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Donald Trump Jr. shares outrageous sex toy meme involving his father

Donald Trump Jr. shares outrageous sex toy meme involving his father

Daily Mail​2 days ago
Donald Trump Jr. posted photoshopped image of his father hurling a bright green dildo off the roof of the White House while women played basketball below.
The 47-year-old made the bizarre post to his Instagram page on Thursday with the innocuous caption: 'Posted without further comment.'
The meme from the president's eldest son circulated among fans as the yet another sex toy was launched against WNBA players half his age.
The initial dildo toss took place during the July 29 WNBA game between the Atlanta Dream and the Golden State Valkyries where someone threw a dildo onto the court.
A 23-year-old Georgia man named Delbert Carver was arrested for that incident and also allegedly confessed to doing the same thing at a Dream game against the Phoenix Mercury on August 1.
Copy cats did the same thing in Chicago and in Los Angeles, where the dildo actually appeared to hit Indiana Fever star Sophie Cunningham in the leg.
Don Jr.'s bizarre post was also a reference to President Donald Trump's shock appearance on the roof of the White House on Tuesday.
'Sir, why are you on the roof?' one journalist shouted.
In response, Trump gave a fist pump and replied: 'Taking a little walk.'
On Thursday, another dildo was thrown onto a WBNA court during a game between the Atlanta Dream and the Chicago Sky.
Meanwhile, Don Jr.'s post got more than 86,000 likes and was mostly well received by his followers, pleased that he was apparently upsetting Democrats.
However, in a sign of the staying power of the Epstein files debacle, many of the commenters took the opportunity to send messages about Jeffrey Epstein to Trump's eldest son.
'So funny! Now RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES,' one person wrote.
'Lmaoooo.....but Epstein files? Or anything but that??' another person said.
'Was that what was hiding in the Epstein files?' said yet another.
'Uh oh Daddy dropped his toy! Release the Epstein files and leave his name in them,' a fourth said.
The meme from Don Jr. came after cryptocurrency traders took responsibility for the green dildos being thrown on courts in the middle of WNBA games.
@Daldo_Rain, a spokesman for the cryptocurrency enthusiasts, and currently has more planned for the future.
According to the anonymous spokesman, the pranks were done to promote their meme coin, Green Dildo Coin (DILDO).
One of these coins is worth $0.0009, which means about 11 of them is equal to one cent.
There are 2,240 people who hold this coin, according to Etherscan, an analytics platform for the Ethereum blockchain.
The largest holder of the coin owns a position that is currently worth nearly $175,000.
There's also a copycat coin called TOPGDILDO that barely has a pulse, with a mere 116 holders and a $0 market cap.
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Scorned teacher-wife blows the whistle on NYC principal's alleged affair with younger married educator: report
Scorned teacher-wife blows the whistle on NYC principal's alleged affair with younger married educator: report

The Independent

time11 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Scorned teacher-wife blows the whistle on NYC principal's alleged affair with younger married educator: report

The enraged wife of a straying New York City elementary school principal blew the lid off her husband's alleged secret affair with a much younger teacher at his Staten Island school, according to a report. Principal Anthony Cosentino, 43, was allegedly caught in a 'consensual sexual relationship' with teacher Jacqueline Sinodinos, 28, according to The New York Post. The reported affair broke up two marriages, with both Cosentino's wife and Sinodino's husband filing for divorce, according to The Post. The scandal came to light when Cosentino's wife, who is also a New York City school teacher, filed a complaint with the city Department of Education claiming he had been having an 'illicit sexual relationship' with Sinodinos since June 2023. The scorned wife complained that her husband had been giving his alleged affair partner extra funds to spend on a Thanksgiving party and other celebrations for her students. The city had received another complaint regarding the pair in November 2023, and by July 2024, the Special Commissioner of Investigation, an independent watchdog for New York City schools, filed a report with the DOE, detailing the alleged misconduct at PS 21 in North Shore. Cosentino was removed from the school, but has remained on the city's payroll, making $187,632 a year, the outlet reported. While officials with the Special Commissioner of Investigation recommended disciplinary actions — including firing Cosentino — he may just be reassigned as principal of a new school, sources told The Post. Romantic relationships between coworkers are allowed among city school employees, as long as they don't involve a financial component and one of the parties isn't in a superior power position. Cosentino eventually admitted to the extramarital affair, but insisted he wasn't giving the teacher involved any special treatment. The independent watchdog group, however, found that he gave Sinodinos 'highly favorable' reviews and recommended her for tenure, granting her permanent teacher status with protections from firing. Cosentino only confessed after Sinodinos was tenured in January 2024. While another administrator who approved her tenure had 'suspicions of bias' by Cosentino, the watchdog group found no evidence to support that Sinodinos wasn't deserving of the tenure. The scandal broke out just as a separate investigation found that Cosentino was 'negligent' in supervising the school's purchasing secretary, Michele Cenci, who pleaded guilty to embezzling over $145,000 from the school over a seven-year period. Instead of firing Cosentino, the DOE reportedly plans to make him principal of PS 3, The Margaret Gioisa School in Elm Park, sources told The Post. However, New York City Department of Education spokeswoman Chyann Tull told the outlet that wasn't the case, and that Cosentino 'is not currently assigned to P.S. 3,' where a retiring principal will be replaced. 'We take all allegations of this kind seriously, and always follow established protocols to ensure the safety and well-being of our school communities,' Tull said.

Inside the glamorous world of the media executive who stole more than $270,000 to fund her lavish life but will not face jail time
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Daily Mail​

time12 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Inside the glamorous world of the media executive who stole more than $270,000 to fund her lavish life but will not face jail time

A glamorous media executive stole over $270,000 from her former employer to fund a lifestyle of expensive clothing, private gyms, and exclusive vacations. Shannon Muldoon, 38, managed to swindle bosses at Food52 out of the eyewatering sum while flaunting her extravagant lifestyle to colleagues on her Instagram page. Muldoon had been the head of Studio 52 for the company, a recipe and lifestyle website, and handled production for brand partnership deals. Over the course of two years, from 2021 and 2023, she racked up bills as high as $126,000 for luxury clothing on website Net-a-Porter, $17,000 on airline tickets and classes at LIV Method - a private training gym. All of that was paid for on her company credit card, according to court documents seen by The Cut - which also indicated the amount could be greater. Muldoon was indicted last August for one count of grand larceny in the second degree and accepted a plea deal for five years probation this year, the outlet said. The outlet reported that she has paid $15,000 in restitution but could face penalties up to $262,000 and is to be sentenced in September. Previous colleagues of her have shone a light on how after being promoted to head the studio they quickly noticed a change in her appearance. Muldoon was hired at the company in early 2020 after being previously employed at Bon Appetit and The New York Times. That fall she was hired to take over Studio 52 and given a corporate card to hand business expenses. Shortly after that, one ex colleague told The Cut that 'her clothes started getting better, her nail art was crazy, she got a lot of Botox'. The anonymous former staffer added: 'You could just tell she was going through a transformation.' According to the staffer she would often call in to work remotely, despite being solely studio based. They recalled her joining a Zoom call from a beach bungalow with a Chanel clip in her hair, and Muldoon sending her links to a Gucci jacket asking if she should buy it. 'Shannon was very brazen with her purchases, just showing them off to the world', they added. Muldoon is said to have continued this type of behavior on social media, displaying trips to Copenhagen, Malibu and a tropical wellness retreat, they added. Another colleague told the outlet: 'I would sometimes ask where she got a bag or a pair of shoes, and the amount of times she would answer "The Row" shocked me.' The Row is a luxury fashion label founded by Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen and is known for its high-quality materials, characterized by an equally as high price point. They added: 'I mean, we work in media. What the f***', while saying her use of the company card was becoming increasingly obvious. Colleagues recalled her buying them holiday gifts and taking them all out for elaborate dinners. One staffer, who worked remotely, was told by Muldoon to come to New York, despite it not being in their contract, and told them to put their hotel and rentals on her card. It wasn't just the excessive spending that was being noticed, former colleagues recalled her being obsessed with social status. They said she had claimed to be a Rockette but failed to back that up with proof, she told people she grew up in Manhattan while telling others she was from New Jersey. The theft went unnoticed for some time, according to internal accounting seen by the outlet she spent nearly $20,000 in a single month. Food52 started to slump during the pandemic and shut down Studio52 as part of restructuring. Muldoon repositioned herself as overseeing talent booking and management and was subsequently moved team but the spending continued. A former staffer said: 'She kind of goes off the brand-partnerships team, but her credit card is still going and still attached to all of our production. 'We were like, 'Why are our videos so expensive? Can we get a report?' We were trying to see it on a higher level, but didn't have access to her personal credit-card statements — that was just her boss and the finance department.' According to the outlet the company used a program named Expensify to track expenses and each campaign had a different job code. If the team was coming in at budget and everything was given the correct job code the expense reports would pass through. Muldoon is said to have exploited the code system to make sure her fraudulent expenses passed, making them appear like they were related to campaigns. 'She was smart about categorizing her expenses per client, and that was a way of not getting flagged. It definitely required some intention and work on her end', a worker said. In 2023, she seemed to drop off the radar at work with colleagues saying they started hearing less from her. In March that year she went on medical leave for a month, telling colleagues she was suffering from migraines and said doctors told her it could be multiple sclerosis. Her absence forced colleagues to file her expenses for her, when they started noticing irregularities. The first unusual charge was for sneaker reseller site StockX, a $1,589.05 that had already been refunded alongside another $196 charge from the site. While workers raised concerns, Muldoon is said to have reached out to them via workplace communication platform Slack saying she had flagged it with accounting. This only exacerbated suspicions, one worker said: 'The second that happened, we're like, Okay, something is up.' The finance team then started pouring over her expenses and noted anything they couldn't account for. They soon realized they were hundreds of thousands in the red due to her spending spree. 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CDC shooter blamed COVID vaccine for depression; union demands statement against misinformation
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The Independent

time41 minutes ago

  • The Independent

CDC shooter blamed COVID vaccine for depression; union demands statement against misinformation

A Georgia man who had blamed the COVID-19 vaccine for making him depressed and suicidal has been identified as the shooter who opened fire late Friday on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention headquarters, killing a police officer. The 30-year-old suspect, who died during the incident, had also tried to get into the CDC's headquarters in Atlanta but was stopped by guards before driving to a pharmacy across the street and opening fire, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press on Saturday. The man, identified as Patrick Joseph White, was armed with five guns, including at least one long gun, the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the investigation. A union representing workers at the CDC said the incident was not random and 'compounds months of mistreatment, neglect, and vilification that CDC staff have endured." It demanded federal officials condemn vaccine misinformation, saying it was putting scientists at risk. Here's what to know about the shooting and the continuing investigation: An attack on a prominent public health institution Police say White opened fire outside the CDC headquarters in Atlanta on Friday, leaving bullet marks in windows across the sprawling campus. At least four CDC buildings were hit, Director Susan Monarez said on X. DeKalb County Police Officer David Rose was mortally wounded while responding. Rose, 33, a former Marine who served in Afghanistan, had graduated from the police academy in March. White was found on the second floor of a building across the street from the CDC campus and died at the scene, Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said. He added that 'we do not know at this time whether that was from officers or if it was self-inflicted.' The Georgia Bureau of Investigations said the crime scene was 'complex' and the investigation would take 'an extended period of time." CDC union calls condemnation of vaccine misinformation and tighter security The American Federation of Government Employees, Local 2883, said the CDC and leadership of the Department of Health and Human Services must provide a 'clear and unequivocal stance in condemning vaccine disinformation.' Such a public statement by federal officials is needed to help prevent violence against scientists, the union said in a news release. 'Their leadership is critical in reinforcing public trust and ensuring that accurate, science-based information prevails,' the union said. Fired But Fighting, a group of laid-off CDC employees has said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is directly responsible for the villainization of CDC's workforce through "his continuous lies about science and vaccine safety, which have fueled a climate of hostility and mistrust.' Kennedy reached out to staff on Saturday, saying 'no one should face violence while working to protect the health of others.' Thousands of people who work on critical disease research are employed on the campus. The union said some staff were huddled in various buildings until late at night, including more than 90 young children who were locked down inside the CDC's Clifton School. The union said CDC staff should not be required to immediately return to work after experiencing such a traumatic event. In a statement released Saturday, it said windows and buildings should first be fixed and made 'completely secure." 'Staff should not be required to work next to bullet holes,' the union said. 'Forcing a return under these conditions risks re-traumatizing staff by exposing them to the reminders of the horrific shooting they endured.' The union called for 'perimeter security on all campuses' until the investigation is fully completed and shared with staff. Shooter had fixation on COVID-19 vaccine White's father, who contacted police and identified his son as the possible shooter, said White had been upset over the death of his dog and also had become fixated on the COVID-19 vaccine, according to the law enforcement official. A neighbor of White told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that White 'seemed like a good guy' but spoke with her multiple times about his distrust of COVID-19 vaccines in unrelated conversations. 'He was very unsettled, and he very deeply believed that vaccines hurt him and were hurting other people,' Nancy Hoalst, told the Atlanta newspaper. 'He emphatically believed that.' But Hoalst said she never believed White would be violent: 'I had no idea he thought he would take it out on the CDC.'

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