>>/173827/, >>/173828/, >>/173829/, >>/173830/
Anthony Constantino @constantino - CONSTANTINO REVEALS HE OVERPAID TAXES BY $10 MILLION!
EDINBURG, NY, Jan. 10 — After NY-21 candidate Robert Smullen accused Sticker Mule CEO Anthony Constantino of “not paying his taxes” during a WGY radio interview, Constantino revealed he overpaid by $10 million and received a U.S. Treasury reimbursement, including an $8.3 million check that is the 2nd largest reported reimbursement in U.S. history behind President Trump’s own $72.9 million reimbursement in 2010.
Smullen also lied during the bizarre interview with Bob Lonsberry saying that Constantino didn’t support Trump in 2016.
Constantino easily disproved this lie:
1. FEC records show Constantino donated to candidate Trump in 2016, triggering a harsh boycott of Sticker Mule by Democrat activists.
2. The New York Times also photographed Constantino at Trump’s 2016 inauguration.
Smullen also made a provably false lie saying “he’s not from this district” despite knowing Constantino’s lifelong home is in Edinburg, NY.
WGY host Bob Lonsberry expressed displeasure at Smullen’s behavior on-air the next day. Lonsberry explained that Smullen requested the interview and he reluctantly granted it despite concerns that it would hurt ratings. Lonsberry was surprised when Smullen immediately attacked Constantino instead of answering questions remarking “I didn’t ask you about that.”
Constantino’s campaign was similarly surprised by what campaign manager Lenny Roudik called a “Truly absurd attack. Everyone knows Anthony Constantino is a fierce Trump supporter and has been since the beginning. Sticker Mule went through hell over Constantino’s early support of the President. It’s insulting to everyone at Sticker Mule, who endured the Democrat Party’s hate for 8 years, that Smullen would lie so egregiously.”
According to Constantino, “Smullen chose to interrupt Lonsberry to make three obvious lies about me and proved that he is a dishonest politician of the worst variety.”
PRESS CONTACT
Paul Antonelli
[email protected]
518 866 6298 https://x.com/constantino/status/2010727314640748627
Archaeo - Histories @archeohistories - In 1998, Honduras completed an ambitious project over the Choluteca River, a modern bridge built with Japanese engineering and intended to serve as a major artery for the country. It was constructed to be stronger and more resilient than anything that had come before it. Engineers designed it to survive hurricanes, flooding, and the intense tropical weather that often strikes Central America. For a moment it stood as a symbol of progress.
Then Hurricane Mitch arrived later that same year. Mitch became one of the deadliest storms in Central American history, unleashing days of relentless rain, destroying towns, and wiping out roads across Honduras. Entire communities vanished under landslides and floodwaters. Yet in the middle of this destruction, the new bridge remained standing almost untouched. It had survived exactly what it had been built to withstand.
The problem was that the storm reshaped the land itself. The Choluteca River, swollen and violent, carved a completely new channel miles to the side of the bridge. When the waters finally receded, the bridge stood proudly over an empty patch of earth, disconnected from the river it was meant to span. It became known worldwide as the Bridge to Nowhere, a strange monument to the idea that the world can change even when the structures we build remain strong.
After the disaster, engineers studied the Choluteca Bridge as a case study in climate adaptation, using its survival and the river’s rerouting to illustrate why modern infrastructure must plan not only for extreme weather but also for shifting landscapes themselves.
#archaeohistories
https://x.com/archeohistories/status/2010633178067968373
5