need to put a public litigation jointly by some affected citizens with proof
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Calypso retweeted
And unnecessary retaliatory litigation gives new meaning to the Streisand effect.
Without the talent of @RealCandaceO and her series Becoming Brigitte, my revelations wouldn't have been able to shatter the wall of secrecy erected by @EmmanuelMacron's regime. The true story of the French presidential couple is now known to 4.2 billion people worldwide – more than half the global population. The emperor has no clothes!
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Replying to @ADCVanguard_
ADC should face their party litigation and stop issues of NDC
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Replying to @2351onthelist
Notice, 'misuse'. McColm is not brave enough to make an actual accusation of SNP misuse of funds, because he had no evidence and he's rightly afraid of litigation, but hides behind the, I'm just quoting others canard.
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The Knicks-Raptors scandal shows corporate espionage doesn't only happen in oil companies and banks. It happens in boardrooms, locker rooms, and Gmail inboxes. Follow @NaijaFraudWatch 🔍 We follow the money — and the betrayal. Sources: ESPN, NBC News, US Federal Court filings, Reuters, Sports Litigation Alert
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How do courts decide land cases? The truth May Surprise You Imagine buying a piece of land, building a fence around it, and years later someone appears claiming, “That land belongs to me.” Both of you have documents. Both of you have witnesses. Both of you are convinced you’re right. So, how does a court determine who truly owns the land? Many people believe that the person with the loudest voice, the most money, or the strongest connections wins a land case. In reality, courts rely on evidence, facts, and established legal principles to determine ownership. 1. The court looks for Proof of Ownership: The first question a judge asks is simple: How did you become the owner of this land? A person claiming ownership must prove it through legally recognized means such as: • Purchase • Inheritance • Gift • Allocation by government • Long-established customary ownership The burden is on the claimant to provide convincing evidence. 2. Documents matter, but they are not everything: Many people assume that having a land document automatically guarantees victory. That is not always true. The court will carefully examine: • Deeds of Assignment • Certificates of Occupancy • Survey Plans • Registered Conveyances • Receipts and Agreements A document that is forged, defective, or obtained from someone without legal title may carry little or no weight. The court wants to know not just whether a document exists, but whether it is genuine and legally valid. 3. Survey Plans can tell a powerful story. Land disputes often involve confusion about location and boundaries. A survey plan helps the court identify: • The exact location of the land • Its dimensions • Its boundaries • Whether it overlaps with another person’s claim In many cases, survey evidence becomes one of the most important tools for resolving disputes. 4. Witnesses can strengthen or deströy a case. Courts listen carefully to witnesses. These may include: • Neighbours • Family members • Community leaders • Surveyors • Previous owners However, credibility is everything. When witnesses contradïct themselves or provide inconsistent accounts, the court may rejèct their testimony. 5. The Court examines possession and Acts of Ownership. Ownership is often demonstrated through actions. The court may ask: • Who has been using the land? • Who built structures on it? • Who planted crops? • Who fenced it? • Who collected rent from it? These acts may support a claim of ownership, especially when combined with other evidence. 6. The stronger evidence wins.One of the most important principles in land litigation is that a claimant must succeed on the strength of t his own case. A person cannot win simply because the other side’s case is wèak. The court compares all the evidence presented and decides which side has provided the more credible and convincing proof. 7. Truth Leaves Traces: In most land disputes, the truth leaves evidence behind. It may be hidden in: • Historical records • Survey plans • Family history • Government documents • Physical occupation of the land The court’s job is to uncover that truth and apply the law fairly. Note this: Land cases are not won by emotion, influence, or popularity. They are won by evidence. Before purchasing land, verify ownership thoroughly. Keep proper records. Register important documents. Seek legal advice when necessary. When a land dispute reaches the courtroom, the person who can prove ownership, not merely claim it, stands the best chance of success. In land matters, possession may raise questions, but proof provides answers. © Happyness Amaka
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Aksan - RCH AFC on FM retweeted
Bricks and minifigs has never been profitable. Mcneffs sued their own father. They have been in litigation for years. The family was kicked out of OHIO for giving law advice while not being lawyers. This whole family is something else. Fathers company is called Legally Mine. Name alone says something.
Bricks & Minifigs denies making any legal attempt to seize Reckless Ben’s GoFundMe amid the $200k Lego dispute The company also maintains that consignments were never approved as an authorized sales process
Community note
The lawsuit seeks disgorgement of "GoFundMe and other crowdfunding proceeds" raised by defendants, contrary to the denial. s3.documentcloud.org/documents/2818
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EJ retweeted
Tickle paid nothing - not a cent - to lodge his AHRC complaint or run his litigation. Sall Grover, an ordinary mum (and extraordinary woman), has already had to raise over a million dollars just to defend herself and appeal. The High Court will cost even more. All because she refuses to lie: men are not women. Her crowdfunder is here: gigglecrowdfund.com/

“It’s important to note that the current government is trying to dismiss this issue as a ‘culture war’ while they’re simultaneously trying to rebrand themselves as the party against misogyny, not connecting the dots that refusing to acknowledge what a woman is & cement women’s rights in law is an act of extreme misogyny”
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🔰🎖️Major General CHRISTOPHER A. EASON U.S. Air Force Logo Air Force HomeAbout UsBiographiesDisplay EFFECTIVE DATES OF PROMOTION 🎖️First Lieutenant🎖️ November 06, 2004 🎖️Captain🎖️ May 06, 2005 🎖️Major🎖️ September 01, 2011 🎖️Lieutenant Colonel🎖️ September 01, 2015 🎖️Colonel🎖️ November 21, 2019 🎖️Brigadier General🎖️ December 01, 2023 🎖️Major General🎖️ February 17, 2026 This is the official portrait of Maj. Gen. Christopher A. Eason. Major General CHRISTOPHER A. EASON Maj. Gen. Christopher A. Eason is The Judge Advocate General of the Air Force (20th) and the senior uniformed legal advisor for the Space Force, Department of the Air Force, the Pentagon, Arlington, Virginia. In these capacities, Maj. Gen. Eason serves as the Legal Adviser to the Secretary of the Air Force, the Air Force Chief of Staff, the Chief of Space Operations, and all officers and agencies of the Department of the Air Force. He directs all judge advocates in the performance of their duties and is responsible for the professional oversight of approximately 4,500 Total Force judge advocates, civilian attorneys, enlisted paralegals, and civilian employees worldwide, overseeing military justice, operations and international law, and civil law and litigation functions at all levels of Air Force and Space Force commands. Maj. Gen. Eason obtained his Bachelor of Science in Economics from Oklahoma State University and Juris Doctor from the University of Oklahoma College of Law. He joined the Air Force through Commissioned Officer Training in 2004 and has served approximately 20 years as a judge advocate in the active-duty Air Force, Air National Guard, and Air Force Reserves with assignments in the United States, Europe, the Middle East, and Southwest Asia. Notably, as a prosecutor with the Office of Military Commissions, he secured Law of War convictions against two members of al-Qaeda. These successful prosecutions included the individual responsible for the murder of a Special Operations Forces Soldier,
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🧑‍⚖️ Hiring: Article Assistant - WrapTax 📍 Gurgaon | 💼 CA Articleship | 🧑‍💻 AI/ML/Blockchain Compliance | 🕐 1 day ago - June 14, 2026 WrapTax is hiring Article Assistants for its Gurgaon office. The company is a financial compliance automation platform built for CAs and tax professionals using AI, machine learning, and blockchain. 📋 What You Will Work On: - Assisting in international taxation and cross-border compliance - Supporting tax compliance, regulatory documentation, and GST workflows - Working on audit assignments and documentation - Assisting in tax litigation, assessments, and dispute resolution - Supporting technology-enabled compliance and automation tools - Client engagements and reporting 🔑 Eligibility: - CA Article Students (all batches) - Willing to work from Gurgaon 💡 Benefits: - Exposure to AI-powered tools and fintech in taxation - Practical experience in international tax, audit, and litigation 📩 To apply: Email CV to careers@wraptax.com highlighting your qualifications and interest in tech-driven compliance. 🔗 Original post: linkedin.com/posts/ankit-p-5… ⚠️ DYOR! I don’t verify every job. If someone asks to run files or ask for payment 🚩 likely a scam. ❗️ I'm not hiring myself! I just sharing fresh web3/crypto/blockchain roles DAILY for all levels! 💡 For Interns & juniors → t.me/crypto_vazima_english 💼 Mid/senior jobs → t.me/web3_jobs_crypto_vazima #ArticleAssistant #CAArticleship #WrapTax #Gurgaon #InternationalTaxation #Audit #TaxLitigation #Fintech #Compliance #AIinTax #Blockchain #CAJobs #Articleship #TaxCompliance #Hiring
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Space X IPO, hilarious. Preference shares with 30x voting rights. 5 percent of shares available for the public. Charter bans class actions litigation. Texas law, you have to have 3% stake before you can even file a shareholder proposal. Banker bookbuild humiliation.
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The only quote in that page is "It is important for the company, our owners, and our customers that we move on and put the uncertainty and ambiguity related to the glyphosate litigation behind us"
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