I miss all the Arizona cactus. Now live in Oregon.
BTW-A great set of photos with names.
Thanks for posting. I miss some of the articles from the original media.
Probably converts it to a jpg or something, depending on your computer system. Printers donât really print RAW anyway.
Over the weekend, The New York Times exposed a Trump campaign scam so simple and perfectly Trumpian that itâs actually a wonder the ex-president hasnât (1) had the scheme trademarked (2) taken to Fox News to brag about what a genius he is for so thoroughly swindling his base. As Shane Goldmacher reports, Donald Trumpâs campaign ripped off supporters for tens of millions of dollars by making it so that when they donated money, the default option authorized the campaign to transfer the pledged amount from peopleâs bank accounts not once but every single week. Later, the campaign introduced a second pre-checked box that doubled a personâs contribution and was thus known internally as a âmoney bomb.â In order for people to have noticed this, they would have had to wade through âlines of text in bold and capital letters that overwhelmed the opt-out language.â
Among the many individuals who were bilked out of money they literally couldnât afford to part with was Stacy Blatt, who was living in hospice care and surviving on less than $1,000 a month. Blatt donated $500 intended as a single contribution and within 30 days discovered that the Trump campaign had withdrawn $3,000 from his account, leading his utility and rent payments to bounce. And Blatt, who died in February, obviously wasnât the only one:
The tactic ensnared scores of unsuspecting Trump loyalistsâretirees, military veterans, nurses, and even experienced political operatives. Soon, banks and credit card companies were inundated with fraud complaints from the presidentâs own supporters about donations they had not intended to make, sometimes for thousands of dollars. âBandits!â said Victor Amelino, a 78-year-old Californian, who made a $990 online donation to Mr. Trump in early September via WinRed [the company that processed the campaignâs online donations]. It recurred seven more timesâadding up to almost $8,000. âIâm retired. I canât afford to pay all that damn money.â
The sheer magnitude of the money involved is staggering for politics. In the final two and a half months of 2020, the Trump campaign, the Republican National Committee, and their shared accounts issued more than 530,000 refunds worth $64.3 million to online donors. All campaigns make refunds for various reasons, including to people who give more than the legal limit. But the sum the Trump operation refunded dwarfed that of Joseph R. Biden Jr.âs campaign and his equivalent Democratic committees, which made 37,000 online refunds totaling $5.6 million in that time. The recurring donations swelled Mr. Trumpâs treasury in September and October, just as his finances were deteriorating.
Oh, and the scheme didnât stop after Trump lost the election. According to the Times, his campaign âcontinued the weekly withdrawals through pre-checked boxes all the way through December 14 as he raised tens of millions of dollars for his new political action committee, Save America.â (Incidentally, Trumpâs legal defense fund was its own kind of dishonest ploy, with the money going to the Save America super PAC, which he can tap to pay for all kinds of personal expenses.)
While marketers have used deceptive practices like pre-checked boxes for years, experts say the scale upon which the Trump campaign duped people and was forced to issue refunds was unprecedented. âItâs unfair, itâs unethical, and itâs inappropriate,â Ira Rheingold, the executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates, told the Times. âIt should be in textbooks of what you shouldnât do,â said Harry Brignull, a UX designer who came up with the phrase âdark patternsâ for manipulative digital-marketing practices.
Of course, ask Donald Trump, a.k.a. the 21 centuryâs leading con man, and he did absolutely nothing wrong. In a statement released Monday, he insisted that âmany people were so enthusiastic that they gave over and over, and in certain cases where they gave too much, we would promptly refund their contributions.â As New York notes, if his supporters had actually wanted to give over and over and over again, the campaign âwouldnât have needed to automatically enroll them in a weekly donation scheme and bury the opt-out box beneath an ever-lengthening sequence of text.â
Still, the most disturbing part of this story is not that the 45th president of the United States fleeced his own supporters for tens of millions of dollars, but that they are still happy to buy his bullshit. Ron Wilson, for instance, only meant to contribute $200, but the campaign withdrew roughly $2,300. Wilson, though, blames WinRed, not Trump. âPredatory!â Wilson said of the company, adding: âIâm 100 percent loyal to Donald Trump.â
Mitch McConnell tells corporate America to shut up about voter suppression if they know whatâs good for them
The Senate minority leader has issued some vague threats about what might happen to naughty little corporations who donât keep their traps shut. Per Reuters:
Mitch McConnell lashed out at corporate America on Monday, warning CEOs to stay out of the debate over a new voting law in Georgia that has been criticized as restricting votes among minorities and the poor. In a sign of a growing rift in the decades-old alliance between the conservative party and U.S. corporations, McConnell said: âMy advice to the corporate CEOs of America is to stay out of politics. Donât pick sides in these big fights.â McConnell warned companies there could be risks for turning on the party, but he did not elaborate. âCorporations will invite serious consequences if they become a vehicle for far-left mobs to hijack our country from outside the constitutional order,â McConnell told a news conference in his home state of Kentucky.
Big business ties with Republicans began fraying under former President Donald Trumpâs leadership and the partyâs focus on voting restrictions has soured businesses embracing diversity as key to their work force and customer base. Major Georgia employers Coca-Cola and Delta Air Lines have spoken out against the law signed by Governor Brian Kemp, and Major League Baseball pulled the 2021 All-Star Game out of the state over the law strengthening identification requirements for absentee ballots and making it a crime to offer food or water to voters waiting in line.
âI found it completely discouraging to find a bunch of corporate CEOs getting in the middle of politics,â McConnell said. Of course, heâs perfectly happy for corporate CEOs to get in the middle of politics when theyâre lining his pockets, but strangely the Senate minority leader didnât get into that particular discrepancy
Wouldnât bother if they were all dead rattlesnakes! I know I know they clean up the rodent population and my dogs nose.