Hey friends how's it going this episode the podcast is brought to you by the motherfucking cash app the cash apps a fantastic application for both iPhone and Android and it does a lot of shit first of all allows you to send money to people they can send it to you like if you owe somebody money you can send it to through the cash app they know you they can send you money you can also save a lot of money with the cash card it's a free debit card that's powered by money-saving boosts this is what you do you open up the cash app select a boost and you save like 10% off at Chipotle or dollar off at any coffee shop and they're always adding boosts constantly adding them so always check the cash app often and you can use boost over and over again the like unlimited coupons and if you're not ready to switch debit cards you don't have to with the cash app you can instantly transfer funds to your cash card for free so you see a boost you like just add funds swipe and ► 00:01:00 He has written columns in The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post and National Review, amongst others, and is an editor for Quillette. It was his first media appearance since the attack.Andy Ngo is a political journalist best known for covering street protests in Portland, Oregon. Ngo tweeted his thread approximately 10 minutes before appearing on the Fox News talk show The Ingraham Angle. They didn’t interfere with the people pursuing Ngo as they yelled at hotel staff. Though Portland police did close the intersection of Southwest Morrison Street and 6th Avenue, their perimeter appeared to be related to the arrest they made. But a probable cause affidavit shows that person’s arrest was unrelated to the attack on Ngo: The 26-year-old protester was arrested on suspicion of breaking a Starbucks window with a rock one month prior. Police arrested one person shortly after arriving at The Nines. (Publishers often ask for follow-up chapters to bestsellers.) Ngo says he ventured back into the crowd while reporting a new chapter for his recent book, Unmasked: Inside Antifa’s Radical Plan to Destroy Democracy. This is the second time in three years that protesters have attacked Ngo, whom they consider a threat to their safety because he regularly posts their mug shots and personal information to social media following their arrests. They chased Ngo for blocks before tackling him and punching him several times after his head hit the brick sidewalk of Southwest Morrison Street. Though Ngo’s identity was unconfirmed, approximately 10 people split off from the larger protest to follow Ngo and question him about his identity. Ngo’s account lines up with much of what WW reported that night. “Had I not been able to shelter wounded and bleeding inside a hotel while they beat the doors and windows like animals, there is no doubt in my mind I would not be here today.” “I was chased, attacked and beaten by a masked mob, baying for my blood,” Ngo wrote. In a thread on Twitter and a statement released to WW, Ngo gave his account of the assault, which occurred when demonstrators recognized him in disguise at a rally on the one-year anniversary of this city’s George Floyd protest. (Justin Yau) By Suzette Smith Jat 9:55 pm PDTĪfter five days of total media silence, right-wing author Andy Ngo confirmed he was the man who some of Portland’s leftist marchers chased and beat until he took shelter in The Nines hotel May 28. Floyd firework Fireworks above the Multnomah County Justice Center on the one-year anniversary of George Floyd's murder.
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