Monday, April 03, 2023

More on the malicious federal prosecution and conviction of Ricky Vaughn


[“Ricky Vaughn Convicted in federal court of Writing Funny Memes; He Could Get Sentenced to Ten Years in Prison, without Having Broken Any Laws (news from the totalitarian u.s.).”]

By Anonymous (eahilf?)
monday, april 3, 2023 at 3:26:00 a.m. edt

>without Having Broken Any Laws (news from the totalitarian u.s.)

Yeah, OK, sure – obviously he was charged with violating statutes/laws, in this case against depriving someone of their “rights,” blah, blah, as was pointed out to him – this breitbart article gives a pretty good summary, including an example of someone who aimed the same meme at Trump supporters but who wasn’t charged:

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2021/01/28/pollak-doj-case-against-mackey-raises-questions-about-free-speech/

It’s also worth reading the judge’s opinion rejecting Mackey’s 1A defense – it also goes into the conspiracy aspect:

https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nyed.459733/gov.uscourts.nyed.459733.54.0_1.pdf

Regarding a conspiracy, anyone who retweeted the meme could theoretically be seen as part of the conspiracy to deprive dumb n-----s of their right to vote, but they arrested and charged Mackey as the presumed creator of the meme.

The case was bull—it, of course, another malicious prosecution. It springs from nigger worship, because actually anyone dumb enough to have fallen for that vote by text message meme (who else but blacks?, who also are “incapable of providing ID to vote”) is too dumb to be voting in the first place, so he was actually performing a public service – see the comment here:

https://reason.com/volokh/2023/03/31/douglass-mackey-convicted-for-vote-by-tweet-meme-prosecution/?comments=true#comment-9995382

Eugene Volokh congratulates the prosecutors who pursued this frivolous, made up, malicious case:

https://reason.com/volokh/2023/03/31/douglass-mackey-convicted-for-vote-by-tweet-meme-prosecution/

[Congratulations to prosecutors Erik D. Paulsen, F. Turner Buford, and William J. Gullotta, who won the conviction.]

Volokh is a Jew, and another reminder of why you should never trust a libertarian.

I can’t imagine there is more than one person who calls himself “Citizen of a Silly Country” – came across him before, and he was upset that I made a demographic argument about blacks, and did not treat them all as individuals, which made me a racist – so he is clearly an idiot, the kind of person who does not understand an aggregate demographic argument, or the concept of per capita.

[N.S.: Postscript: Several years ago, before Jack Dorsey permablocked me for the first time, “Ricky Vaughn” and I were twitter buds.]



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

If this isn't eahilf,he has a doppelganger.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

Or Jayson Blair is plagiarizing again.

--GRA