WOWSA! Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 Bought Up Host of WhiteNationalist Website Domains

I heard in study hall someone who has no ties to Trump paid someone else some money and purchased some domains. OMG :aargh:
Oh yeah? Well I read in the news that a Russian oligarch fed $500,000 to Trump's personal attorney while possibly colluding with the Trump team to interfere in the American elections and provide illegal, material support to the Trump campaign.
Must be two different stories.

No you didn't stop making shit up, your new screen name is Fake News Indiana.
 
I heard in study hall someone who has no ties to Trump paid someone else some money and purchased some domains. OMG :aargh:
Oh yeah? Well I read in the news that a Russian oligarch fed $500,000 to Trump's personal attorney while possibly colluding with the Trump team to interfere in the American elections and provide illegal, material support to the Trump campaign.
Must be two different stories.

No you didn't stop making shit up, your new screen name is Fake News Indiana.
Of course, those are the simple facts I mentioned. Trump has really turned your brain to tapioca.
 
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:





Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction. A creation of the progressive left as a means for fundraising. They number very few, and this shows that assertion to be true. They are a joke, antifa, the hero's of the left are far more a domestic terrorist group than the alt right ever was.
Odd that they named themselves years ago...This sounds like like tea baggers trying to disavow them naming themselves. :71:






What is funny is a dishonest shill, like you, knows that the Tea Party groups were about as non racist as you could get. They were united in one thing, reducing taxes. But you lie through your teeth for a political group that will use you, and then dispose of you when they are finished with you. And you are too dumb to figure it out.
 
I heard in study hall someone who has no ties to Trump paid someone else some money and purchased some domains. OMG :aargh:
Oh yeah? Well I read in the news that a Russian oligarch fed $500,000 to Trump's personal attorney while possibly colluding with the Trump team to interfere in the American elections and provide illegal, material support to the Trump campaign.
Must be two different stories.

No you didn't stop making shit up, your new screen name is Fake News Indiana.
Of course, those are the simple facts I mentioned. Trump has really turned your brain to tapioca.

We won, you lost, ha ha its still funny :auiqs.jpg:
 
Tea Party groups were about as non racist as you could get.
While that may be true of the stated platform, it certainly is false about the groups themselves. Demonstrably false. Come on man, tone it down a bit, you're saying silly shit.
 
I heard in study hall someone who has no ties to Trump paid someone else some money and purchased some domains. OMG :aargh:
Oh yeah? Well I read in the news that a Russian oligarch fed $500,000 to Trump's personal attorney while possibly colluding with the Trump team to interfere in the American elections and provide illegal, material support to the Trump campaign.
Must be two different stories.

No you didn't stop making shit up, your new screen name is Fake News Indiana.
Of course, those are the simple facts I mentioned. Trump has really turned your brain to tapioca.

We won, you lost, ha ha its still funny :auiqs.jpg:
Wow, that has literally nothing to do with anything...
 
Tea Party groups were about as non racist as you could get.
While that may be true of the stated platform, it certainly is false about the groups themselves. Demonstrably false. Come on man, tone it down a bit, you're saying silly shit.





How about you provide some credible evidence for your claim then.
 
Tea Party groups were about as non racist as you could get.
While that may be true of the stated platform, it certainly is false about the groups themselves. Demonstrably false. Come on man, tone it down a bit, you're saying silly shit.





How about you provide some credible evidence for your claim then.
And what sort of evidence would you like to see, in order to change your mind on the claim that tea party groups are "the least racist groups out there"? Be specific.
 
Yes, Filthy Don ran a racist campaign. ALT-RIGHT WeakWhyte Supremacists cheered with joy and still do so at Filthy Don's Rah Rah Parties. This message board is full of them.

If somebody wants to pay me half $1 million I don’t give a flying fuck what they do with their free time
 
Don't care. Somebody buying up domain names ranks as low on my list as anything else you've posted
Because you lack depth of thought and have a blind spot for your Russian sweethearts.

They are buying these domain names because they want to foster right wing nationalism, both here and abroad. They want to do this in order to weaken the international alliances, trade agreements, and and treaties, especially NATO. They want to weaken these things, because they crave new territory and resources, especially territory that was once a part of the USSR.
Or maybe they just want to save what is left of western culture and European genetics.....

There is nothing good coming from NATO. Certainly nothing worth the entirety of Western Europe’s indigenous stock.
 
Yes, Filthy Don ran a racist campaign. ALT-RIGHT WeakWhyte Supremacists cheered with joy and still do so at Filthy Don's Rah Rah Parties. This message board is full of them.

rivalsPutinMaga.jpg
What part of Trump's campaign was racist ?
 
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:





Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction. A creation of the progressive left as a means for fundraising. They number very few, and this shows that assertion to be true. They are a joke, antifa, the hero's of the left are far more a domestic terrorist group than the alt right ever was.
Nope, it was created by White Supremacist , Richard Spencer.

Alt-right - Wikipedia

The alt-right, or alternative right, is a loosely-connected and somewhat ill-defined[1] grouping of white supremacists, neo-Confederates, neo-Nazis, neo-fascists, and other far-right[2][3][4] fringe hate groups.[5][6] Alt-right beliefs have been described as isolationist, protectionist, antisemitic and white supremacist,[7][8][9]frequently overlapping with neo-Nazism,[10][11][12][13] identitarianism,[14] nativismand Islamophobia,[15][16][17][18][19] antifeminism, misogyny and homophobia,[10][20][21][22][13] right-wing populism[23][24] and the neoreactionary movement.[7][25] The concept has further been associated with several groups such as American nationalists, paleoconservatives, paleolibertarians, Christian fundamentalists, neo-monarchists, men's rights advocates, and the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump.[15][24][25][26][27][14]

White supremacist[28] Richard Spencer initially promoted the term in 2010 in reference to a movement centered on white nationalism and did so, according to the Associated Press, to disguise overt racism, white supremacism, neo-fascismand neo-Nazism.[29][30][31] The term drew considerable media attention and controversy during and after the 2016 United States presidential election.[32]
<more>
 
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:
Ah, down the rabbit hole you go.

Or is it a rabbit hole? Might be something else.
 
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:





Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction. A creation of the progressive left as a means for fundraising. They number very few, and this shows that assertion to be true. They are a joke, antifa, the hero's of the left are far more a domestic terrorist group than the alt right ever was.
Nope, it was created by White Supremacist , Richard Spencer.

Alt-right - Wikipedia

The alt-right, or alternative right, is a loosely-connected and somewhat ill-defined[1] grouping of white supremacists, neo-Confederates, neo-Nazis, neo-fascists, and other far-right[2][3][4] fringe hate groups.[5][6] Alt-right beliefs have been described as isolationist, protectionist, antisemitic and white supremacist,[7][8][9]frequently overlapping with neo-Nazism,[10][11][12][13] identitarianism,[14] nativismand Islamophobia,[15][16][17][18][19] antifeminism, misogyny and homophobia,[10][20][21][22][13] right-wing populism[23][24] and the neoreactionary movement.[7][25] The concept has further been associated with several groups such as American nationalists, paleoconservatives, paleolibertarians, Christian fundamentalists, neo-monarchists, men's rights advocates, and the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump.[15][24][25][26][27][14]

White supremacist[28] Richard Spencer initially promoted the term in 2010 in reference to a movement centered on white nationalism and did so, according to the Associated Press, to disguise overt racism, white supremacism, neo-fascismand neo-Nazism.[29][30][31] The term drew considerable media attention and controversy during and after the 2016 United States presidential election.[32]
<more>








Yeah, we already knew that. We also KNOW, that they are a tiny fringe group that you silly people have inflated into the latest boogie man to try and drum up support for your silly belief system.
 
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:





Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction. A creation of the progressive left as a means for fundraising. They number very few, and this shows that assertion to be true. They are a joke, antifa, the hero's of the left are far more a domestic terrorist group than the alt right ever was.
Nope, it was created by White Supremacist , Richard Spencer.

Alt-right - Wikipedia

The alt-right, or alternative right, is a loosely-connected and somewhat ill-defined[1] grouping of white supremacists, neo-Confederates, neo-Nazis, neo-fascists, and other far-right[2][3][4] fringe hate groups.[5][6] Alt-right beliefs have been described as isolationist, protectionist, antisemitic and white supremacist,[7][8][9]frequently overlapping with neo-Nazism,[10][11][12][13] identitarianism,[14] nativismand Islamophobia,[15][16][17][18][19] antifeminism, misogyny and homophobia,[10][20][21][22][13] right-wing populism[23][24] and the neoreactionary movement.[7][25] The concept has further been associated with several groups such as American nationalists, paleoconservatives, paleolibertarians, Christian fundamentalists, neo-monarchists, men's rights advocates, and the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump.[15][24][25][26][27][14]

White supremacist[28] Richard Spencer initially promoted the term in 2010 in reference to a movement centered on white nationalism and did so, according to the Associated Press, to disguise overt racism, white supremacism, neo-fascismand neo-Nazism.[29][30][31] The term drew considerable media attention and controversy during and after the 2016 United States presidential election.[32]
<more>








Yeah, we already knew that. We also KNOW, that they are a tiny fringe group that you silly people have inflated into the latest boogie man to try and drum up support for your silly belief system.
Then why did you lie and say, "Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction"?
 
Last edited:
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:





Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction. A creation of the progressive left as a means for fundraising. They number very few, and this shows that assertion to be true. They are a joke, antifa, the hero's of the left are far more a domestic terrorist group than the alt right ever was.
Odd that they named themselves years ago...This sounds like like tea baggers trying to disavow them naming themselves. :71:






What is funny is a dishonest shill, like you, knows that the Tea Party groups were about as non racist as you could get. They were united in one thing, reducing taxes. But you lie through your teeth for a political group that will use you, and then dispose of you when they are finished with you. And you are too dumb to figure it out.
Connect the right dots. The tea party movement might be against high taxes but minorities primarily get their income from high taxes so wanting lower taxes is racist.
 
Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names

Company that paid Trump lawyer $500,000 also bought up a host of white nationalist website names
Hunter
Daily Kos Staff
Wednesday May 09, 2018 · 1:48 PM EDT


It sure is curious that the Russia-tied company that handed over $500,000 to Trump lawyer Michael Cohen for as-of-yet-unclear services had a side gig promoting white nationalism, for some reason.

As NBC reported Wednesday morning, Columbus Nova also spent 2016 and 2017 registering a number of websites aimed at young white supremacists, or members of the so-called “alt-right.”

Among the URLs registered were domains like Alt-Right.co, Altrights.co, Alternate-rt.com, and Alt-rite.com. Some of the domains, like Alt-Right.com and Altrights.co, were registered in late August 2016 — just a few months before the American election — while others, like Alt-rite.com, were created in August 2017
.

None of the sites were apparently ever used. They may have been purchased as a "squatting" effort, waiting for another buyer to come along, or they may have been purchased for a larger effort that never came to pass.

Columbus Nova is currently scrubbing all past mentions of their Russian affiliation, which is also Really Damn Curious. Until the end of 2017 they were listed as one of the companies of the Renova Group, Viktor Vekselberg's conglomerate; they're now insisting to reporters that such ties are untrue. No matter—federal investigators have almost certainly sorted all of that out many months ago.

But the purchase of numerous domains targeting the American white nationalist movement is a fascinating little tidbit. How odd it is that a single company would both be paying a large sum of cash to Donald Trump's right-hand man and would have an apparent keen interest in the far-far-right of American politics. Mighty curious indeed, that.

What did I tell you about this Republican Evangelistic Racist Group that supports Filthy Don's evil ways. :113:





Proving what we have been saying all along, the alt right is a fiction. A creation of the progressive left as a means for fundraising. They number very few, and this shows that assertion to be true. They are a joke, antifa, the hero's of the left are far more a domestic terrorist group than the alt right ever was.
Nope, it was created by White Supremacist , Richard Spencer.

Alt-right - Wikipedia

The alt-right, or alternative right, is a loosely-connected and somewhat ill-defined[1] grouping of white supremacists, neo-Confederates, neo-Nazis, neo-fascists, and other far-right[2][3][4] fringe hate groups.[5][6] Alt-right beliefs have been described as isolationist, protectionist, antisemitic and white supremacist,[7][8][9]frequently overlapping with neo-Nazism,[10][11][12][13] identitarianism,[14] nativismand Islamophobia,[15][16][17][18][19] antifeminism, misogyny and homophobia,[10][20][21][22][13] right-wing populism[23][24] and the neoreactionary movement.[7][25] The concept has further been associated with several groups such as American nationalists, paleoconservatives, paleolibertarians, Christian fundamentalists, neo-monarchists, men's rights advocates, and the 2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump.[15][24][25][26][27][14]

White supremacist[28] Richard Spencer initially promoted the term in 2010 in reference to a movement centered on white nationalism and did so, according to the Associated Press, to disguise overt racism, white supremacism, neo-fascismand neo-Nazism.[29][30][31] The term drew considerable media attention and controversy during and after the 2016 United States presidential election.[32]
<more>








Yeah, we already knew that. We also KNOW, that they are a tiny fringe group that you silly people have inflated into the latest boogie man to try and drum up support for your silly belief system.
So, now that you have had some time to think about what evidence you would require to change your mind, what did you come up with?
 

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