To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.
It might also be the opposite: using DJT to launder campaign donations?They are obviously doing everything they can to keep it afloat. I suspect that they are using PAC money to keep it propped up.
It was June 5, 2008 and Trump had called a news conference at Trump Tower to announce a new venture into the business of mixed martial arts—a blood-spattering blend of boxing, wrestling and karate often fought in a caged octagon.
In that world, Fedor Emelianenko was king. Fedor, as everyone called him, was a heavyweight champion who made his name in his native Russia, cracking ribs in places like Kaliningrad, St. Petersburg and Moscow. He had never killed anyone, despite Trump’s quip in an interview that summer. But he was known for his devastating blows, including a nasty punch dubbed “the Russian hook.” And his fans included his country’s president, Putin, a black belt in karate who watched Fedor battle from front-row seats and sat with him at dinners and sports events.
But the Trump-Fedor tag team would not last long, nor end well. Affliction folded after staging just two budget-busting events, likely losing millions. The reality show never took flight. “The whole thing was a mess,” said Josh Gross, a sportswriter and author of Ali vs. Inoki: The Forgotten Fight That Inspired Mixed Martial Arts and Launched Sports Entertainment. “It’s a sordid chapter for mixed martial arts.”
