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#master vanity
betafishtank · 9 months
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Dallas Master Bath Bathroom Example of a mid-sized transitional master white tile and porcelain tile ceramic tile, gray floor and double-sink bathroom design with flat-panel cabinets, light wood cabinets, a two-piece toilet, white walls, an undermount sink, quartz countertops, a hinged shower door, white countertops and a floating vanity
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misstel · 11 months
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Bathroom Master Bath Dallas Bathroom with a double sink, flat-panel cabinets, light wood cabinets, a two-piece toilet, white walls, an undermount sink, quartz countertops, a hinged shower door, white countertops, and a floating vanity in a medium-sized transitional bathroom.
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magically-cozy · 11 months
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Master Bath Bathroom Dallas
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Mid-sized transitional master bathroom with a floating vanity, flat-panel cabinets, light wood cabinets, a two-piece toilet, white walls, an undermount sink, quartz countertops, and porcelain and white tile and porcelain tile flooring.
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qinzimos · 1 year
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Bathroom - Contemporary Bathroom Example of a mid-sized trendy beige tile, gray tile and pebble tile ceramic tile and beige floor bathroom design with flat-panel cabinets, medium tone wood cabinets, a vessel sink, granite countertops and multicolored walls
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flipjack · 5 months
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Lizzy Caplan at the Vanity Fair pre Emmy party
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plick-lunazzz · 5 months
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"And no, you're never gon' find"
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majoregan · 3 months
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Callum Turner photographed by Matthew Brookes for Vanity Fair
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winniemaywebber · 4 months
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we're eating good this morning ‼️
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asoiafreadthru · 3 months
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A Game of Thrones, Catelyn IV
Her hand groped beneath her cloak, her fingers stiff and fumbling. The dagger was still at her side. She found she had to touch it now and then, to reassure herself.
“Now we must reach the king’s master-at-arms, and pray that he can be trusted.”
“Ser Aron Santagar is a vain man, but an honest one.”
Ser Rodrik’s hand went to his face to stroke his whiskers and discovered once again that they were gone. He looked nonplussed.
“He may know the blade, yes…”
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When the FBI raided Donald Trump’s private resort and residence last month, after obtaining a search warrant based on probable cause that they’d find evidence of one or more crimes, it was presumably difficult for people to resist fantasizing that the Feds would soon arrest the former president and perp-walk him out of the place. That fantasy, we’re guessing, likely involved the 45th president trying to wriggle out of handcuffs while screaming “It was Melania!”, before being tased by an agent on the scene. It likely also included— and again, we're just guessing here!—him being charged and found guilty of the crimes cited by the government, plus a few others we didn’t even expect, like selling counterfeit Louis Vuitton bags and smuggling exotic lizards into the country, the latter of which would emerge he undertook with Jared Kushner. Naturally, this fantasy would also include the former president being sentenced to numerous years in prison, and a hysterical Don Jr. and Eric Trump telling reporters outside the courthouse of their plans to go to law school so they could represent their father on appeal.
Obviously, all of this could still happen. On Monday, though, such dreams became somewhat less likely after a judge threw the ex-president an outrageous, legally-suspect bone.
That bone came courtesy of Judge Aileen Cannon, who granted Trump’s request for a special master to review the 11,000 government documents seized from Mar-a-Lago on August 8 and blocked prosecutors from continuing to use the documents in their criminal investigation until that review is complete. The absurdly deferential ruling was based on Team Trump’s claims that some of the materials are covered by “executive privilege,” i.e., their go-to argument whenever the ex-ex-President has done something that seems like it might be illegal. “The Court hereby authorizes the appointment of a special master to review the seized property for personal items and documents and potentially privileged material subject to claims of attorney-client and/or executive privilege,” she wrote. (According to the ruling, the FBI found “medical documents, correspondence related to taxes, and accounting information” among the classified information, and seized that too; according to The Daily Beast, “the DOJ has indicated that their placement next to some of the nation’s most highly classified secrets officially makes them evidence of Trump’s criminal recklessness that could be shown at a future trial.”) And if you’re wondering if Cannon’s decision was one that members of the legal community would agree was well-founded, legitimate, and completely unimpeachable, the answer is “no,” “no,” and “hell no.”
“To any lawyer with serious federal criminal court experience who is being honest, this ruling is laughably bad, and the written justification is even flimsier,” Samuel Buell, a Duke University law professor, told The New York Times. “Donald Trump is getting something no one else ever gets in federal court, he’s getting it for no good reason, and it will not in the slightest reduce the ongoing howls that he is being persecuted, when he is being privileged.” Constitutional law professor Laurence Tribe similarly assessed the situation, writing that Cannon’s decision was “utterly lawless” and that she “has disgraced her position as an Article III judge.” Former US acting solicitor general Neal Katyal tweeted: “This special master opinion is so bad it’s hard to know where to begin....Frankly, any of my first year law students would have written a better opinion.”
Why the negative reviews and insinuations that Cannon should go back to remedial judge school? For one, there’s the fact that she suggested publicly, even before she heard arguments from the Justice Department, that she was going to side with Trump. Then there’s the fact that, despite tacitly acknowledging that the documents Trump was hoarding at Mar-a-Lago are a big fucking deal—Cannon permitted a probe by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which is assessing the risk to national security of keeping top secret documents in the basement of a building possibly breached by multiple spies—she temporarily halted the one that could result in Trump being charged with a crime. There’s also the absurd idea that “executive privilege” can be asserted in an investigation being undertaken by a department within the executive branch, i.e., the DOJ. “The opinion,” Peter Shane, a legal scholar at NYU, told the Times, “seems oblivious to the nature of executive privilege.”
Perhaps most galling, though, was the argument by Cannon that Trump would suffer grave “reputational harm” if a special master was not allowed to intervene, a claim that numerous legal experts agreed was utter bullshit. Ronald Sullivan, a Harvard Law School professor, told the Times that everyone targeted by a search warrant worries about how their reputation will suffer as a result, but few of them are able to call in favors from the government; he dubbed Cannon’s logic “thin at best” and accused her of giving “undue weight” to Trump’s status as a former inhabitant of the White House. “I find that deeply problematic,” he told the outlet, noting that, in the United States, the criminal justice system is supposed to treat everyone equally. “This court is giving special considerations to the former president that ordinary, everyday citizens do not receive.” Attorney Seth Abramson similarly called BS on Monday, tweeting that Cannon “declared—and not just implicitly, but, horrifyingly, *explicitly*—that Donald Trump’s reputation simply *matters* more than yours or mine, as do his property rights. And they matter more because he is a powerful man.” DOJ veteran Andrew Weissman wrote: “Nothing about the MAL search warrant process was special and her reasoning [would] lead to appointment of a special master in EVERY criminal case. The only thing special is a former president stealing highly classified docs.” Commenting on the ludicrous idea that the entire criminal investigation should be halted because a few of Trump’s doctors notes were mixed in with top secret documents he wasn’t supposed to be holding onto, former federal prosecutor Jeff Blattner posed the following hypothetical: “Suppose a guy robs a bank and government gets a search warrant and finds stolen dough along with guy’s pocket change and an email from his lawyer. Can the guy get a special master to sort out the cash and the email, and an injunction against further investigation in the meantime?”
By the way, if you’re wondering whether Cannon is cut from the same MAGA cloth as the guy who gave her a lifetime appointment to the federal bench at the age of 39, it would seem she is. We know this because she bizarrely claimed in her ruling that one of the reasons Trump should receive special treatment was because of the no-good, very-bad free press. “The Court takes into account the undeniably unprecedented nature of the search of a former President’s residence,” she wrote, saying it is of the utmost importance to protect the ex-President amid “swirling allegations of bias and media leaks.”
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As Vox’s Ian Millhiser pointed out on Tuesday, not only is the legal justification for appointing a special master “highly dubious,” but it “could lead to considerable delay” of the investigation—and the potential prosecution of Trump— “for months or years.” While many believe that Cannon’s ruling will be appealed by the DOJ, “any appeal would be heard by the Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta, where Mr. Trump appointed six of its 11 active judges," the Times worryingly reminds us.
Anyway, for anyone still who remains unconvinced that this whole thing was an egregious, disturbing move, here’s noted Trump lackey Bill Barr—who has spent years trying to keep the guy out of prison—on the ruling:
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missdragonica · 9 months
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3/4 Bath - Bathroom
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Mid-sized elegant 3/4 porcelain tile bathroom/laundry room photo with an undermount sink, shaker cabinets, white cabinets, quartz countertops, a one-piece toilet and blue walls
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istherewifiinhell · 9 months
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Now why do they introduce so many characters and repeat the gimmick/archtype?
Well. 👆🏻. Toys. ✌🏻. It is funny they did the. Hollywood joke and the 4 most annoying bots [affectionate] show up cause they wanna be in the movies.....
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chloemoretz-news · 9 months
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Minneapolis Master
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An illustration of a master bedroom in the mountain style that is medium in size, has a medium tone wood floor, and has brown walls.
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baebgracie · 1 year
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flavorsims · 1 year
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Bedroom Master in Los Angeles Large ornate master concrete floor and beige floor bedroom photo with beige walls and no fireplace
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missroxelot · 1 year
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Sacramento Modern Bathroom
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