Two important little pieces of news:

First, this Tweet:

 

Then this story from the NY Post:

Realtor who took private jet to Capitol riot gets booted from PayPal

The Texas Realtor who flew on a private jet to take part in the US Capitol riot shamelessly begged for donations on PayPal for her legal fees and business losses — getting her booted from the service.

Jenna Ryan, who said this week that she has “no guilt in my heart” and felt like a martyr after taking part in the DC assault, asked her Twitter followers on Thursday for financial help.

“I am accepting donations to pay legal fees and losses due to my arrest and charges by the FBI for protesting at the US Capitol. Thank you for your support. Any amount helps,” the disgraced real estate agent posted along with a link to PayPal.

She said she raised $1,000 — but by Thursday evening, PayPal had closed her account.

“PayPal has a policy to allow fundraising for legal defense purposes,” company rep Kim Eichorn told CBS News in an email.

First of all, whether or not she took a private plane makes no difference.  I don’t know if she chartered the plane, owns the plane, or if it was a corporate plane that she had access to, I have no idea.  It’s irrelevant.  All it does in the story is to imply that she is very rich and is being an asshole asking for donations.

The point is, she was using PayPal within the allowable policy, but was kicked off because she was asking for help with legal fees associated with the Capitol Hill protest.

PayPal is a banking institution, it has a credit service.

In both of these cases, the money handling company was making decisions based on the politics or perceived politics of the user.

This is what Trump banned and Biden is overturning.

The goal is to destroy us by making us unable to have credit or transfer money.  Let’s be honest, you cannot live a cashless life, too much is done digitally.

The first step in unpersoning millions of people is to take away our ability to use money by unbanking us.

Spread the love

By J. Kb

8 thoughts on “The unbanking of undesirables”
  1. Some banks will realize the loss they will incur will out weigh the political bullshiite. Some. How did yall do business before “debt cards”?

  2. Don’t use your credit cards to purchase guns or ammo. Use them to purchase gift cards or pre-paid debit cards at the market. That should protect you from this kind of crap.

    1. Harder than it looks. That’s been the big issue with the whole ‘just make your own’ — you have to jump through regulatory hoops and have huge piles of cash just to start.

      It’s also why the Bidenharris misadministration is eager to strangle the Fair Access to Financial Institutions rule before it becomes set in stone. It’s far too useful a weapon to use against political opponents.

  3. We really are approaching the full on Demolition Man timeline. Edgar Friendly was quite the prophet, “I’ve seen the future, you know what it is? It’s a 47-year-old virgin sittin’ around in his beige pajamas, drinking a banana-broccoli shake singing “I’m an Oscar-Meyer Wiener”. You wanna live on top, you gotta live Cocteau’s way. What he wants, when he wants, how he wants. Your other choice: come down here, maybe starve to death.”

  4. The problem is the people in these corporations making these decisions are not held accountable; either by the chief executives, the stockholders, the customers, the government, or the general public.

    If you want to change their behaviors, you must inflict pain and punishment on the individuals making these stupid, politically correct and popular decisions.

    We have made positive results for many organizations that don’t cave to the mob with buycotts for Goya and the like. Unfortunately we can’t bring the pain to our wost opponents.

    None of this happens in real life. Look at the examples of CNN and Fox News, Hollywood Movie Studios, and Twitter. Have any of these organizations or the Progressive decision makers sufered any setbacks?

Comments are closed.