Stacey's mom may have it goin' on

Abrams had a company that supplied election worker who counted ballots in Atlanta.


Oh, did she, now?

No, Stacey Abrams did not own a company that supplied election workers who counted ballots in Atlanta. This claim likely stems from misinformation that circulated regarding her involvement with Happy Faces Personnel Group, a temporary staffing agency based in Atlanta. Happy Faces did provide staffing services to Fulton County, Georgia, for the 2020 election (and prior elections), but Abrams has no ownership stake in the company.

The confusion may have arisen from her past association with NOWAccount Network Corp., a financial services company she co-founded, which was a secured party for Happy Faces in 2017, according to business documents.

However, this was a financial arrangement, not an indication of ownership or operational control. The CEO of Happy Faces, Michael Hairston, has confirmed that he owns 100% of the company, and it does not rely on non-bank funding from entities like NOWAccount. Furthermore, Happy Faces provides staffing and payroll services to Georgia-based clients but does not manage elections or count ballots—those responsibilities fall to election officials.

Abrams herself was not directly involved with Happy Faces, and claims suggesting she owned 16% of a firm that counted ballots in Fulton County have been debunked. Her focus has been on voting rights advocacy, notably through Fair Fight Action, not on owning or operating election staffing companies.


@Grok
 
Setup
  • Profile: Female, 49, 300 lbs, 5’6”, morbidly obese.
  • Prison Diet: Federal Bureau of Prisons standard ~2,800 calories/day (high-carb, moderate-protein). Partial eating common:
    • Full: 2,800 calories.
    • Partial: 2,240 calories (80%).
    • Minimal: 1,800 calories (skipping meals).
  • Activity: Sedentary (TDEE 2,357 calories/day) to lightly active (2,700 calories/day), per prison constraints.
Energy Expenditure
  • BMR (Mifflin-St Jeor): 1,964 calories/day (10 × 136 kg + 6.25 × 167 cm - 5 × 49 + 5).
  • TDEE:
    • Sedentary: 1,964 × 1.2 = ~2,357 calories/day.
    • Lightly Active: 1,964 × 1.375 = ~2,700 calories/day.
Deficit Scenarios
  1. Full Diet (2,800 calories):
    • Sedentary: 2,800 - 2,357 = 443 surplus (no loss, ~0.9 lb/week gain).
    • Lightly Active: 2,800 - 2,700 = 100 surplus (no loss).
    • Outcome: No weight loss.
  2. Partial Diet (2,240 calories):
    • Sedentary: 2,240 - 2,357 = 117 deficit (~0.2 lb/week).
    • Lightly Active: 2,240 - 2,700 = 460 deficit (~0.9 lb/week).
    • Outcome: Modest loss.
  3. Minimal Diet (1,800 calories):
    • Sedentary: 1,800 - 2,357 = 557 deficit (~1.1 lbs/week).
    • Lightly Active: 1,800 - 2,700 = 900 deficit (~1.8 lbs/week).
    • Outcome: Significant loss.
Weight Loss Projections
  • Weekly: 3,500 calories = 1 lb fat.
    • Partial: 0.2–0.9 lbs/week.
    • Minimal: 1.1–1.8 lbs/week.
  • Monthly:
    • Partial: 1–4 lbs.
    • Minimal: 4–7 lbs.
  • 6 Months:
    • Partial: 6–23 lbs + 5–10 lbs water = 11–33 lbs.
    • Minimal: 29–47 lbs + 5–10 lbs water = 34–57 lbs.
  • Year 1:
    • Partial: 12–47 lbs (slows as TDEE drops to ~2,200 at 250 lbs).
    • Minimal: 57–94 lbs (up to 100 lbs max if sustained).
Morbid Obesity Context
  • Initial Boost: Higher TDEE at 300 lbs drives bigger deficits; water weight adds early loss.
  • Age 49: Slightly lower BMR (~100 calories less than at 35), but weight dominates.
  • Plateau: At 250 lbs, TDEE falls (e.g., 2,190 sedentary, 2,513 active), narrowing deficits unless intake drops further.

Stacey Adams could theoretically lose 40–70 lbs in a year on a typical federal prison diet, with 20–35 lbs in 6 months if eating 2,240–1,800 calories/day (partial to minimal intake). Most likely, with light activity and partial eating (2,240 calories), she’d lose ~45–50 lbs in a year.


@Grok
 
Stacey-Abrams.jpg


A STINT IN PRISON MIGHT SAVE HER LIFE
 
e25c9f5ec42ab6983feee25e275df31f.jpg



Kamala Harris HireD Top Official From Climate Group Behind Gas Stove Crackdown​


Rewiring America made headlines last year when it hired failed Georgia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams as its senior counsel.

Abrams said at the time that she was excited to join the group "to share the benefits of electrification and ensure families get their fair share."

The group, meanwhile, is a project of the Windward Fund, a pass-through organization that is, in turn, a key cog in the billion-dollar dark money network managed by the Washington, D.C.-based firm Arabella Advisors.

As a project of a separate entity, Rewiring America isn't required to file tax forms with the IRS, its total funding remains unknown, and its funders are largely shielded from public view.

According to tax filings reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon, however, it has received significant funding from left-wing pass-through groups like the Sergey Brin Family Foundation and Rockefeller Brothers Fund.




"Electrification?" It is estimated that just 60,000 Americans don't have electrical power where they live, and the majority of those are Native Americans living on reservations


So, basically, almost 100% of the American population has electricity and Abrams' group is just bullshit.
 
"Electrification?" It is estimated that just 60,000 Americans don't have electrical power where they live, and the majority of those are Native Americans living on reservations


So, basically, almost 100% of the American population has electricity and Abrams' group is just bullshit.


Money laundering?


:dunno:
 
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