UPDATED, 3/8:Critics noticed that his paintings stopped selling after Joe Biden left office, coincidentally.
" 'Hunter Biden chose to go into the Joe Biden business. Made millions. When he evaded paying taxes, a new friend who just happened to be a Joe Biden supporter gave him millions in 'loans.' But now Joe Biden is out, nobody's buying the art, and the Biden business has gone bust," said journalist Byron York."
Broc Smith |
With all due respect to the Clinton Grift Machine, Joe Biden and his family have been running their money scam for a lot longer. Sure, it took years for the bagman to come of age, but Hunter Biden filled that role, and the rest was history. I used the past-tense because the grift is over.
Turn out the lights.... the party’s ooooover.
On January 20th, the party ended. The money died up. The grift hit a wall. You can use your own metaphor, but the point being, what happened this week, we knew, was inevitable. Hunter’s usefulness ended, and so did his source of income.
The left pretended that Hunter had some talent. Either as a lawyer or, later, as an “artist.” We were told his paintings were, indeed, worth thousands of dollars – in fact, worth hundreds of thousands; but Hunter’s only talent was running interference for his corrupt pops. When Joe Biden became an afterthought on January 20th, Hunter Biden became irrelevant to the grift machine.
With the money gone, Hunter is in a bit of a “tight” spot. Sure, his corrupt dad pardoned him for crimes he was already convicted of, and for potential crimes yet to be charged with. Hunter won’t end up in prison, but he still has plenty to do in a courtroom.
The former president's son has civil lawsuits still pending. Hunter sued the guy who turned over his laptop. Almost two years ago to the day, Hunter sued the computer repair shop owner. I have to give it to his attorneys. They had some nerve:
On January 20th, the party ended. The money died up. The grift hit a wall. You can use your own metaphor, but the point being, what happened this week, we knew, was inevitable. Hunter’s usefulness ended, and so did his source of income. . . .