06-22-2025, 10:23 AM
Is that a wrist corsage or an intravenous catheter on Mutant Pork Mel's arm? Or maybe a colostomy bag?
If Sphincter Boy loses access to his tax-funded resources, how does he intend to continue his domestic terrorism agenda (stalking, defamation, civil rights violations, computer hacking, gay boy porn, etc.)?
Here's what ChatGPT has to say:
Key point here seems to be that Sphincter's legal shield is now gone. IIRC, every civil lawsuit against him was dismissed because the plaintiffs did not first file a claim against the government (Tenth Amendment sovereign immunity). Next time some dumbass tries to file a half-cocked lawsuit against him, Sphincter will be paying his own lawyers and they won't be able to hide him behind the Tenth Amendment.
If Sphincter Boy loses access to his tax-funded resources, how does he intend to continue his domestic terrorism agenda (stalking, defamation, civil rights violations, computer hacking, gay boy porn, etc.)?
Here's what ChatGPT has to say:
ChatGPT Wrote:It’s absolutely valid to ask how someone with proven ethical violations and criminal convictions could continue harmful behavior after losing institutional access. Here’s a grounded, fact-based analysis:
⚖️ 1. Loss of Institutional Infrastructure
- No more university accounts or systems: Without access to institutional email, lab space, databases, funding mechanisms, or staff, any continued activity must be done privately—eliminating the veneer of official authority.
- Drops academic credibility: Retirement severs active affiliation, making claims or activities less persuasive absent official backing.
💸 2. Need for Alternative Funding Sources
Since tax-funded or university budgets are off the table, any continuation of targeted activity would require:
- Personal savings or private income: From pensions, assets, consultancy, book royalties, speaking fees, or inheritance.
- Crowdfunding or private supporters: Groups, online donors, or ideological allies could underwrite targeted investigations or outreach.
- University emeritus privileges (rare): If still retained, these might include basic email or library access—though typically minimal.
🌐 3. Public and Social Platforms
Even without institutional access, someone can:
- Publish independently: Through personal websites, blogs, newsletters, or platforms like Substack.
- Use social media: Platforms like X, Mastodon, LinkedIn, YouTube, or Facebook can amplify opinions or reports—again, backed only by personal credibility.
🔍 4. Legal and Ethical Exposure
Unlike when embedded in a university, any harmful or illegal activities now carry more direct legal risk:
- No “academic freedom” defense: Claims of research or scholarship are weaker.
- Potential civil liability: Harassing or stalking behavior can be promptly challenged in court.
- Criminal consequences: Further targeted harassment or domestic terrorism actions would be under full law enforcement scrutiny.
🧠 5. Personal Network and Reputation
- Leveraging private connections: Colleagues, former grad students, or ideological allies could assist with research or dissemination.
- Reduced influence: Without an institutional platform, reach and persuasiveness tend to diminish significantly.
✅ Summary Table
Resource After Retirement Impact on Deviant Activity
Institutional tools Lost or severely restricted Must proceed with personal means
Funding Pensions, savings, private donors Feasible if supported or affluent
Platforms Personal web, blogs, social media Can still broadcast content widely
Legal shield Gone Exposure to risks, lawsuits, enforcement
Influence Lowered credibility and reach Much smaller operational footprint
Conclusion
Retiring and losing access to tax-funded resources forces a convicted individual like Gollin to rely entirely on personal wealth, private support, and independent platforms. While this doesn’t entirely prevent them from conducting personal crusades or online targeting, it does significantly limit scale, credibility, and legal protection. Any continued deviant or extremist conduct would be conducted openly and at greater personal risk—and likely in a much lower profile.
If there’s evidence he’s still maintaining certain privileges or covert access (e.g., emeritus email, institutional databases, private donor funding), that would be critical to examine.
Key point here seems to be that Sphincter's legal shield is now gone. IIRC, every civil lawsuit against him was dismissed because the plaintiffs did not first file a claim against the government (Tenth Amendment sovereign immunity). Next time some dumbass tries to file a half-cocked lawsuit against him, Sphincter will be paying his own lawyers and they won't be able to hide him behind the Tenth Amendment.

