Ms Rachel is outside Delaney Hall DHS center in NJ singing about knocking down walls and freeing criminal illegal aliens.
Parents, keep your kids away!
Tard leftists: the people are reacting emotionally, and there is no justice in this system for black folks. He was defending himself. Here's a donation.
BREAKING
The Sudanese asylum seeker who nearly beheaded a man in Belfast has been named.
Hadi Alodid took a dinghy across the Mediterranean, took a flight from Paris to Dublin & finally a bus from Dublin across the open border to Belfast where he applied for asylum in the UK
The fatigue is real and at this point they are losing supporters with every single event that takes place.
Unfortunately, there will come a time when patience runs out...
The hilarious thing out of all of this is these people act like stabbing somebody in the chest , even if there was a physical altercation, is acceptable... when his life was not in danger.
Well, it's just some white kid that got stabbed in the heart right, who cares?
Today, Iowa takes a critical step forward to modernize the state’s legacy data systems by partnering with tech industry leaders @awscloud and @Cognizant.
It’s an investment in security, agility and long‑term value for Iowans, with projected savings of more than $525M over 10 years.
https://t.co/WgNEmyNjrp
@IAGovernor@awscloud@Cognizant You are such a disappointment.
Whomever told you that hiring Indians to take over your IT should be fired & investigated.
Fool.
@IAGovernor , traitor, I hope @SteveDeaceShow rips your ass apart for this.
Inevitably, when there is a security reach because you hired 3rd worlders, you should be held personally responsible.
BREAKING: IOWA IS LAYING OFF 200 STATE IT WORKERS AND OUTSOURCING THEIR JOBS TO COGNIZANT, THE #3 H-1B EMPLOYER IN AMERICA.
We have covered Cognizant extensively as being a H-1B body shop, importing largely Indian nationals to contract with large American corporations.
Cognizant has been certified for 152,483 H-1B workers since 2015. In 2024, a federal jury found the company discriminated against its non-Indian employees. In 2019, two of its top executives were charged with foreign bribery.
The state's data centers are moving to the cloud within Amazon, the #2 H-1B employer.
The laid-off Iowans are being told they can apply for jobs at Cognizant.
Gov. Reynolds claims this saves taxpayers $525M over a decade. The actual contract price was not disclosed.
Cognizant is technically headquartered in New Jersey, but their leadership team is nearly 100% Indian, with the top 9 listed on their website shown here.
Hey @RepMattHall I'm sure the funding is still in next year's budget. You know, the one you're patting yourself on the back about in your flaccid pressers. The one that is actually increasing.
Traitor.
Can't wait to see you investigated
Outrage in Lansing: 41 former Michigan lawmakers are pocketing six-figure “Cadillac” pensions decades after leaving office, topped by ex-Senate Majority Leader Ken Sikkema at nearly $190,000 a year, all juiced by a guaranteed 4% annual raise that nearly DOUBLED John Engler’s pension. That dwarfs the 2.6% seniors average from Social Security. Engler started collecting at age 50 while he was still GOVERNOR.
These are the same politicians who pushed state workers and teachers into 401(k)s, yet their own fund sits at just 40.6% funded with a $206 million hole the Michigan Constitution forces taxpayers to cover. 85 retirees collect more than a sitting legislator’s $71,685 salary. Even David Jaye, expelled from the Senate after criminal convictions, pockets almost $105,000 a year. Kwame Kilpatrick was collecting too, until federal prosecutors seized it for restitution.
This “bipartisan” self-dealing has to stop. We need leaders who serve the Michigan families, not insiders who write themselves lifetime paydays while taxpayers, teachers, and troopers play by different rules.
Time to stop it. Let’s make Michigan safe, normal, and responsible again! 🇺🇸
@realDonaldTrump@JDVance@MIGOP@MI_Republicans@Th_Midwesterner@stevegrubershow@MrJustinBarclay@gatewaypundit@Rescue_Michigan@HarmeetKDhillon@elonmusk@timlovesann@mifairelections@TruckerRandy@DonnieDetroit19@downi75
Daughter came to me with a dilemma last night, so I'm going to walk you through it, in the hopes it helps some of you.
She has been applying for jobs, and got an email in response asking her to set up an interview.
She asked me if it was legit.
So, here's what I did:
First, I looked at the body of the email. It began, "Dear applicant". Red flag number one. If the email isn't personalized, that raises suspicions.
Red flag number two: The email didn't come from the company domain. The company claimed to be "Special Stuff and Things, Inc." (example name, but in the email, it's the name of a legit company in MA) in the sender's signature at the bottom of the email.
However, the email was sent from "[email protected]", which had no relationship to the company mentioned in the email. HR folks will almost always email from the company email address.
I also visited https://t.co/ojCeI1dsrh via a web browser. It's South Korean (as evidenced by the entire site being in, well, Korean).
The email directed her to send an email to Julie Brown @ https://t.co/FtborXbuf9 (note the lack of the 's' on 'thing', as the company domain. Companies don't typically misspell their own email domain, either when sending an email, or when registering the domain).
I went to a WHOIS lookup service (just use a search engine and use the term "whois lookup", then go to one and type in the domain name). https://t.co/8bU0vshLIs was registered on Monday. Legit companies don't ask you to send an email to an address at a domain that's less than a day old.
Finally, I researched the name of the person she was supposed to email, in relation to the supposed company mentioned in the email signature. Generally, outward-facing employees of a company leave traces on the internet. In this case, the name was a real person, but had no relationship whatsoever to the named company. A simple search engine search for "[person's name] [company name]" was enough to determine this (and usually is).
This search may also turn up complaints online from other people who got scammed. Didn't happen in this case, but I've seen it in the past.
So, when you get an email from someone you don't know, particularly if they're trying to get you to do something -- even if it's as innocuous as having an online meeting with someone -- do your research. It just might save you some real headaches.