Pardon my cheap pun, but it's relevant, I promise.

Went to look up Pegasus Museum on Yelp. It doesn't exist.



rub a dub-dub, look what's been scrubbed?

So, looked up the business listings relating to James Alefantis. Got some hits.

Now, hear me out before I belly flop into that shit pile.

What we know of Alefantis:

Dated David Brock, once Republican douche canoe, now staunch Hillbot surrogate.

GQ had his listed as one of the 50 most influential men in DC for slinging "pizza."

CPP has hosted and catered political functions, is close to several people in the Clinton camp.

Has never explained the pedophilic comments on his instagram account despite his many interviews to clear CPP's name.

Is associated with Hereisyourman LLC, Castellum Achilles, LLC

Gets really pissy whenever Pegasus Museum is mentioned.

If Pegasus Museum is an actual museum, wouldn't there be any review of it and it's exhibitions? Or can we safely say that due to Alefantis' obvious prickly-ness of the topic and the fact that it's not listed as a museum in DC, that odds are it's a front. As a front, it'd need help to be set up-- someone willing to assist with the paperwork side of things. Enter lawyer Robert Harris. He is listed as the man who registered the Alefantis-related "businesses" of Herecomesyourman LLC and Castellum Achilles LLC.

When one looks up that address, we get interesting hits-- including Big Bucks and Big Cheese, both agented by Harris.



By the by, did you know Buck's has an (old) ad for hiring someone aged 14 or older?

Also listed is RH Impact. That stood out to me because my first thought is blood's RH factor. But then I realized that it could be simply the attorney's initials, too. That came to me after I searched for it. The most interesting thing I found was a Department of Consumer Affairs DC report that's it's listed. DCRA 2014 list of revocation. Also on that list are businesses we've heard of an a whole lot that we haven't.

Just because I'm an occasional shithead, I did a search for Pizza. Afterall, Pizzagate has a certain aura around it that smells strongly of cheese and despair of abused children and a cognitive dissonant populace.

This was the first hit:

That's an odd choice for a moving company name, I must say. Pizza Movers? But pizza is just food, a name is just a name, and this is in our imaginations, right?





One entry is registered to Dohia Ali. When one searches that name and address, it comes up with one main hit Elzamzami Dohia Ali, the owner of Duccini's Pizza. (I've seen the Elzamzami at both ends of the dude's name, not sure if it's his first or last, but it's in there)

Looks like they got shut down a couple months ago.

What's creepy are some of the associations with that business.

Is it common in that area to offer remodeling and babysitting at a pizza place? Because that's a fucking red flag right there. And what do you know, they are even on Hours Center, and just a couple blocks away from a park.

So, any nay-sayers care to offer an explanation of a business in redundancy (one is an Inc, the other is Inc, Inc. and both entries were updated on the same day.) that doesn't involve a layer of distraction and a cloak of operation? I mean, if one existed before the other (and both are registered in DC, why not choose another, unique name instead? Why have marketing issues and copyright infringement, which could very well involve litigation, ya know, if one didn't opt to change their business name. But no. They went ahead with the Inc, Inc. And that's a hell of a head-scratcher to me. Especially since it's Pizza Movers.

Also on this list are businesses with more cringe-worthy names such as Babylove DC and this unfortunate use of Alphabetizing a list:



Also on that list are several businesses related to trucking.

There's a lot of patriotic sounding names; it's one of the reasons I investigated O.P.E.N. America. Wanted to find out what the OPEN stood for and how it related to America, the country.

It's just a hunch, but I'm thinking the lawyers responsible for registering businesses that don't seem to go any where know exactly what those businesses do. They'd state otherwise to protect the client's privacy, no doubt and beg ignorance... but darkness cannot thrive without the help of light. If people are in positions of authority (and let's face it, lawyers are supposed to help society by maintaining law, but many are corrupted by those with power and money) yet aid shady shit, they aren't on the side of America. They are on the side of themselves, their ilk, and those giving them money, influence, and depravity.

I don't know how involved the lawyer is. But the fact he's worked with Alefantis on a couple business registries, is enough for me to call him a red flag. When one gets to a certain level in DC, it's like a small town. Everybody knows the rumors, everybody knows each other's bullshit. Anyone wallowing in the Alefantis/Podesta muck is suspect, imho.

"Pizza Movers," my ass.