#and chains&&houston chan
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running my mouf. put down a pretty comprehensible pd2 relationship chart for them under the cut also
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#payday#dallas#hoxton#and chains&&houston chan#my art#abuse //#< AND IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII#i've reshaped my brain into liking pd1 dallas now because of how he can be drawn as an obnoxious jacked steak house owner
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Rapid STD Testing Near Me
Auspicious Laboratory Inc. is a medical laboratory located in Houston, Texas, specializing in rapid and PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) testing for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). Their mission is to provide accurate, confidential, and prompt testing services for individuals in need of STD screening.The lab offers various testing options, such as: Rapid testing: This type of testing provides quick results, often within a few hours or the same day, depending on the specific test being performed. Rapid testing is usually done using blood or saliva samples, and it detects the presence of antigens or antibodies related to specific STDs. PCR testing: PCR is a highly sensitive and accurate molecular testing method that amplifies small amounts of DNA or RNA to detect the presence of pathogens, including bacteria and viruses causing STDs. This method is particularly useful in diagnosing early-stage infections when the pathogen's levels may be low. Results for PCR tests may take a few days to a week, depending on the lab's workload and the specific test being performed. Auspicious Laboratory Inc. aims to provide a comfortable and discreet environment for patients to undergo testing. To ensure privacy, the lab follows strict protocols and adheres to HIPAA guidelines. Test results are kept confidential and are only shared with the patient and their healthcare provider.
Contact Information: Business Name - Auspicious Laboratory Inc. Rapid & PCR, STD Testing Houston Address: 3707 Westcenter Dr # 100, Houston, TX 77042 Owner Name - Dr. Chan Phone No. - +17132660808 Email - [email protected] Website - https://www.auspiciouslab.com/
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Channing Frye on the Lakers, Bucks, and what it’s like to be broadcaster

Bucks-Lakers is the marquee matchup of the week in the NBA.
A Q&A with the former NBA veteran on the start of his broadcasting career and the two best teams in the NBA.
SB Nation had the chance to sit down with TNT’s Channing Frye ahead of Thursday night’s Lakers vs. Bucks game.
SB Nation: You dabbled in media as a player, but did you always know you’d want to get into broadcasting in some form or fashion after you retired from the NBA?
You know what, I grew up around it. My Mom worked for Channel 12, NBC, out in Phoenix. So I’ve sort of just been around it, and in all honesty I just like to talk. I think the game is amazing. The game imitates life, with the drama and the growing up of players, and so for me to be able to translate that—to show how amazing the game of basketball is and how good of a product the NBA is—it’s kind of my pleasure.
Even though I’m retired from basketball, I have an opportunity to do some things at Turner, NBC Sports, and my own podcast. But I started the [Road Trippin’ podcast] basically for the free wine. Richard [Jefferson] wanted to do it for the reps, and he said here, be our first guest. So I said ‘well I’m not coming up unless you give me a bottle of wine.’ And then it just became our thing. We’d always have a bottle of wine. I think the best stories are told with friends, sitting at a dinner table and just kind of talking about life, man.
Your show, Handles, is a bit non-traditional. Did you have any other offers in media after you retired, and how did you land in this particular job?
I did have other offers, and I thought, for me, if I’m going to go into this arena, if I’m gonna go into this new field, why not go into it with something that I would want to watch, something that I’m interested in that probably hasn’t ever been done before?
Right now I look at people, rarely does anyone just watch the game anymore. They’re looking at social media. What’s going on. I want to see who dunked on who. So why not create a show that’s based on that? Why not be a part of a show that takes in everything that happens during a game, whether it’s someone getting crossed, someone’s outfit being atrocious, or somebody having 50 points? We’re both celebrating and joking around about the drama that happens on Wednesday nights when there’s 10 or 11 games going on.
Do you ever have a fear of being too critical?
Sometimes. But I always say this: Anytime I write something or say something, just know—my teammates can vouch for me—I would say that to that person’s face. I never talk about a player personally, I just don’t think that’s fair and I don’t think there’s a place in media to talk about a player personally, but if I want to talk about your game yeah, I’m gonna be extremely critical of you based on that one game. But at the same time I just want to see good product out there.
Now if you take that personally, either you’re sensitive or or don’t know me and don’t know my voice of, like, if I go ‘dude that’s a trash shot’ I’ll go back to the film and if you want to explain to me why it’s not...you coming down five times, not passing the ball to your teammates and jacking up five bad shots is bad basketball, and there’s no if ands or buts. These are facts. You know? Where if I said ‘Hey, it just doesn’t look like you have energy,’ that is a fact. It does not look like you have energy or passion on the court! Now we can go look at what I saw, and you can say ‘Hey, I’m just not that type of guy,’ OK cool. I’m wrong. I have no problem being wrong. I love it when somebody goes ‘Channing you’re wrong’.
And one example, I was talking about the Houston Rockets and I said ‘Hey I think the Houston Rockets are gonna lose in the first round this year,’ and one of the big-time Houston Rockets fans goes ‘nope because we went to the Western Conference Finals, blah blah blah, this is what the percentages say’. I said ‘Listen, OK...you’ll lose in the second round’.
I don’t mind arguing back and forth with people who have actual information. But when you say ‘Oh Channing you suck,’ well no I don’t suck because I don’t play anymore. And two, it’s just like when you come at me, that means you don’t have a rebuttal to my question or my statement with actual numbers.
Have any players confronted you from something you’ve said on the air?
No. Heck no. No, no, no, no, no. At the end of the day, the only people I really talk about, honestly, are players I’ve played with. And they know me. What you’re getting on Twitter is me sitting on a bench, just with a lot less cuss words. Honestly.
if I saw somebody getting dunked on, for sure on the text chain I would have those gifs and memes up immediately on the airplane, win or lose. Because at the end of the day, whether you win or lose, you prepare to win, and you have a 50/50 chance of winning that game, no matter how how hard you play. So if you take yourself that seriously after the game, then you have some other issues.
As a basketball fan and someone who’s competed with and against so many of the guys who will take part, what interests you the most about tonight’s game between the Milwaukee Bucks and Los Angeles Lakers?
Well, I’ll say this, whether people know it or not, we’re in the age of the big man. At the forefront was Dirk Nowitzki, Pau Gasol, obviously Arvydas Sabonis, and even Yao Ming: Skilled big men who can pass, shoot, defend multiple positions and score on the block.
You look at some of these lineups that both of these teams can put out there, you have God knows how many All-Stars at the three, four, five positions. You have Hall of Famers. You have MVPs. It is going to be a battle. Both coaches are definitely amazing and top of their class at getting their teams prepared. So I’ll be interested to see what happens, like, can Milwaukee shoot better than the Lakers can play defense? Who’s Giannis gonna guard? Who’s gonna guard Anthony Davis? Is LeBron gonna guard Giannis? [The Bucks] can mess around and play a lineup of Robin Lopez, Brook Lopez, [Ersan] Ilyasova, Giannis, and Eric Bledsoe. That’s huge, and they all work within that system, because they’re all skilled players. That’s what’s gonna be exciting, to see where the league has evolved to, to now your superstars are seven-foot tall ball-handlers, shooters, passers, shot blockers, everything. I think it’s great for the league.
You’ve played in Finals preview matchups during the regular season when you were in Cleveland. What can you learn about your opponent that’s meaningful in a matchup like that?
Yeah, it’s all mental. You want to see which guys shine bright. I’ll just say for me, my scouting report would be: the Bucks are a system team. Giannis makes them go. I want to make Eric Bledsoe beat me. At the end of the day, Eric Bledsoe has to get 25-plus points to beat me. I’m not gonna let Brook Lopez take over in the fourth quarter on the block, getting fouled, grabbing rebounds, and shooting threes. I want them to play one-on-one basketball, because I just don’t think they’re successful that way.
But then on the other side if I’m the Bucks, I want anybody else, except for Bron and AD to beat me. I want to see what Kuzma’s gonna do against my defenders. I want to see, is Rondo gonna score? Are they gonna throw it to Dwight Howard or JaVale McGee to score? For them, I want them to run their sets all the way through and slow the pace of the game down.
Did you expect the Lakers to be this good this early?
This early? No. I did not. Did I expect them to be good? Heck yeah. Heck yeah. Any team with LeBron and AD, if you’re anywhere close to .500, somebody needs to get fired.
Which team is easier to score on?
I’m gonna say the Bucks. I think the Bucks, defensively, are built to play the percentages. They stick to their principles, they stick to their rotations. Where the Lakers just have dudes that are just like, ‘lock him down’.
Who’s the best player in the world right now?
[Deep sigh]. I don’t think there’s one. But I would say, of the four best players, three of them are in this game. I would say Anthony Davis, LeBron, and Giannis. And then the fourth would be James Harden. Fifth would be Luka.
What about Kawhi?
He hasn’t done it this year. He has championship remorse right now.
So you can’t separate LeBron, Giannis, and AD?
Listen, at the end of the day. If you have any one of those three players, and you’re not vying for a championship, that is your fault as a GM. For not putting better players around those guys. Honestly. If you have any three, and you’re not going for a championship, there’s some problems.
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Tech Companies Like Foursquare, EventBrite, MeetUp, and Reddit Defend Funding Planned Parenthood Abortion Biz
The heads of 70 tech companies including top names like Reddit and Foursquare are defending taxpayer funding of the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
Despite the fact that Planned Parenthood is the nation’s leading abortion company and regularly aborts more than 300,000 little baby boys and girls every year, these companies want to continue forcing Americans to fund it.
The heads of the companies signed a letter urging Congress to defeat legislation that would defund Planned Parenthood. The letter completely ignores abortion or the fact that Planned Parenthood as aborted so many unborn children annually and is the nation’s leading abortion business– doing more than one-third of all abortions across the country.
Instead, the tech leaders wrongly discuss how defunding Planned Parenthood would supposedly impact women’s health adversely. The letter ignores the fact that Planned Parenthood funding would go to community health centers that provide legitimate women’s healthcare as opposed to abortion.
Below is a list of the tech industry leaders who signed the letter defending the abortion business:
David Karp, CEO, Tumblr Erin Bagwell, CEO, Dream, Girl Film Jessica Banks, CEO, RockPaperRobot Hayley Barna, Venture Partner, First Round Capital Phin Barnes, Partner, First Round Capital Scott Belsky, Founder, Behance Brett Berson, Partner, First Round Capital Kiran Bhatraju, CEO, Arcadia Power John Borthwick, CEO, Betaworks Bryan Breckenridge, Executive Director, Box.org DeVaris Brown, CTO, Super Heroic Inc. Kristina Budelis, President, KitSplit Stewart Butterfield, CEO, Slack Karen Cahn, CEO, IFundWomen Anthony Casalena, CEO, Squarespace, Inc. Cariann Chan, CEO, Level Sara Chipps, CEO, Jewelbots Alex Chung, CEO, Giphy Erin Clift, CMO, Kik Interactive, Inc. David Cohen, co-CEO, Techstars Meghan Conroy, CEO, Captureproof Dennis Crowley, Executive Chair, Foursquare Jess Davidoff, CEO, Admittedly Kelsey Doorey, CEO, Vow To Be Chic Avriel Epps, Cofounder, SeekU Brad Feld, Managing Director, Foundry Group Elizabeth Francis, Partner, Brilliant Ventures Jeffrey Glueck, CEO, Foursquare Jocelyn Goldfein, Managing Director, Zetta Venture Partners Kristen Goldstein, CEO, HireAthena Lisa Hammann, Vice President and Region Head, North American Supply Chain, Genentech Corie Hardee, CEO, Union Station Julia Hartz, CEO, Eventbrite Rob Hayes, Partner, First Round Capital Scott Heiferman, CEO, Meetup David Hirsch, Managing Partner, Compound VC Grant Hughs, CSO, FocusMotion Jennifer Hyman, CEO, Rent the Runway Kellee James, CEO, Mercaris Harleen Kahlon, CEO, Bolde Josh Kopelman, Partner, First Round Capital Sarah Lacy, CEO, PandoMedia Aileen Lee, Managing Partner, Cowboy Ventures Aaron Levie, CEO, Box Jake Levine, CEO, Electric Objects Moj Mahdara, CEO, Beautycon Media Melody McCloskey, CEO, StyleSeat Joanna McFarland, CEO, HopSkipDrive Sheel Mohnot, Partner, 500 Startups Howard Morgan, Partner, First Round Capital Paul Murphy, CEO, Dots Alexis Ohanian, Cofounder, Reddit Eric Paley, Managing Partner , Founder Collective Deven Parekh, Managing Director, Insight Venture Partners Satya Patel, Partner, Homebrew Georg Petschnigg, CEO, FiftyThree Bijan Sabet, General Partner, Spark Capital Chris Sacca, Chairman, Lowercase Capital Noa Santos, CEO, Homepolish Kenneth Schlenker, CEO, Stellar Base Brian Shimmerlik, CEO, Vengo Kristen Sonday, COO, Paladin Robert Stavis, Partner, Bessemer Venture Partners Jennifer Sutton, CPO, EVRYTHNG Doug Ulman, CEO, Pelotonia Hunter Walk, Partner, Homebrew Rick Webb, COO, Timehop Kara Weber, Partner, Brilliant Ventures Alexandra Wilkis Wilson, CEO, Fitz Fred Wilson, Partner, Union Square Ventures Joanne Wilson, Owner, Gotham Gal Ventures Denielle Wolf, CDO, Arloskye Tim Wu, Professor of Law, Columbia University Susan Zheng, CEO, Planted
Yesterday, another House committee approved the bill that will defund the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
As LifeNews.com reported, President Donald Trump made an offer to the Planned Parenthood abortion company that it would not only keep its funding but would increase its taxcpayer funding if it would stop killing babies in abortions and focus on legitimate non-abortion healthcare. But Planned Parenthood said no.
As a result, Republicans in Congress have released the American Health Care Act. Their plan to repeal Obamacare includes provisions that would revoke funding for Planned Parenthood. Under the legislation there is a provision in the bill that prohibits states from using “direct spending” on “prohibited entities” with federal funds allocated from the legislation and those entities include any entity that “provides for abortions.” That means the nation’s biggest abortion corporation — Planned Parenthood.
And it’s not happy.
In an email Planned Parenthood sent to its supports, the abortion giant said: “The threat we’ve been warning about has just hit the House of Representatives. Republican leadership introduced a bill that would cut millions of patients off from care at Planned Parenthood health center.”
The new language also prohibits premium tax credits from being used to purchase plans that offer elective abortion coverage — the abortion funding component of Obamacare. Between 2018 and 2020, under the proposal, the small business tax credit generally is not available with respect to a qualified health plan that provides coverage relating to elective abortions.
SIGN THE PETITION! Congress Must De-Fund Planned Parenthood Immediately
A recent survey found that community health centers not only provide more comprehensive health care than Planned Parenthood, excluding abortions, they also outnumber the abortion group’s facilities by 20 to one.
The U.S. Senate took the first step in paving the way for a vote on defunding the Planned Parenthood abortion corporation in early January. The Senate approved on a party-line vote a budget resolution bill. This repeal resolution is the first step in the process to re-direct Planned Parenthood’s taxpayer funding to legitimate health care entities and repeal Obamacare using the budget reconciliation procedure.
President Donald Trump promised to sign a bill that would defund the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
Recent polls also indicate Americans support the defunding efforts. New polling found 56 percent of Americans in battleground states want Planned Parenthood defunded.
The expose’ videos catching Planned Parenthood officials selling the body parts of aborted babies have shocked the nation. Here is a list of all twelve:
In the first video: Dr. Deborah Nucatola of Planned Parenthood commented on baby-crushing: “We’ve been very good at getting heart, lung, liver, because we know that, so I’m not gonna crush that part, I’m gonna basically crush below, I’m gonna crush above, and I’m gonna see if I can get it all intact.”
In the second video: Planned Parenthood’s Dr. Mary Gatter joked, “I want a Lamborghini” as she negotiated the best price for baby parts.
In the third video: Holly O’Donnell, a former Stem Express employee who worked inside a Planned Parenthood clinic, detailed first-hand the unspeakable atrocities and how she fainted in horror over handling baby legs.
In the fourth video: Planned Parenthood’s Dr. Savita Ginde stated, “We don’t want to do just a flat-fee (per baby) of like, $200. A per-item thing works a little better, just because we can see how much we can get out of it.” She also laughed while looking at a plate of fetal kidneys that were “good to go.”
In the fifth video: Melissa Farrell of Planned Parenthood-Gulf Coast in Houston boasted of Planned Parenthood’s skill in obtaining “intact fetal cadavers” and how her “research” department “contributes so much to the bottom line of our organization here, you know we’re one of the largest affiliates, our Research Department is the largest in the United States.”
In the sixth video: Holly O’Donnell described technicians taking fetal parts without patient consent: “There were times when they would just take what they wanted. And these mothers don’t know. And there’s no way they would know.”
In the seventh and perhaps most disturbing video: Holly O’Donnell described the harvesting, or “procurement,” of organs from a nearly intact late-term fetus aborted at Planned Parenthood Mar Monte’s Alameda clinic in San Jose, CA. “‘You want to see something kind of cool,’” O’Donnell says her supervisor asked her. “And she just taps the heart, and it starts beating. And I’m sitting here and I’m looking at this fetus, and its heart is beating, and I don’t know what to think.”
In the eighth video: StemExpress CEO Cate Dyer admits Planned Parenthood sells “a lot of” fully intact aborted babies.
The ninth video: catches a Planned Parenthood medical director discussing how the abortion company sells fully intact aborted babies — including one who “just fell out” of the womb.
The 10th video: catches the nation’s biggest abortion business selling specific body parts — including the heart, eyes and “gonads” of unborn babies. The video also shows the shocking ways in which Planned Parenthood officials admit that they are breaking federal law by selling aborted baby body parts for profit.
Unreleased Videos: Unreleased videos from CMP show Deb Vanderhei of Planned Parenthood caught on tape talking about how Planned Parenthood abortion business affiliates may “want to increase revenue [from selling baby parts] but we can’t stop them…” Another video has a woman talking about the “financial incentives” of selling aborted baby body parts.
The 11th video: catches a Texas Planned Parenthood abortionist planning to sell the intact heads of aborted babies for research. Amna Dermish is caught on tape describing an illegal partial-birth abortion procedure to terminate living, late-term unborn babies which she hopes will yield intact fetal heads for brain harvesting.
The 12th video in the series shows new footage of Jennefer Russo, medical director at Planned Parenthood in Orange County, California, describing to undercover investigators how her abortion business tries to harvest intact aborted babies’ bodies for a local for-profit biotech company and changes the abortion procedure to do so.
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Tech Companies Like Foursquare, EventBrite, MeetUp, and Reddit Defend Funding Planned Parenthood Abortion Biz
New Post has been published on http://www.therightnewsnetwork.com/tech-companies-like-foursquare-eventbrite-meetup-and-reddit-defend-funding-planned-parenthood-abortion-biz/
Tech Companies Like Foursquare, EventBrite, MeetUp, and Reddit Defend Funding Planned Parenthood Abortion Biz
The heads of 70 tech companies including top names like Reddit and Foursquare are defending taxpayer funding of the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
Despite the fact that Planned Parenthood is the nation’s leading abortion company and regularly aborts more than 300,000 little baby boys and girls every year, these companies want to continue forcing Americans to fund it.
The heads of the companies signed a letter urging Congress to defeat legislation that would defund Planned Parenthood. The letter completely ignores abortion or the fact that Planned Parenthood as aborted so many unborn children annually and is the nation’s leading abortion business– doing more than one-third of all abortions across the country.
Instead, the tech leaders wrongly discuss how defunding Planned Parenthood would supposedly impact women’s health adversely. The letter ignores the fact that Planned Parenthood funding would go to community health centers that provide legitimate women’s healthcare as opposed to abortion.
Below is a list of the tech industry leaders who signed the letter defending the abortion business:
David Karp, CEO, Tumblr Erin Bagwell, CEO, Dream, Girl Film Jessica Banks, CEO, RockPaperRobot Hayley Barna, Venture Partner, First Round Capital Phin Barnes, Partner, First Round Capital Scott Belsky, Founder, Behance Brett Berson, Partner, First Round Capital Kiran Bhatraju, CEO, Arcadia Power John Borthwick, CEO, Betaworks Bryan Breckenridge, Executive Director, Box.org DeVaris Brown, CTO, Super Heroic Inc. Kristina Budelis, President, KitSplit Stewart Butterfield, CEO, Slack Karen Cahn, CEO, IFundWomen Anthony Casalena, CEO, Squarespace, Inc. Cariann Chan, CEO, Level Sara Chipps, CEO, Jewelbots Alex Chung, CEO, Giphy Erin Clift, CMO, Kik Interactive, Inc. David Cohen, co-CEO, Techstars Meghan Conroy, CEO, Captureproof Dennis Crowley, Executive Chair, Foursquare Jess Davidoff, CEO, Admittedly Kelsey Doorey, CEO, Vow To Be Chic Avriel Epps, Cofounder, SeekU Brad Feld, Managing Director, Foundry Group Elizabeth Francis, Partner, Brilliant Ventures Jeffrey Glueck, CEO, Foursquare Jocelyn Goldfein, Managing Director, Zetta Venture Partners Kristen Goldstein, CEO, HireAthena Lisa Hammann, Vice President and Region Head, North American Supply Chain, Genentech Corie Hardee, CEO, Union Station Julia Hartz, CEO, Eventbrite Rob Hayes, Partner, First Round Capital Scott Heiferman, CEO, Meetup David Hirsch, Managing Partner, Compound VC Grant Hughs, CSO, FocusMotion Jennifer Hyman, CEO, Rent the Runway Kellee James, CEO, Mercaris Harleen Kahlon, CEO, Bolde Josh Kopelman, Partner, First Round Capital Sarah Lacy, CEO, PandoMedia Aileen Lee, Managing Partner, Cowboy Ventures Aaron Levie, CEO, Box Jake Levine, CEO, Electric Objects Moj Mahdara, CEO, Beautycon Media Melody McCloskey, CEO, StyleSeat Joanna McFarland, CEO, HopSkipDrive Sheel Mohnot, Partner, 500 Startups Howard Morgan, Partner, First Round Capital Paul Murphy, CEO, Dots Alexis Ohanian, Cofounder, Reddit Eric Paley, Managing Partner , Founder Collective Deven Parekh, Managing Director, Insight Venture Partners Satya Patel, Partner, Homebrew Georg Petschnigg, CEO, FiftyThree Bijan Sabet, General Partner, Spark Capital Chris Sacca, Chairman, Lowercase Capital Noa Santos, CEO, Homepolish Kenneth Schlenker, CEO, Stellar Base Brian Shimmerlik, CEO, Vengo Kristen Sonday, COO, Paladin Robert Stavis, Partner, Bessemer Venture Partners Jennifer Sutton, CPO, EVRYTHNG Doug Ulman, CEO, Pelotonia Hunter Walk, Partner, Homebrew Rick Webb, COO, Timehop Kara Weber, Partner, Brilliant Ventures Alexandra Wilkis Wilson, CEO, Fitz Fred Wilson, Partner, Union Square Ventures Joanne Wilson, Owner, Gotham Gal Ventures Denielle Wolf, CDO, Arloskye Tim Wu, Professor of Law, Columbia University Susan Zheng, CEO, Planted
Yesterday, another House committee approved the bill that will defund the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
As LifeNews.com reported, President Donald Trump made an offer to the Planned Parenthood abortion company that it would not only keep its funding but would increase its taxcpayer funding if it would stop killing babies in abortions and focus on legitimate non-abortion healthcare. But Planned Parenthood said no.
As a result, Republicans in Congress have released the American Health Care Act. Their plan to repeal Obamacare includes provisions that would revoke funding for Planned Parenthood. Under the legislation there is a provision in the bill that prohibits states from using “direct spending” on “prohibited entities” with federal funds allocated from the legislation and those entities include any entity that “provides for abortions.” That means the nation’s biggest abortion corporation — Planned Parenthood.
And it’s not happy.
In an email Planned Parenthood sent to its supports, the abortion giant said: “The threat we’ve been warning about has just hit the House of Representatives. Republican leadership introduced a bill that would cut millions of patients off from care at Planned Parenthood health center.”
The new language also prohibits premium tax credits from being used to purchase plans that offer elective abortion coverage — the abortion funding component of Obamacare. Between 2018 and 2020, under the proposal, the small business tax credit generally is not available with respect to a qualified health plan that provides coverage relating to elective abortions.
SIGN THE PETITION! Congress Must De-Fund Planned Parenthood Immediately
A recent survey found that community health centers not only provide more comprehensive health care than Planned Parenthood, excluding abortions, they also outnumber the abortion group’s facilities by 20 to one.
The U.S. Senate took the first step in paving the way for a vote on defunding the Planned Parenthood abortion corporation in early January. The Senate approved on a party-line vote a budget resolution bill. This repeal resolution is the first step in the process to re-direct Planned Parenthood’s taxpayer funding to legitimate health care entities and repeal Obamacare using the budget reconciliation procedure.
President Donald Trump promised to sign a bill that would defund the Planned Parenthood abortion business.
Recent polls also indicate Americans support the defunding efforts. New polling found 56 percent of Americans in battleground states want Planned Parenthood defunded.
The expose’ videos catching Planned Parenthood officials selling the body parts of aborted babies have shocked the nation. Here is a list of all twelve:
In the first video: Dr. Deborah Nucatola of Planned Parenthood commented on baby-crushing: “We’ve been very good at getting heart, lung, liver, because we know that, so I’m not gonna crush that part, I’m gonna basically crush below, I’m gonna crush above, and I’m gonna see if I can get it all intact.”
In the second video: Planned Parenthood’s Dr. Mary Gatter joked, “I want a Lamborghini” as she negotiated the best price for baby parts.
In the third video: Holly O’Donnell, a former Stem Express employee who worked inside a Planned Parenthood clinic, detailed first-hand the unspeakable atrocities and how she fainted in horror over handling baby legs.
In the fourth video: Planned Parenthood’s Dr. Savita Ginde stated, “We don’t want to do just a flat-fee (per baby) of like, $200. A per-item thing works a little better, just because we can see how much we can get out of it.” She also laughed while looking at a plate of fetal kidneys that were “good to go.”
In the fifth video: Melissa Farrell of Planned Parenthood-Gulf Coast in Houston boasted of Planned Parenthood’s skill in obtaining “intact fetal cadavers” and how her “research” department “contributes so much to the bottom line of our organization here, you know we’re one of the largest affiliates, our Research Department is the largest in the United States.”
In the sixth video: Holly O’Donnell described technicians taking fetal parts without patient consent: “There were times when they would just take what they wanted. And these mothers don’t know. And there’s no way they would know.”
In the seventh and perhaps most disturbing video: Holly O’Donnell described the harvesting, or “procurement,” of organs from a nearly intact late-term fetus aborted at Planned Parenthood Mar Monte’s Alameda clinic in San Jose, CA. “‘You want to see something kind of cool,’” O’Donnell says her supervisor asked her. “And she just taps the heart, and it starts beating. And I’m sitting here and I’m looking at this fetus, and its heart is beating, and I don’t know what to think.”
In the eighth video: StemExpress CEO Cate Dyer admits Planned Parenthood sells “a lot of” fully intact aborted babies.
The ninth video: catches a Planned Parenthood medical director discussing how the abortion company sells fully intact aborted babies — including one who “just fell out” of the womb.
The 10th video: catches the nation’s biggest abortion business selling specific body parts — including the heart, eyes and “gonads” of unborn babies. The video also shows the shocking ways in which Planned Parenthood officials admit that they are breaking federal law by selling aborted baby body parts for profit.
Unreleased Videos: Unreleased videos from CMP show Deb Vanderhei of Planned Parenthood caught on tape talking about how Planned Parenthood abortion business affiliates may “want to increase revenue [from selling baby parts] but we can’t stop them…” Another video has a woman talking about the “financial incentives” of selling aborted baby body parts.
The 11th video: catches a Texas Planned Parenthood abortionist planning to sell the intact heads of aborted babies for research. Amna Dermish is caught on tape describing an illegal partial-birth abortion procedure to terminate living, late-term unborn babies which she hopes will yield intact fetal heads for brain harvesting.
The 12th video in the series shows new footage of Jennefer Russo, medical director at Planned Parenthood in Orange County, California, describing to undercover investigators how her abortion business tries to harvest intact aborted babies’ bodies for a local for-profit biotech company and changes the abortion procedure to do so.
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#payday#chains#houston#my art#it's Ok i'm just waiting for all of this (hand gestures) to blow over (rubbing temples) (gripping stress ball)#they're [purple and pink isn't that cute tho 😍😍#CHAINNNNNNNNNNNNNNNISSSSSSSGGGGffFGGGGG#houston-chan and the chillest && nicest guy in this whole crime ring he pulled by talking about vehicles and -#- not knowing what a richard mille watch is#(houston voice)(shy and awkward) W-wow cool umm.... collection. (chains' million dollar watch stand) Um.. can i like; touch your bicep.#S-sorry man😁 i say some weeeird shit sometimes
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Bills need to play on the field like their fans cheer off it
Unless Sean McDermott can break Buffalo’s streak of mediocrity, the most exciting action in Buffalo will be in the parking lots.
Over the course of 17 playoff-less years, Bills fans have become much more interesting than the franchise they’re stuck with.
Buffalo, once home to the perennial AFC champions, now leads the league in most tailgating tables broken and pretty much nothing else. Official highlights from Sammy Watkins’ player of the week performance against the Dolphins in Week 16 have about 7,500 views on YouTube. Three different short clips of a sex toy being thrown onto the field at New Era Stadium during a game against the Patriots have nearly 750k views between them.
That’s right. The most indelible image of Buffalo’s 2016 wasn’t a LeSean McCoy touchdown run or a shutdown victory over their division rivals. It was a phallus with the words “Tom Brady’s Dildo” scribbled on the side.
That’s what happens when you field a historically mediocre team. The Bills haven’t been to the playoffs since 1999, but the intervening years have failed to produce the kind of bottoming-out that could jump-start a true rebuild. They’ve won at least six games in 14 of those 17 seasons, but never more than nine. They’ve only had three top-five picks in that span — and one of them was the result of a trade-up for Watkins, which time has yet to validate as shrewd.
The end result is a franchise with enough talent to compete with some of the league’s best teams, but not for long. In the past three seasons, they’ve beaten playoff teams like the Patriots, Texans, Lions, and Packers. They’ve also lost to the 3-13 Raiders, 5-11 Jaguars, and twice to the 5-11 Jets. Buffalo is a tidy 24-24 in that span.
That’s a familiar narrative for the Buffalo Bills: They’re good enough to ruin someone else’s day, not bad enough to rebuild in earnest. After years of uneven returns in the draft and free agency, it’s difficult to find their path out of the woods and into the playoffs.
How do the Bills return to the postseason?
New head coach Sean McDermott, taking over after Rex Ryan’s underwhelming performance got him fired, has been tasked with reversing 17 years of failure. He started by taking the reins at the 2017 NFL Draft. McDermott teamed with then-general manager Doug Whaley, who was fired days later, to bring a new approach to the team’s draft strategy. Buffalo traded down in the first round, shipping the No. 10 overall pick to Houston in exchange for three picks, including a 2018 first and a 2017 third that gave the team the leverage to make a pair of selections in the second round.
How much McDermott had to do with the process vs. Whaley’s contribution is still unclear — Whaley called the 2018 first-round pick the team gleaned from Houston his “parting gift,” while Albert Breer’s report from inside the club’s war room suggests the new head coach was calling the shots — but the early returns on these moves were positive.
After recent efforts to trade up brought mixed contributions from Watkins and Reggie Ragland, moving back will help replenish an unbalanced roster. First-round pick Tre’Davious White could prove to be a bargain replacement for Stephon Gilmore at cornerback. Second-round picks Zay Jones — the all-time receptions leader in FBS history — and Dion Dawkins, a versatile lineman who excelled at run blocking in college, will each add value as potential starters for 2017.
McDermott and his staff also added some low-cost contributors through the free agent market this offseason. Micah Hyde, one of the only reliable pieces in the Packers’ secondary, moved to the AFC with a $30 million contract. Cheaper additions like safety Jordan Poyer, fullback Patrick DiMarco, and guard Vlad Ducasse should all add value this fall as well.
The good news for the Bills is the NFL is not like the NBA; free agency and deep draft classes can turn a 5-11 team into a Super Bowl winner the next season. The bad news is everything starts behind center — and the Bills haven’t had an upper-tier quarterback on the roster since Jim Kelly retired.
Tyrod Taylor may be a two-time Pro Bowler, but his back-to-back invitations are more a commentary on the dire state of the league’s All-Star Game than his skill as a passer. The young veteran regressed from his breakout 2015. His yards per pass attempt dropped from an efficient 8.0 to Case Keenum-ian 6.9. A cheesecloth offensive line had something to do with that — no passer in the league was sacked more than Taylor’s 42 times.
The sad news is Taylor is the best of a long line of quarterbacks that have topped out at “average.” Since Drew Bledsoe left New York in 2004, the team’s primary starters have included:
Kelly Holcomb J.P. Losman Trent Edwards Ryan Fitzpatrick EJ Manuel and Kyle Orton
That doesn’t even count other acquisitions like Thad Lewis and Matt Cassel, whose Buffalo career is best summed up with a Google search:
Teams with similarly quiet quarterbacks have won Super Bowls. The Broncos did it two years ago with a hobbled Peyton Manning and Brock Osweiler. The Buccaneers did it in 2003 behind Brad Johnson. However, those teams had top-ranked defenses on which to fall back.
Despite hiring defensive-minded Ryan two years ago, Buffalo was 19th in yards allowed in both 2015 and 2016.
The Bills need to beef up Taylor’s supporting cast
The Bills have made waves to bolster their roster in recent years — for better or worse. Adding McCoy in exchange for linebacker Kiko Alonso proved to be a smart acquisition, but Buffalo’s inability to chain big moves together has kept the team mired in its playoff-less slump.
McCoy and free agent pickups like Mario Williams, Corey Graham, and Zach Brown have provided solid returns on the team’s investments — at least through the early stages of their contracts. Expensive pickups like Manny Lawson, Chris Williams, Percy Harvin, and Charles Clay have not.
2016 saw the franchise largely duck out of major investments on the free agent market. The biggest contract Buffalo handed out was a $1.5 million mistake for Reggie Bush, a move that ended about as poorly as a free agent deal can after Bush finished 2016 with negative rushing yards. That quiet year gave the team the latitude to jump back in with both feet to sign more players this offseason.
But while signing key contributors provides cause for optimism, there is reason to believe many of the players who perform the best in blue and red won’t be calling Buffalo home for long. This offseason saw the Bills lose their top two wideouts and star cornerback when Robert Woods, Marquise Goodwin, and Stephon Gilmore left. They followed a trend set in recent seasons by starters like Nigel Bradham, Jairus Byrd, and Andy Levitre, who all departed as well.
Many of those moves worked out in the team’s favor — Byrd and Levitre famously failed to live up to the contracts they signed with other teams — but they certainly don’t help Buffalo’s reputation as a non-factor in free agency. In fact, some of those moves bring the added hindrance of strengthening division rivals at the same time. The Patriots in particular have made Buffalo their farm system recently by adding free agents Gilmore, Chris Hogan, Alan Branch, Scott Chandler, and Mike Gillislee the past few seasons.
Sean McDermott should be a significant upgrade
The Bills shucked recent tradition to grab a coaching mind on the rise rather than the decline. Their playoff drought features a head coach lineage more at home in an NFL retread mad lib than on the sideline in Orchard Park. Before bringing McDermott into the fold, Buffalo gambled on veterans like Chan Gailey, Dick Jauron, and Rex Ryan. It also bet on a Syracuse coach who peaked at the Pinstripe Bowl (Doug Marrone) and jettisoned Mike Mularkey (who resigned after a clash with management) after just two seasons.
McDermott is a breath of fresh air — the kind of defensive mind the club thought it was getting with Ryan. As a rising star coordinator, he helped develop a strong defense in Carolina that has consistently ranked in the top 10 the past few seasons.
His leadership will be key after Ryan failed in such a short time.
“He’s tough, he’s honest and he’s fair. I think that he’s the right guy for the job,” McCoy told Bills Insider Chris Brown. “The guys in Buffalo, we need somebody that we can believe in and trust. And not to say anything bad about Rex, because I love Rex, but I think that Sean is a guy that will get it done.”
He’ll have to erase the team’s recent history of unbalanced drafts. The past five years have brought starters like Alonso, Preston Brown, Ronald Darby, and John Miller into the fold. They also featured several high-profile misses: from 2011 to 2016, the Bills have the lowest draft retention rate in the NFL:
Draft pick retention by NFL teams, 2011-16 http://pic.twitter.com/HeO5ueAFPB
— Jeff Hunter (@MrJeffHunter) May 24, 2017
Watkins has yet to turn his potential into a full, dominant season as a No. 1 receiver while Odell Beckham Jr. and Brandin Cooks — players who were picked later in the 2014 first round — have blossomed as pros. His lingering injury issues prevented the club from picking up his fifth-year option this spring.
The Bills’ second-round pick that year, Cyrus Kouandjio, started only seven games in three seasons and was released earlier this week. 2016’s top two picks, Ragland and Shaq Lawson, combined to play in only 10 games last fall due to injuries. Buffalo’s top pick in 2013 was Manuel, who is now Derek Carr’s backup in Oakland.
Trading back and taking a shotgun approach to an imperfect science is a smart first step for McDermott. Moving back to 27th gave the team the latitude to move up in the second round and snag Jones without costing any of their original draft capital. More importantly, it added an extra first-rounder in 2018 that will add an extra punch to the team’s rolling rebuild next fall.
He’ll be able to counsel with a familiar face when it comes to making moves this summer and beyond. Buffalo replaced Whaley, who reportedly butted heads with McDermott, with Carolina’s Assistant GM Brandon Beane in May.
2017 probably won’t be better, but there’s a light at the end of the tunnel
The Bills are a thrift store jigsaw puzzle; most of the pieces are there, but the big picture is all messed up
McDermott’s task is to build from a foundation that includes a talented-but-aging tailback, a middle-of-the-road quarterback, and a defense that proved capable of holding the Patriots scoreless and allowing the Jets to put up 37 points, in just a three-game span. When the pieces fall into place, the Bills look like a playoff team. Unfortunately, those perfect storms are few and far between thanks to the gaping holes in the team’s roster.
Healthy seasons from Ragland and Lawson will help. So will contributions from this year’s draft class, whose top three picks were all storied NCAA producers. As is tradition, those picks will be expected to stem the bleeding associated with the team’s free agent losses. Unless White, Jones, and Dawkins can develop into homegrown stars — an ingredient the Bills have desperately lacked in recent years — McDermott will struggle to break the cycle of mediocrity that has consumed Buffalo.
And until that happens, whatever happens in the stands and parking lots outside New Era Stadium will remain more exciting than anything the Bills can put on the field.
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