• Winner! Quick Shot Challenge: What’s the dumbest shooting myth you’ve heard?

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PortaJohn

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None of this fixes anything permanently. They will be back with the next presidency unless legislation is put forth about politicians not being able to accept campaign money from lobbyists. That's got a low likelihood of happening. He can make all the statements he wants, but statements do nothing, especially for things we already knew existed and legislators are benefitting from.
 

According to the charge document, the 20 individuals indicted are associated with a church and a mental health organization called Happy House Behavioral Health. Prosecutors allege that Happy House was paid over $60 million for services that were either never rendered or only partially completed. Some of the billing, they say, was for clients who were deceased or incarcerated.

Prosecutors also allege that sober living facilities referred clients to Happy House, which in turn received funds from the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS), the state’s Medicaid agency. Happy House then allegedly paid the referring sober homes for those client placements, an arrangement at the center of the fraudulent scheme charges.
More than 100 individuals and multiple companies have so far been charged in cases cases tied to Arizona’s sweeping crackdown on Medicaid fraud and unlicensed sober living homes, many of which specifically targeted members of Native American tribes.
Meanwhile, the scammers overbilled the American Indian Health Program, a Medicaid plan for tribal members, for services that were never provided. AHCCCS said between 2019 and 2022, outpatient behavioral health claims surged from $53 million to $668 million.
 
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What happens when you believe you are so entitled, that you basically tell your CEO to FK off?
We will see.....

"Ana Navarro faces being given a very cold shoulder by her co-stars on The View after she had the nerve to challenge her uber-powerful boss' complaint that the show's constant moaning about Donald Trump is boring.​
Bob Iger - CEO of ABC parent company Disney - asked the panel show to tone down the politics in recent weeks after finding viewers responded better to frothier showbusiness segments, the Daily Beast reported.​
Navarro is then said to have taken it upon herself to push back against Iger - one of the most powerful figures in media - by insisting that viewers enjoy being served an daily dose of resistance-style rants.​
But the anti-Trump Republican may have made a very dangerous error."​

 
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