Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Boycott My Pillow. Mike Lindell Is A Scumbag

 Here are the facts. The My Pillow guy is crooked bastard and his products are horrible and his advertising is deceptive. AND he's a Trumper.

  • My Pillow Creator Michael Lindell Threatens CNN with Legal ...

    https://www.newsweek.com/my-pillow-creator-michael...

    Sep 09, 2020 · U.S. CNN Anderson Cooper Michael Lindell, the chair of President Donald Trump's reelection campaign in Minnesota and famous as the creator of My Pillow, …

  • The Untold Truth Of The MyPillow Guy's Ex-Wife

    https://www.nickiswift.com/197874/the-untold-truth...

    May 07, 2020 · Mike Lindell's disastrous love life didn't start with his failed marriage to Dallas Yocum. The MyPillow guy — who was called "boring" by his runaway bride, and who's worth a …

  • MyPillow inventor defends advertising methods after ...

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/mypillow-inventor...

    Jan 05, 2017 · The CEO and inventor of MyPillow is defending his advertising methods after the Better Business Bureau (BBB) dropped the pillow maker’s company rating from an A+ to an F and revoked its...

  • MyPillow CEO Goes Off On CNN As He’s Grilled On Hawking ...

    https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/mypillow-ceo...

    Aug 18, 2020 · MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell on Tuesday went off on CNN’s Anderson Cooper as he vehemently defended pushing the use of oleandrin, an unproven COVID-19 therapeutic. On Monday, Lindell confirmed to CNN...

  • MyPillow Lays Off 150 Workers Months After CEO Mike ...

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/mypillow-lays-off...

    May 11, 2019 · MyPillow is laying off about 150 workers, according to a statement from CEO Mike Lindell. Lindell has been a vocal supporter of Trump, and …

    • Occupation: Reporter
  • MyPillow CEO speaks at 'Stop the Steal' rally, accuses Fox ...

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9047957

    Dec 13, 2020 · MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell has accused Fox Newsof trying to overthrow Donald Trumpand claimed they were 'in on it' as he repeated the president's claims that the Democrats were trying to 'steal' the...

  • PEOPLE ALSO ASK
  • The Truth About The MyPillow Commercial Guy

    https://www.nickiswift.com/131574/the-truth-about...

    Aug 20, 2018 · It says it right there on the Guinness World Records website: On May 18, 2018, the largest-ever pillow fight rocked Minneapolis, with thousands of participants flooding the …

  • 8 things about the MyPillow guy ... - The Kansas City Star

    https://www.kansascity.com/news/nation-world/article207904039.html

    Apr 04, 2018 · Politics can make strange bedfellows, and Mike Lindell, the guy who founded MyPillow, is getting a taste of that this week. Lindell is the target of an online pillow fight after refusing to join...

  • MyPillow gets rude awakening with $1M suit settlement ...

    https://www.startribune.com/mypillow-gets-a-rude...

    Nov 02, 2016 · MyPillow Inc., the Chaska-based pillow manufacturer, agreed to pay about $1 million in civil penalties to settle a deceptive ad case brought by prosecutors in nine California counties. The …

  • Michael Lindell, MyPillow Inventor: 5 Fast Facts | Heavy.com

    https://heavy.com/news/2017/01/michael-lindell-my...
      1. The BBB Revoked Its Accreditation Over MyPillow’s Never-Ending BOGO …
      2. MyPillow Claimed its Pillows Could Treat & Cure Sleep Apnea, Restless Leg …
      3. Lindell Fought a Cocaine Addiction & Says He Asked God to ‘Take Away My …
      4. Lindell Is a Big Donald Trump Supporter & Attended Trump’s New York Victory …
  • The advertisements for the My Pillow claim it is the number one pillow recommended by the National Sleep Foundation. Of course it is. The only products recommended by the National Sleep Foundation are the My Pillow products and that is because the National Sleep...
    View full review

    Waste of money

    2.4
    Details
    Ordered both pillows to try and just a big diss appointment ,don't waste your moneyl Great commercial worked for me ....feels like your sleeping on cut of foam scrap parts left over from something else .

    No money back

    1.5
    Details
    They say 60 day money back guarantee. That's a lie. You have to pay to send it back. They do not have free returns. Also we ordered the mattress topper in the summer and they have a note on the purchase saying that. When we tried to return it they said no. After complaining they let us exchange it but we had to pay around $50 to return it. It was never even opened. Our daughter did not want it. Already got a new mattress plus. They do not offer any discounts at all. They obviously raise the price than discount it. Smart marketing but dishonest.

    User's recommendation: Do not buy anything from them.


    I'm trying to cancel my order #166407 and once after waiting on the phone for 25 minutes I was disconnected and once they couldn't find my order

    I realized I could buy the pillow I ordered on Amazon and wouldn't have to pay for shipping. On a $20 order $11 for shipping makes no sense. Now I can't reach anybody to cancel. Yes, I am frustrated.

    Save your money

    1.2
    Details
    Over priced, over hyped. It is just a pillow filled with chunks of lumpy foam. The price of these pillows boarders on extortion. It most likely cost less than a dollar to make one of these. The "sleep" foundation that endorses them, is a company started by the My Pillow guy and only rates his pillow.. Also, he claims to be a sleep expert. OK me too ! and I say these are crap.

    User's recommendation: run, do not walk away, before you sucked in by this guy.


    Poor quality expensive

    1.4
    Details
    I spent 89.00 for the same pillow selling for 29.00 now. I have to laugh when he tells you that it took him 2 years to invent this pillow all you get is pillow case stuff with shredded foam

    User's recommendation: skip this con artist and check reviews all 1 star ratings.


    3.1
    Details
    MyPillow - Terrible customer service, defective product
    I bought My Pillow towels. They are wonderful towels, but after using them, two of the washcloths started to unravel at the edges. I asked Customer Service to replace them. The reply was that I would have to send back, at my expense, the entire set of towels and they'd...
    View full review

    Review of pillow

    1.0
    Details
    overpriced and not as advertised. Don't waste your money....

    User's recommendation: By a pillow at wallmart for a fraction of the price and better quality.


    My wife and I appear to have a bad reaction to sleeping with the topper; it feels like rug burn in my sides which Is how I sleep and she reports her buttocks burn; is there an unknown chemical

    1.2
    Details
    Are the toppers treated with any type cleaning substance which could cause a chemical burn to our bodies?
    1.0
    Details
    I went through all the hassle to find which of the pillows was the 'right fit'. I heard that there was a sale on, so I thought why not try it. When I have only been getting an hour or two of sleep a night in the past 5 years, and they are so expensive they should work,...

    MY PILLOW IS FLIMSY AND LUMPY

    1.0
    Details
    TERRIBLE PILLOW ITS LUMPY AND ITS FLIMSY AND IT FLATTENS QUICLY

    User's recommendation: DONT BUY.


    Read all 268 reviews.




    Tuesday, January 12, 2021

    Nine More MAGAt Headed To The Firing Squad

     Amanda Terkel

    ·Washington Bureau Chief, HuffPost

    Three Democratic members of Congress have tested positive for COVID-19, and they all have pointed to a day spent locked down with colleagues who refused to wear masks as a likely point of contraction.

    Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) put out a scathing statement Tuesday after her positive diagnosis, stating that “anyone who refuses to wear a mask should be fully held accountable for endangering our lives because of their selfish idiocy.”

    She also called for “serious fines … on every single Member who refuses to wear a mask in the Capitol,” and said the sergeant-at-arms should immediately remove any member from the floor who won’t comply.

    Reps. Brad Schneider (D-Ill.) and Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-N.J.) have also tested positive.

    “I was forced to spend several hours in a secure but confined location with dozens of other Members of Congress. Several Republican lawmakers in the room adamantly refused to wear a mask,” Schneider said Tuesday.

    “Following the events of Wednesday, including sheltering with several colleagues who refused to wear masks, I decided to take a Covid test. I have tested positive,” Watson Coleman tweeted Monday.

    When a mob of President Donald Trump’s supporters overtook the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, officials rushed a number of lawmakers, reporters and staffers into a protected, undisclosed location.

    More than 100 people were in the room together for as long as several hours, a source who was there told HuffPost.

    At least nine Republican House members were not wearing masks for extended periods of time, according to the source, as well as video of the lawmakers. They included:

    Andy Biggs (Ariz.)

    Mo Brooks (Ala.)

    Michael Cloud (Texas)

    Matt Gaetz (Fla.)

    Paul Gosar (Ariz.)

    Marjorie Taylor Greene (Ga.)

    Doug LaMalfa (Calif.)

    Markwayne Mullin (Okla.)

    Scott Perry (Pa.)

    Punchbowl News published video Friday showing Biggs, Cloud, Greene, LaMalfa, Mullin and Perry in the room, refusing to wear masks offered by Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.).

    “I’m not trying to get political here,” Mullin said.

    “Congresswoman Greene is a healthy adult who tested negative for COVID at the White House on 1/4,” a Greene spokesperson told HuffPost. “She does not believe healthy Americans should be forced to muzzle themselves with a mask. America needs to reopen and get back to normal.”

    Greene is a backer of the QAnon conspiracy theory that asserts Trump is fighting a “deep state” cabal of child traffickers. She has made videos promoting racist, anti-Semitic and anti-Muslim views.

    Mark Spannagel, LaMalfa’s chief of staff, did not comment on LaMalfa’s lack of a mask. Instead, he blamed Democrats for the leak of the video to Punchbowl News, and criticized House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) for allowing members who had tested positive for COVID-19 to vote in person for the speaker election.

    “Given that Speaker Pelosi pressured Covid positive Democrats to come to Washington and put them in the House Chambers to ensure her election as Speaker, Democrats should take a long look at the hypocrisy of their caucus before attacking Republicans,” Spannagel said. “Sending out video of the one of the Capitol’s ‘undisclosed locations’ that could easily be identified by those knowledgeable of the rooms just endangers everyone if it were needed next time. All to satisfy the need for partisan grandstanding.”

    The other lawmakers did not respond to requests for comment.

    Blunt Rochester told CNN that she was “very concerned we were sitting in a super-spreader event, but instead of sitting back and lamenting, I tried to go into action to try and persuade people” to put masks on.

    The House sergeant-at-arms also reminded members that they were in close quarters and it was important to wear masks, a suggestion that Democrats applauded.

    Many of the maskless Republicans were congregated together, and Democrats tried to stay away from that corner of the room.

    Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) tweeted that she simply left because she didn’t want to be stuck with the GOP members.

    Congress’ attending physician, Brian Monahan, sent a letter to lawmakers on Sunday, warning them that someone in the room that day may have been infected with the coronavirus.

    “The time in this room was several hours for some and briefer for others. During this time, individuals may have been exposed to another occupant with coronavirus infection,” the email read. “Please continue your usual daily coronavirus risk reduction measures (daily symptom inventory checklist, mask wear, and social distancing). Additionally, individuals should obtain an RT-PCR coronavirus test next week as a precaution.”

    Two other GOP lawmakers, Rep. Jake LaTurner (Kan.) and Rep. Chuck Fleischmann (Tenn.), have also tested positive for COVID-19 since the Jan. 6 siege, but both told The Washington Post they were not in the secured room that day.

    Just one day after the right-wing riot at the Capitol, the United States hit a grim milestone: the deadliest day of the pandemic thus far, with more than 4,000 deaths.

    This piece has been updated with two additional lawmakers who have tested positive after Jan. 6.

    Related...

    House Lawmakers Possibly Exposed To COVID-19 Under Lockdown

    Records Prove The Obvious: Fervent Trump Fans Fueled The Capitol Siege

    Democratic Lawmaker Tests Positive For COVID-19 After Capitol Attack

    This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.

    Legal Theory For Dealing With Insurrection

    Because the 9 maskless MAGAts who may have infected Americans are insurrectionists and the command and control that aided and encouraged enemy combatants to storm of the capital building, they too are enemy combatants and saboteurs. They therefore have no protection under American law or the Geneva convention. It could be argued that anyone who took the oath to defend the United States Constitution is obligated to capture or neutralize MAGAts according to their best judgement. 

    These anti-mask MAGAts knowingly placed Americans in even greater danger during the MAGAt's siege of the Capitol building. 


    Being that COVID-19 is as deadly as a knife attack the member of Congress that these 9 maskless MAGAts exposed would be legally within their rights to use deadly force on them. Dead MAGAts can't spread the virus. (deaths from knife attacks are 4% and 25% from gunshots) 

    These enemies would not be entitled to trials in US criminal courts of law. They probably should face military tribunals. 

    Enemy Combatant:

    Captured fighter in a war who is not entitled to prisoner of war status because he or she does not meet the definition of a lawful combatant as established by the geneva convention; a saboteur.

    They have declared war on the United States and they have attacked. 

    Commanders of military forces are even more culpable than their foot soldiers.


    The U.S. war against Terrorism that began after the September 11, 2001, attacks led to the invasion of Afghanistan, the toppling of the Taliban regime, and the aggressive dismantling of al-Qaeda terrorist strongholds within that country. Although many Taliban soldiers were released after the conclusion of the conflict, the United States took into custody over five hundred individuals they labeled enemy combatants. This designation, which is also referred to as unlawful combatants, gives detainees fewer rights than those conferred on prisoners of war by the Third Geneva Convention (1949).

    According to the articles of the convention, a lawful combatant must be part of an organized command structure; wear openly visible emblems to identify themselves as non-civilians; carry arms out in the open; and respect the Rules of War, which would include not taking hostages. President george w. bush and his administration maintained that the five hundred detainees did not meet these criteria. Therefore, they could be tried for crimes by military tribunals; moreover, the individuals could be held incommunicado for as long as the war lasted, with no access to the U.S. legal system. The confinement of these prisoners at Camp X-Ray at the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, raised questions about the U.S. government's interpretation of enemy combatant status. The fact that two detainees were U.S. citizens complicated matters, as both sought to use the U.S. courts to gain their freedom.

    During the last months of 2001, the United States took into custody suspected al-Qaeda terrorists. These detainees included Afghan nationals, Pakistanis, Saudis, Yemenis, and others from different parts of the world. Members of the U.S. military screened and interrogated detainees to identify persons who might be prosecuted or detained, or who might have useful information about the terrorist network. In January 2002, 482 of these detainees were flown to Cuba, where they were incarcerated at Camp X-Ray. The conditions were at best spartan, which drew criticism from Human Rights organizations. Over time the United States upgraded the facilities and by early 2003, a small number of detainees had been returned to their country of origin, having satisfied U.S. officials that they had no terrorist ties.

    One detainee, Yaser Esam Hamdi, informed his captors that he had been born in the United States before his family returned to the Middle East. This information led the U.S. military to transfer Hamdi from Camp X-Ray to the Norfolk, Virginia, Naval Station in early 2002. His father filed a Habeas Corpus petition (a legal writ that requires a person be brought before a court) in the U.S. District Court of Virginia, demanding that the government release his son. The district court judge ruled that Hamdi had the right to see an attorney, and the court appointed a public defender to represent him. The Defense Department, however, challenged the ruling, declaring that Hamdi, as an enemy combatant, did not have the Right to Counsel. The Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed and reversed the order. Nevertheless, the district court still raised doubts whether Hamdi, as a U.S. citizen, could be held as an enemy combatant. The Fourth Circuit finally settled the matter in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 316 F.3d 450 (4th Cir. 2003), when it ruled that a U.S. citizen captured with enemy forces during a combat operation in a foreign country could be held as an enemy combatant.

    Another detainee raised objections in federal court about his enemy combatant status. In May 2002, Jose Padilla, a U.S. citizen, was arrested in Chicago as he disembarked from a flight from Pakistan. Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that Padilla was a "dirty bomber," an al-Qaeda terrorist trained to make and explode a low-grade nuclear device. He was arrested under a judicial warrant, which made it necessary for him to make a court appearance. A lawyer was appointed to represent Padilla, but then the U.S. government changed its mind. It informed the judge that Padilla had been classified as an enemy combatant in a military order signed by President Bush. Confined to military custody in a South Carolina brig, Padilla's requests to see his lawyer were refused. This led to a series of hearings and orders in which the U.S. district court judge in New York urged the government to relent and let Padilla consult with his attorney. In December 2002, the judge issued an order directing the government to allow attorney visits (Padilla ex rel, Newman v. Bush, 233 F.Supp.2d 564 [S.D.N.Y.2002]). The government continued to object, leading the judge, in April 2003, to finalize his order so the government could appeal the issue.