Stir Fry Challenge Collab Dance 🔥 Best Viral Lit Dances Compilation #stirfrychallenge
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Obama Business Just Raided – Massive Secret Found Inside That's Been Covered Up For Years - Duration: 5:03.
Obama Business Just Raided – Massive Secret Found
Inside That's Been Covered Up For Years.
It's evidently clear that Democrats have had a lot to hide for some time and were desperate
to protect their secrets by replacing one criminal in office with another one.
Now that Barack Hussein Obama is a regular citizen, he's no longer able to get away
with his sleazy scandals and President Donald Trump is doing his part to blow the doors
wide open on all of D.C's big criminals.
You can pretty much bet that anything with Obama's name on it is not good and one Obama
business just proved that after it was discovered what it was actually a cover for.
Someone is going to prison and it will not be fun for them, as a long-overdue raid was
made and uncovered worse than we thought.
It all went down in South Carolina this week.
They really had it coming.
WISTV reports:
The owner of a well-known gas station in Columbia has been arrested and charged with tax evasion,
the state's Department of Revenue said in a statement on Tuesday.
DOR investigators charged Murad A. Alhanik, owner of the Obama Mart on North Main Street,
with four counts of sales tax evasion.
Investigators say Alhanik failed to pay more than $136,000 in sales taxes over four years.
Alhanik, investigators said, evades taxes by underreporting sales from 2013 to 2016.
Alhanik faces up to five years in prison and/or $10,000 fine for each count.
The Obama gas station began turning heads in 2011 when Alhanik bought the station and
rebranded it to feature the 44th President of the United States.
Alhanik said in an interview months after he rebranded the store that he saw an uptick
in business.
"I see more people come in," Alhanik said.
"Excited with the name."
No surprise that Alhanik, a Muslim immigrant, would name his business after his Muslim hero,
Obama.
Afterall, the former president helped him get to America without a care in the world
of how it would affect natural citizens.
Obama sees no problem with lying, cheating, and stealing, so his name is perfect for a
business that operated under the same dishonest intentions.
Steadfast and Loyal reports of what the entitled Obama dreamer had to say about his "business"
he was especially proud of:
He said in an interview after the rebranding began getting noticed that he actually saw
an uptick in business.
"I see more people come in," Alhanik said.
"Excited with the name."
Now, Alhanik has been arrested and charged with tax evasion according to the state's
Department of Revenue in a statement released this week.
Specifically, DOR investigators have slapped him with 4 counts of sales tax evasion, saying
that he's failed to pay upwards of $136,000 in sales taxes over four years.
They're also alleging that he's underreported his sales between 2013 and 2016.
In a recent statement, the department says "Alhanik filed monthly sales tax returns
reporting a total of $971,935 in gross sales.
However, the DOR investigation revealed actual sales to be $2,688,533.
Due to the underreported sales, the defendant evaded paying $136,753 in sales taxes due
to the state of South Carolina."
He's currently being held at the Alvin S Glen Detention Center and is facing up to
$10,000 in fines as well as up to 5 years in prison.
In January 2017, Alhanik told the Post and Courier that he would never change the name
of the store despite Obama not being president anymore because "it's still history."
Are you really surprised that someone so supportive of former President Obama would be arrested
for tax evasion?
It seems par for the course if you ask me.
This is the Obama legacy he earned and the gas station perfectly represents what he accomplished
in office – allowing criminals to flourish and creating more of them.
There's a new sheriff in town now and he's not letting people steal from the system like
Obama did – he's creating tax breaks and incentives for people working hard.
If businesses are being created in presidents names that represent them, Trump's should
be a bank, while Obama's name is good to stay on this illegal business.
Also, as long as people are getting busted and locked up for their scams and scandals,
maybe Barack and Hillary could be Alhanik's cell mates.
Poetic justice was served with this business owner's arrest, he can thank Barack for
leading him down the wrong path by his example and then leaving him there to deal with it.
Barack is not going to bail this guy out, he's long since forgotten the "honor"
of his face and name on his dreamer's gas station.
Hopefully Alhanik remembers that as he sits in his cell for the next several years.
what do you think about this?
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10 Animals That Got Revenge! (HD) #Animals - Duration: 10:09.
Debate remains as to whether animals are capable of deep emotions like holding grudges.
However, most scientists would agree that animals can have personality traits comparable
to humans, so it's possible that they can hold grudges.
Of course, the question of just which species can hold grudges could open a whole new can
of worms.Lions have been observed apparently holding grudges against other lions, and cows
have behaved similarly toward other cows.
Elephants have even appeared to take revenge against humans.
Here are ten instances where animals apparently held grudges against humans and retaliated.
The Siberian tiger is generally considered the largest subspecies of tiger.
They can easily weigh over 225 kilograms and measure over 10 ft when measured from nose
to tail.
They're also excellent jumpers and can comfortably scale a height of 25 ft without breaking a
sweat.
Getting on the nerves of such an apex predator is a very bad idea and could have some seriously
undesirable consequences.Russian poacher Vladimir Markov
found out the hard way after attacked one in the Russian Far East in 1997.
Markov shot and wounded the tiger during a hunt, and to add insult to injury, he took
part of its kill.
The tiger didn't forget, and between 12 and 48 hours later, it tracked Markov to the
cabin where he lived.
But Markov wasn't home, so the tiger destroyed anything in the cabin that had his scent and
patiently waited for him to arrive.
When Markov finally did, the tiger killed and ate him.
To date, the incident remains the only time a tiger has been known to have deliberately
tracked down a specific human and waited for him before killing and eating him.
In 2015, a man in Chongqing, China, drove to his home one evening to find a stray dog
lying in his parking space.
Instead of shooing the dog, he proceeded to kick it out of the way before parking his
car and entering his home.
The canine didn't take the kicking incident lying down.
It left but returned with more dogs, and they all proceeded to vandalize the man's car.
They used their jaws to make dents in the car and bit the windshield wipers.
The man was shocked when he awoke the next morning to find his car full of dents.
He only realized what happened when a neighbor who saw the dogs attacking the car told him.
Octopuses are intelligent animals with good vision and the ability to remember things.
They are also capable of holding grudges and taking revenge whenever they get the chance.
There was the case of Truman, an octopus that used to live at the New England Aquarium in
Boston, Massachusetts.
Truman took a particular dislike for a woman who was volunteering at the aquarium and would
shoot a stream of water at her at every opportunity he got.
The lady later left for college but returned for a visit few months later.
Truman, who hadn't been shooting water at anyone in the meantime, quickly shot a stream
of water at her the moment he saw her.
In Lake Nakuru National Park, Kenya, a female leopard became a nuisance to some communities
after she started feeding on their livestock.
The people, fearing that the leopard might soon become a man-eater, called in park rangers
to capture and relocate the animal.
The leopard was captured and relocated but refused to leave her cage at the back of the
pickup truck used to transport her.
It was at this point that things got nasty.
One of the rangers, Alexander Rono, poked the leopard with a long stick from the cabin
of the truck, hoping she would leave the cage and escape.
The leopard did not appreciate the gesture and roared aggressively at the pokes.
She even bit the stick at one point but still did not leave the cage.
When she finally did, she didn't immediately flee.
Rather, she turned toward the front of the vehicle and tried unsuccessfully to jump into
the cabin where Alexander was seated.
Alexander tried rolling up the windows but wasn't fast enough.
The leopard tried jumping in a second time and got half her body in.
She engaged Alexander in a serious scuffle and repeatedly tore his face with her 3-inch
claws while attempting to deliver a fatal bite to his neck.
At one point, Alexander had his hand in her mouth.
The attack continued, and the leopard almost got all the way into the truck until Alexander
raised his feet and kicked her out the window, sending her running into the forest.
Alexander suffered severe injuries and almost went blind.
He required 21 stitches to close his wounds.
In his words, Alexander said he "learned a very painful lesson he will never forget."
Crows are good at recognizing people who trouble them and will often taunt and dive-bomb these
people whenever they see them around.
Some researchers—who had been capturing and attaching identification bands on some
crows—discovered that the birds kept grudges when they noticed that the crows made noises
and swooped at them whenever they entered their territory.To prove their theory, the
researchers started wearing masks when capturing and tagging the birds.
With time, they realized that the crows made noises whenever they saw the masked person
around.
The crows didn't forget the faces and still recognized the masks even after they didn't
see them for a whole year.
More interesting is the fact that the crows taught their children which faces were their
enemies, so the baby crows will scold and dive-bomb at the perceived enemies even if
they have never seen them capturing a crow before.
If there is one animal that never forgives or forgets, it is the camel.
They have good memories and can hold grudges against people who harm them.
Harming a camel is likely to lead to a revenge attack that will most likely end in death.One
Indian man found this out the hard way in 2016 after he was killed by his own camel.
The man, Urjaram, had been engrossed in hosting some guests in his home in Mangta village,
Rajasthan, India, that he forgot about the camel he tied out in the scorching sun for
the whole day.
When Urjaram tried untying the camel at night, the already angry camel caught him by the
neck and lifted him up before throwing him back to the ground.
Thereafter, it chewed on the neck until the head was separated from the body.
It took 25 villagers about six hours to calm the angry camel down.
On December 25, 2007, a tigress escaped from its enclosure at the San Francisco Zoo and
attacked three men.
Two of the men were brothers, Paul and Kulbir Dhailwal, and the third was their friend,
Carlos Sousa.
The tigress, which was called Tatiana, first attacked Kulbir.
Sousa tried distracting her but only attracted calamity to himself, as she left Kulbir and
fatally attacked him.
Tatiana wasn't done.
She followed Kulbir's blood trail for over 900 ft before catching up with Paul, who had
fled the scene with Kulbir.
She attacked Paul but didn't kill him before she was killed by the police.
The two surviving men initially denied taunting the tigress, but Paul later confessed that
they did taunt her.
He claimed that all three yelled and waved at Tatiana, although he denied that they threw
anything into her enclosure.
n July 2016, members of several villages around the Champua forest range in Keonjhar, India,
suffered a series of elephant invasions that lasted over two weeks.
Over 15 days, 16 elephants from two different herds launched a number of night attacks on
the villages and destroyed 54 homes.Investigations revealed that the cause of the attacks was
the killing of a male elephant on the night of July 11.
Some poachers from a neighboring state were responsible for poisoning and killing the
elephant before making off with its tusks.
However, the rest of the herd directed their aggression at the village and launched simultaneous
attacks that left the villagers living under trees or in makeshift sheds.
Skuas are one of the several birds that live in Antarctica.
While they evolved without human interaction, we know today that they have the ability to
remember human faces and will attack people they assume to be enemies.
Between 2014 and 2015, some Korean scientists based on King George Island started a study
that involved them checking on the nests, eggs, and chicks of the skuas.
The skuas weren't comfortable with this, and with time, they started attacking the
researchers whenever they got close to their nests.To confirm whether the birds recognized
them or just attacked any human, two researchers visited the nests together.
One had previously visited the nest, while the other never had.
The two researchers split up and went in two opposite directions whenever they got close
to the nest.
They discovered that the birds attacked the researcher who had previously visited the
nest while ignoring the one who had never been there before.
In fact, with time, they didn't even wait for the scientists they branded as enemies
to come close to their nests before they launched their assault.
In Kerala, India, a male tiger went on a rampage in 2016 after a poacher killed its tigress
and cub.
The poacher, who was called Baby, was among a party of brewers who illegally brewed alcohol
in the forest.
They came across the tigress and cub during one of their illegal brewing expeditions.
Baby shot and killed the tigress and cub, and the men skinned her and shared her meat.The
brewers returned three days later to meet the angry partner of the tigress.
The tiger pounced on Baby and mauled him badly before carrying him into the forest.
Baby initially survived the attack, but the injuries soon proved fatal.
The tiger did not stop at killing Baby.
It continued patrolling the region for over two months, attacking any unfortunate human
it came across.
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