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Twisting The Narrative's Narrative: Rand Paul & Project Veritas

submitted by FalseRealityCheck to DeathVax19 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 20:34:38 ago (+8/-3)     (files.catbox.moe)

https://files.catbox.moe/dqzyqv.mp4

Are Rand Paul and Project Veritas controlled opposition?


8 comments block


[ - ] Nosferatjew 3 points 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 22:23:05 ago (+3/-0)

I saw a thing a while back showing that Project Veritas receives a big chunk of funding from kikes in israel. If true, they're probably controlled opposition.

Does Rand Paul support israel? Let's see...

Sen. Rand Paul yesterday reintroduced the Stand with Israel Act of 2015. This legislation would halt all U.S. foreign aid to the Palestinian Authority (P.A.) until the P.A. renounces violence, purges terrorists from its ranks, and recognizes the nation of Israel.

https://www.paul.senate.gov/news/sen-rand-paul-introduces-stand-israel-act-2015

Yup.

[ - ] TOVA 1 point 2.3 yearsJan 15, 2022 05:49:51 ago (+1/-0)

Fauci's bureaucratic policys are taking your freedoms and leading to death. Who TF CARES about a $15k investment?! The doctor / Senator's wife probably wears $15k of jewelry to bed every night. Rand has to be reelected every few years so he answers to voters. He's one vote in the Senate.
Fauci is an entrenched bureaucrate, the highest paid official in the U.S and has been for years. He makes the rules. He decides policy, funding, grants, what drugs are tested and how. Why aren't we talking about his money? He has blatantly obvious financial ties to all U.S. drug companies. Fauci gave U.S. dollars to China for gain of function research, against policy, lied about it, and is still trying to cover it up.
Seems like a drive by hit piece to me. Senator Paul MUST be over the target because I hear screaming.

[ - ] yesiknow 1 point 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 23:19:27 ago (+1/-0)

Trust nobody. Run for any office you can and campaign door to door.

[ - ] FalseRealityCheck [op] 0 points 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 21:09:27 ago (+0/-0)

Addendum:
Rand Paul Belatedly Discloses Wife’s Purchase of Covid-19 Drugmaker’s Stock
https://www.wsj.com/articles/rand-paul-belatedly-discloses-wifes-purchase-of-covid-19-drugmakers-stock-11628788853

[ - ] SparklingWiggle 0 points 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 20:57:36 ago (+0/-0)

So, what can't Rand Paul ask? Did his wife directly invest or is it part of a fund?

[ - ] FalseRealityCheck [op] 0 points 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 21:04:53 ago (+0/-0)

[ - ] SparklingWiggle 1 point 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 21:32:29 ago (+1/-0)

As OP, you seem very well versed on this particular subject. Seems like you may even want to portray a particular narrative on it. So, before COVID was even a minor shitstorm, this physician's wife invested $1k-$15k in a drug company. She used her psychic powers to know remdesivir would eventually be used to treat Cooties. Sounds diabolical.

Your other article is behind a paywall, so you're apparently a leftist attempting to act as controlled opposition. I still don't understand how any of this affected his ability to ask questions.

[ - ] FalseRealityCheck [op] 0 points 2.3 yearsJan 14, 2022 22:20:49 ago (+0/-0)

Paywall? Loads right up for me. Besides you think I'm going to give my money to a JWO shill paper like the WSJ?

Here's the article:

Rand Paul Belatedly Discloses Wife’s Purchase of Covid-19 Drugmaker’s Stock
Aug. 12, 2021 | WSJ

Kentucky senator’s wife bought stock in Gilead Sciences, maker of remdesivir, in February 2020

WASHINGTON—Sen. Rand Paul disclosed that his wife purchased stock in Gilead Sciences Inc. in late February 2020, the same day the company formally announced that it would start late-stage studies of its experimental treatment for Covid-19 in an acceleration of its push to evaluate the drug, remdesivir.

Mr. Paul (R., Ky.) disclosed on Wednesday the purchase by his wife, Kelley Paul, a year and a half after she bought between $1,000 and $15,000 of shares in the company. Her purchase came after the National Institutes of Health had already said that researchers at the University of Nebraska had started testing whether remdesivir was effective at treating Covid-19.

The stock traded between $70.72 and $75.47 on Feb. 26, the day of her purchase. Shares are currently trading below $70 a share. Under the Stock Act, lawmakers must disclose transactions within 45 days.

The Washington Post earlier reported the transaction and its delayed disclosure.

“Last year, Dr. Paul completed the reporting form for an investment made by his wife using her own earnings, an investment which she has lost money on,” his office said. “This was done in the appropriate time window. In the process of preparing to file his annual financial disclosure for last year, he learned that the form was not transmitted and promptly alerted the filing office and requested their guidance. In accordance with that guidance, he filed both reports today.”

Mr. Paul sits on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, where he is the second-highest-ranking Republican. His position gives him access to detailed health-policy information.

Transactions related to bets on how the coronavirus would affect stock prices drew scrutiny last year when several senators disclosed such trades just as they were getting closed-door briefings about the virus. While much of the information was also public, the disclosures were complicated by then-President Donald Trump’s assertions that the U.S. had the virus under control.

“The fact that he didn’t disclose it, and the investigations of other senators for possible insider trading didn’t trigger him to disclose, it is very troubling,” Walter Shaub, former head of the Office of Government Ethics and now a fellow at the Project on Government Oversight, said on CNN. He said that ethics was an issue whether or not Mr. Paul’s wife made or lost money.

In March 2020, the Justice Department began looking into reports that several members of Congress, their spouses or their investment advisers traded hundreds of thousands of dollars in stock after lawmakers attended closed-door briefings about the threat posed by the virus as it was beginning to reach the U.S. Some of those trades spared lawmakers as much as hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses as stocks sank by mid-March.

In some cases, the trades became campaign issues, such as for then-Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R., Ga.). She and her husband purchased and sold about $1.4 million in stocks amid the coronavirus panic, suffering losses but limiting the damage through some timely trades, The Wall Street Journal previously reported. Ms. Loeffler lost re-election during a January runoff.

Mr. Paul is up for re-election in 2022.

Earlier this year, Sen. Richard Burr (R., N.C.), whose trades were also the subject of a Justice Department investigation, said he had been informed that the department wouldn’t pursue charges. The Justice Department last year informed three other senators, including Ms. Loeffler, that it wouldn’t pursue insider trading charges.

Write to Siobhan Hughes at [email protected]