ACCUSE A SUPREME COURT NOMINEE OF RAPE,
GET $1 MILLION
BY DANIEL GREENFIELD
SEE: https://www.frontpagemag.com/point/271785/accuse-supreme-court-nominee-rape-get-1-million-daniel-greenfield; republished below in full unedited for informational, educational and research purposes:
Not bad for two weeks work.
At $1 million, that comes out to around to $70K a day. I doubt that "Dr. Ford" was making that kind of money in her old job.
And that's on the table. We don't know what lurks under the table.In fact, Ford stands to gain some $1 million and counting from national crowdfunding campaigns launched by friends and other supporters, while she is said to be fielding book offers.The potential seven-figure windfall, which she says she intends to cash in on – while still asking donors for more money – has some questioning her motivation for accusing the conservative judge after 35 years of silence, and whether it goes beyond personal or even political justice. Others worry the largesse sets a dangerous precedent: Crowdfunding, which unlike political donations is unregulated, could be routinely used in the future as a bounty for providing political dirt on opponents.Two GoFundMe accounts have raised more than $842,000 for Ford, and the money is still coming in weeks after she testified and left the spotlight. The total does not include a third account collecting $120,000 for an academic endowment in her name.
One of Hillary Clinton’s wealthy pals paid $500,000 in an unsuccessful effort to fund women willing to accuse President Trump of sexual misconduct before the 2016 election, The New York Times reported Sunday.Susie Tompkins Buell, the founder of Esprit Clothing and a major Clinton campaign donor for many years, gave the money to celebrity lawyer Lisa Bloom who was working with a number of Trump accusers at the time, according to the paper’s bombshell report.Bloom solicited donors by saying she was working with women who might “find the courage to speak out” against Trump if the donors would provide funds for security, relocation and possibly a “safe house,” the paper reported.In one case Bloom reportedly arranged for a donor to pay off one Trump accuser’s mortgage and attempted to score a six-figure payout for another woman.The woman with the mortgage ultimately declined to come forward after being offered $750,000, The Hill reported.
There's money in them, thar smears.