Marjorie Taylor Greene - can you get more certifiable than this

Marjorie Taylor Greene filed for divorce from her husband the same year she met her gym manager lover and began an affair with a tantric sex guru - but called it off after having a change of heart
  • DailyMail.com revealed last week that Marjorie Taylor Greene had affairs with tantric sex guru Craig Ivey and fitness gym manager Justin Tway
  • The embattled Georgia congresswoman, 46, has been married to husband Perry Greene since 1995 and shares three kids with him
  • Now DailyMail.com can reveal that she planned to leave Perry in July 2012 but reconciled with him two months later
  • Divorce papers show Taylor Greene blamed the marriage breakdown on their relationship being 'irretrievably broken'
  • Taylor Greene had met her two lovers while working at a gym in Georgia in 2012
  • The court papers note that she and her husband were able to reconcile – possibly because her affairs with Ivey and Tway had come to an end
  • She demanded half of the couple's assets, as well as custody of their three children - to which Perry agreed
  • Known for her QAnon conspiracy theories, she boasts on her social media of her love of 'family values' and being a 'strong, conservative, Christian'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ylor-Greene-tried-divorce-husband-affair.html

(More at above url)
You're reposting your own articles bro
 
This article about Greene is new and not a re-post. What are you trying to say?
Is it really new or just a rehash with a different headline? These tabloids are notorious for recycling their garbage.
Embattled QAnon congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene 'openly cheated' on her husband of 25 years with a polyamorous tantric sex guru and then moved on to another affair with the manager at her gym
  • Marjorie Taylor Greene had affairs with tantric sex guru Craig Ivey and fitness gym manager Justin Tway, DailyMail.com has learned
  • The embattled Georgia congresswoman, 46, has been married to husband Perry Greene since 1995 and shares three kids with him
  • Neither man denied the affairs when approached by DailyMail.com, but both refused to comment on their past relationships with Taylor Greene
  • 'I have no interest in talking about anything to do with that woman. Everything with her comes to no good,' Tway, 42, said
  • Taylor Greene had met her two lovers while working at a gym in Alpharetta, Georgia in 2012
  • Insiders say she was so brazen about her affairs they believed her marriage was on the rocks, but it appears the couple has put her infidelity behind them
  • Congress voted last week to remove Taylor Greene from her committee assignments due to her outrageous beliefs and controversial social media posts
  • In response to DailyMail.com's request for comment, Taylor Greene said it was another attempt to smear my name because I’m the biggest threat to the Democrats’ Socialist agenda'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...lor-Green-openly-cheated-husband-men-gym.html

Controversial conspiracy congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene cheated on her husband with a polyamorous tantric sex guru, DailyMail.com has learned.

Then after ending her affair with him, the mom-of-three moved on to a gym manager behind her husband's back.

But despite the tawdry flings, Taylor Greene stuck with her husband Perry as she made her unlikely rise that has turned her into the most talked-about Republican in Washington, D.C.

Neither man denied the affairs when approached by DailyMail.com.

Craig Ivey, the tantric sex practitioner, said: 'I will not respond to anything about this,' while the other man, Justin Tway, said: 'I have no interest in talking about anything to do with that woman. Everything with her comes to no good.'

But others say the new representative from Georgia's 14th Congressional District was brazen about her affairs which she carried on a decade ago while working in gyms in Alpharetta, Georgia, some 35 miles north of Atlanta.

'It wasn't a secret. Everyone who moved in her circles knew about both the affairs,' one man who worked closely with Taylor Greene told DailyMail.com.

And her boss, billionaire's grandson Jim Chambers, added: 'She socialized a lot with us. I remember one particular pool party where she was lying draped over Craig's lap drinking a beer.

'She was quite open about it,' he added. 'We all thought her marriage was falling apart.

'But then I took my son to her son's birthday party and things seemed totally normal between her and her husband - even if they were a little lukewarm.'

In response to DailyMail.com's request for comment, Taylor Greene called the story ‘ridiculous tabloid garbage spread by an avowed Communist,’ and ‘another attempt to smear my name because I’m the biggest threat to the Democrats’ Socialist agenda.’

Her attorney L. Lin Wood, has previously said that an article about the allegations published by the New Yorker magazine was 'intended to smear her with false accusations, half-truths, misrepresentations, out-of-context statements, and agenda driven lies.'

Taylor Greene, 46, has become notorious since being elected to Congress. She calls herself a 'strong conservative Christian,' who planned to take her 'family values' to Washington.

But she has been slammed for her belief in conspiracies linked to the group QAnon which claims former president Donald Trump was sent by God to oust Democrats who are involved in a nationwide ring that traffics, abuses, kills and even eats children.

She has also said that the Parkland and Sandy Hook school shootings were 'false flag' operations aimed at tightening gun control, harassed Parkland survivor David Hogg on the streets and questioned whether the September 11 terrorist attacks were real.

Congress voted last week to remove her from her committee assignments due to her outrageous beliefs and actions.

Rumors of Taylor Greene's affairs have been around since she hit the headlines in the summer by winning the Republican primary for her seat, which covers a wide swath of rural north west Georgia.

Chambers even tweeted out at the time: '@mtgreenee so when you worked for me at CrossFit Alpharetta in 2012, the extramarital affairs you had with Justin and Craig, those were Jesus-approved, right?'

39171694-9246917-Rumors_of_Taylor_Greene_s_affairs_began_to_resurface_in_the_summ-a-10_1613072939830.jpg


He then added: 'I would never choose to doc someone's infidelities...unless they're this person,' and linked to a Marjorie Taylor Greene for Congress page.

A New Yorker profile of her said a reporter had seen texts in which Taylor Greene admitted sleeping with one man outside her marriage.

Chambers, whose grandmother Anne Cox Chambers was the richest person in Georgia until she died last year, bought two gyms in the early 2010s.

He really only wanted one in downtown Atlanta, but the previous owner insisted on selling the Alpharetta gym as part of a package. That is where Taylor Greene was already working.

'She was part of the staff I inherited,' Chambers, 36, told DailyMail.com. 'She wasn't someone who needed a paycheck. She was working as a trade - she got free membership and access and the opportunity to learn the business.'

Soon it became apparent that she and Craig Ivey had started an affair.

'I know about it because I was a member of the gym,' said one man who asked not to be identified. 'Certainly she was screwing around.'

'Guys talk and I know there was definitely sex involved. People don't make up stuff like that. They were spending a lot of time together, turning up at the gym in the same car.

'When I would suggest going out, Craig would say he had things to do with Marjorie.'

Soon after, Chambers brought in a new manager for his Alpharetta gym. Justin Tway moved to Georgia from Colorado, to take over with the understanding that he might end up buying it and taking it off Chambers's hands.

Taylor Greene soon set her sights on him, said both Chambers and the second source.

'This seemed much more serious than the affair with Craig,' said Chambers. 'That was more of a flirty thing. But with Justin she seemed to have designs on a more long-term relationship.

'My impression is that she knew he might take over the gym and she wanted to be there right alongside him.'

Eventually Taylor Greene did buy another gym in Alpharetta.

The second source said: 'With Marjorie it always seemed to be a power thing. If anyone was a leader or in a position of power, she would gravitate to them, and that is what it was like with Justin.'

Chambers - whose far-left politics are as opposed to Taylor Greene's views as they could possibly be - said he thought she even might have had designs on him as he was going through a divorce at the time. But he insists nothing happened between them.

The second source added: 'I don't know whether she was after Jim, you'd have to ask him that one.'

'What I do know is that she was a lot different then to what she is now. I worked out with her a lot and she certainly wasn't saying the insane things she is now. If she had been, I would have had nothing to do with her.'

Since his affair with Taylor Greene, Ivey, 42, has moved to Washington State. He worked in at least two CrossFit gyms in Seattle and has now set up a gladiator bootcamp called The Ludus.

He participates in reenactments of medieval battles and teaches sword fighting.

Ivey's profile picture on his Facebook page shows him standing stark naked by a waterfall.

On Instagram he calls himself The Tantric Warrior, describing himself as 'Living a warrior lifestyle while finding tantric love.'

Medical News Today defines tantric sex as a 'slow, meditative form of sex where the end goal is not orgasm but enjoying the sexual journey and sensations of the body.'

Rocker Sting is its most famous practitioner, claiming he and wife Trudie Styler have seven-hour lovemaking sessions.

Ivey is currently living in a trailer in Renton, Washington, but along with a girlfriend and another couple, he has bought a house in Buckley, an hour south of Seattle, which he says he wants to turn into a polyamorous commune.

When approached by DailyMail.com, Ivey said: 'I have made myself very clear, I will not respond to anything about this again.

He also threatened to call the police on a reporter. 'Please stay away from me and anyone connected with my life,' he said in a text message.

Tway, also 42, still lives in Alpharetta with his wife Sherrie, whom he met long after his affair with Taylor Greene had ended.

The couple run a gym in the city, often taking their 'gym pups', Briggs and Salo, along with them.

Taylor Greene and her husband along with their three children, Lauren, Taylor and Derek, moved from Alpharetta last year when they bought a $610,000 home in Rome, Georgia, so she could live inside her congressional district.

They still own their previous house in Alpharetta, where Perry runs a construction and renovation company that was founded by Marjorie's father.

(Article at above url contains many pictures)
 
The woman is clearly a nut. If ethics were applied uniformly and partisan bullshit were not something to distract us, people like this would be removed. But until that point, it'll always be a "their idiot needs to go!" while I ignore "my idiots".
 
Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'polyamorous' ex-lover addresses their affair

EXCLUSIVE: 'It saddens me to see the person she has become.' Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'tantric sex guru' ex-lover says he's proud to be 'polyamorous' and launches OnlyFans page - as he finally addresses his affair with the QAnon congresswoman
  • Craig Ivey, 42, has addressed his affair with Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene after their relationship was revealed by DailyMail.com last week
  • He described her as a 'kind spirit' that wanted to people reach their health goals
  • 'I feel like I knew her at her best and unfortunately she has drifted far from that life. I still wish her the best,' he wrote
  • Ivey, who lives in Renton, Washington, has also launched an OnlyFans account, where he invites potential subscribers to 'take a peek' at his nude photos
  • The embattled Georgia congresswoman, 46, has been married to husband Perry Greene since 1995 and shares three kids with him
  • DailyMail.com can reveal that she planned to leave Perry in July 2012 but reconciled with him two months later
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...Greenes-ex-lover-addresses-affair-online.html

(More at above url)
 
The woman is clearly a nut. If ethics were applied uniformly and partisan bullshit were not something to distract us, people like this would be removed. But until that point, it'll always be a "their idiot needs to go!" while I ignore "my idiots".

'Around here, Trump is king.' How Marjorie Taylor Greene got to Congress by running as the MAGA candidate
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...nservative-views-and-donald-trump/4411352001/

To many of her constituents, Marjorie Taylor Greene got to Congress because she embodies a variety of conservative values: Anti-tax, anti-bureaucracy, pro-religion, pro-guns, pro-Donald Trump.

Her violent rhetoric and conspiracy theories?

Those aren't as popular with Republican conservatives in Georgia – but probably aren't a deal-breaker, either.

"I know her – I think she's representing us very well," said Debbie Scoggins, 54, a co-owner of Giggity's sports bar in downtown Rome, the imperially named city at the heart of Georgia's 14th Congressional District.

Sweeping the sidewalk in front of the restaurant, Scoggins said she met Greene as the latter asked for her vote. Pointing to the wide boulevard that runs past the old brick buildings of the rehabbed downtown, Scoggins said, "She's been all up and down Broad Street, asking people what they want from her ... She's passionate; she cares about people."

To others, Greene's passion boils into something far more than that: dangerous, conspiracy-driven extremism, the kind of rhetoric that leads to things like the the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by fervent Trump supporters.

"We just elected a bomb thrower, and she is not going to back down," said John Cowan, a Rome-based neurosurgeon who lost a Republican runoff to Greene last year.

Greene's election in 2020 underscored how Trump's political movement swept some far-right candidates into public office; her tenure so far has exposed Trump-generated divisions in the Republican Party moving forward, though local GOP members said they are unsure if they can defeat Greene in next year's congressional elections.

Earlier this month, the Democratic majority in the U.S. House, along with 11 Republicans, voted to dismiss Greene from two congressional committees, bringing another hail storm of bad publicity to this rural, small-town corner of northwest Georgia.

Some Republicans in Georgia, and elsewhere, said people like Greene are killing the party – it's "a battle for sanity," Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., told NPR News. Greene, meanwhile, raised money off of the attacks on her and threatened to back primary opponents for Republicans who voted for Trump's impeachment.

"You’ve picked a fight you can’t win. We will make sure of it," Taylor tweeted at Kinzinger during the recent Senate impeachment trial that acquitted Trump of charges that he incited the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Republicans in northwest Georgia, some speaking on condition of anonymity so as not to alienate their neighbors, said too many of their colleagues are hurting the party by ignoring Greene's more extreme views: Her seeming support for violence against political opponents, her apparent QAnon belief that a secret sect runs the United States, her suggestions that school shootings were staged to inspire calls for gun control.

Marjorie Taylor Greene got to Congress because she embodies a variety of conservative values: Anti-tax, anti-bureaucracy, pro-religion, pro-guns, pro-Donald Trump.

Her violent rhetoric and conspiracy theories?

Those aren't as popular with Republican conservatives in Georgia – but probably aren't a deal-breaker, either.

"I know her – I think she's representing us very well," said Debbie Scoggins, 54, a co-owner of Giggity's sports bar in downtown Rome, the imperially named city at the heart of Georgia's 14th Congressional District.

Sweeping the sidewalk in front of the restaurant, Scoggins said she met Greene as the latter asked for her vote. Pointing to the wide boulevard that runs past the old brick buildings of the rehabbed downtown, Scoggins said, "She's been all up and down Broad Street, asking people what they want from her ... She's passionate; she cares about people."

To others, Greene's passion boils into something far more than that: dangerous, conspiracy-driven extremism, the kind of rhetoric that leads to things like the the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by fervent Trump supporters.

65c1fc74-8388-4787-b9ff-831cb4215285-AP_Trump_6.jpg

"We just elected a bomb thrower, and she is not going to back down," said John Cowan, a Rome-based neurosurgeon who lost a Republican runoff to Greene last year.

Greene's election in 2020 underscored how Trump's political movement swept some far-right candidates into public office; her tenure so far has exposed Trump-generated divisions in the Republican Party moving forward, though local GOP members said they are unsure if they can defeat Greene in next year's congressional elections.

Earlier this month, the Democratic majority in the U.S. House, along with 11 Republicans, voted to dismiss Greene from two congressional committees, bringing another hail storm of bad publicity to this rural, small-town corner of northwest Georgia.

Some Republicans in Georgia, and elsewhere, said people like Greene are killing the party – it's "a battle for sanity," Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., told NPR News. Greene, meanwhile, raised money off of the attacks on her and threatened to back primary opponents for Republicans who voted for Trump's impeachment.

"You’ve picked a fight you can’t win. We will make sure of it," Taylor tweeted at Kinzinger during the recent Senate impeachment trial that acquitted Trump of charges that he incited the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

Republicans in northwest Georgia, some speaking on condition of anonymity so as not to alienate their neighbors, said too many of their colleagues are hurting the party by ignoring Greene's more extreme views: Her seeming support for violence against political opponents, her apparent QAnon belief that a secret sect runs the United States, her suggestions that school shootings were staged to inspire calls for gun control.

Some voiced concern that Greene's lack of committee membership could cost the region some federal aid. But they added it's too early to say whether a more establishment Republican might challenge her in a party primary next year.

"I think Jan. 6 was a big, big wake-up call for the Republican Party," Cowan said. "The issue is, how are we being represented?"

'Around here, Trump is king.'
Amy Stone, 47, a Democrat and chief compliance officer who lives in Chickamauga, said Greene succeeded because she was seen as being like Trump, spreading false claims that politicians want to forge "socialism" and take away people's guns.

"I feel like she did a really great job of just stirring that fear," Stone said. "And then riding Trump coattails because, around here, Trump is king."

Local Republicans said it could take a long time to figure out how someone like Greene could win a GOP primary and get elected to Congress, even from a conservative area like northwest Georgia.

"Everyone's scratching their head trying to figure that out," said Hal Storey, 63, a local businessman who described himself as a political independent,

Some reasons are already clear, however: A successful businesswoman, Greene had money and a good organization. Her incendiary social media posts gave her name recognition. She managed to cast herself as the "Trumpiest" candidate in a Republican primary field full of Trump supporters.
Initially, Greene did not even plan to represent the 14th District. She prepared to run in another district, a less Republican area in the northern suburbs of Atlanta that had elected a Democrat in 2018. The district did so again in 2020.

In the meantime, Greene took advantage of an unexpected political development that allowed her to run in a more Republican district.

Rep. Tom Graves, R-Ga., first elected to Congress from northwest Georgia in 2010, announced in December 2019 he would not seek reelection. A businessman, Graves was a more traditional Republican who developed a reputation as a fiscal hawk.
During the 2016 Republican presidential race, Graves also criticized Trump. In a letter to constituents, he said: "Would I be comfortable if my three children acted like Trump? Certainly not.”

Nine Republicans jumped into the 2020 race for the newly open seat, but most had to create a campaign structure from scratch. Greene, moving into the 14th District from the northern Atlanta area, had a ready-made organization she had created for the other race.

"She had the car up and running, while other people were assembling the pieces," said Charles S. Bullock III, a political science professor at the University of Georgia.

Greene's aggressive style, and provocative use of social media, gave her name identification and enabled her to build support from the area's large group of Trump supporters. It all helped her accomplish step one: Finish in the top two of the primary and qualify for the runoff.

This despite a criticism of a string of Facebook videos in which Greene said Muslims should not be allowed to serve in government, and that Black people have become "slaves to the Democratic Party." Greene also ran ads showing her holding semiautomatic weapons.

In the one-on-one runoff with Cowan, Greene cast herself as a champion of Trumpism and declared her opponent as insufficiently conservative; she won with 57% of the vote.

During an online debate, Taylor hit Cowan for not having donated to Trump's campaign – "you haven't given a dime to President Trump" – while Cowan brought up Taylor's extreme views.

"I'm all of the conservative and none of the embarrassment," he said.

Greene, who spent a reported $2.2 million on the campaign, prevailed even as her views drew national attention to the congressional race featuring the "QAnon candidate."

As in most of the country, most people don't follow the details of politics, said residents of northwest Georgia. They did not think through the ramifications of some of Greene's beliefs. They did not fathom QAnon, the conspiracy theory that baselessly claims that a cabal of pedophiles and Satan worshipers are secretly running the government.

Cowan noted that the primary was June 9 and the runoff was Aug. 11. Details about Greene's background emerged gradually, he said, and people did not have enough time to absorb and fully understand the implications of some of Greene's views.

"I don't think there was enough time and money to adjudicate it properly," Cowan said.

In Georgia's 14th Congressional District, winning the Republican nomination is tantamount to winning the seat. Greene's Democratic opponent in the general election – Kevin Van Ausdal, 35, a political newcomer who had pledged to "bring civility back to Washington” – withdrew from the race just more than a month before Election Day.

Some Greene supporters said the Democrats were just stirring up trouble for the Republicans, and still are.

"They need to get some of these old ones that's in there out that have gone wacko," said Raleen Carr, 64, a Greene backer who works at a coffee shop in downtown Ringgold.

Carr cited Greene's youth and opposition to abortion – "not killing babies," she said – as reasons for Green's support in Georgia and her opposition in Washington. Carr said "they are trying to get her out because of her morals and her values."

A very Republican district
From the three rivers that originally made Rome a trade center, to the carpet industry that made Dalton a brand name, the 14th Congressional District was drawn to loop in Republican and conservative areas.

The electorate here is a distillation of the conservative evolution of the Republican Party, especially in the once solid-Democratic South. It's a tradition that runs from Barry Goldwater to Ronald Reagan to Georgia's own Newt Gingrich, and now includes the Trump movement.

In getting to Congress, Greene campaigned on the Trumpian view that the nation is in decline, threatened by "socialism" and other countries that take advantage of the United States.

The approach "appeals to people who see the world changing around them," said Bullock, the professor. "They's uncomfortable. They don't know what to do about it."

There are other factors behind Greene's popularity, some residents said. Some supporters are simply resentful of Black or Hispanic people and never happy about civil rights laws that stretch back to the 1960s, some residents said,speaking on condition of anonymity.

Others simply hate Democrats and are thrilled to see Greene's slashing attacks on them. "I think people in northwest Georgia have applauded that," Cowan said.

The area has historically chafed at the federal government.

There are Civil War references all over Rome, from a marker along a river noting the site of the Noble Brothers Foundry, which once made locomotives and cannons for the Confederate Army, to cannons themselves sitting atop Jackson Hill. Officials recently removed a statue of Confederate Gen. William Bedford Forrest, who after the war became the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

The city also honors all sorts of history, including a statue of its most historic resident: Ellen Axson Wilson, first lady of the United States during Woodrow Wilson's presidency; she died during his first term.

Taylor might not even be the most conservative member to ever represent the area.

Rep. Larry McDonald, elected in 1974 in a district that included parts of northwest Georgia, campaigned against what he saw as a communist conspiracy to destroy the United States. In office, he voted against the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, falsely claiming in a statement that the civil rights leader had been "manipulated by communists and secret communist agents."

McDonald was also a Democrat, a throwback to the party's "Solid South" at a time when Republicans were poorly organized in the state. He died in the one of the most infamous incidents of the Cold War, a passenger aboard the Korean airlines plane accidentally shot down by the Russians in 1983.

'We don't think what's going on now is working'
Some northwest Georgia Republicans offered a different view of the political world. They said too many politicians are out for themselves and indifferent to the loss of manufacturing jobs and the decline of religious morality.

In downtown Dalton, where the whistles of passing freight trains are often heard, Greene supporter Susan Meals said "we don't think what's going on now is working – sometimes you just need a change."

Meals, a nurse, did not agree with some of Greene's views: "There are a lot of people out there on both sides who have conspiracy theories I don't agree with. Does that make them bad people? No."

Greene would probably not be "my best friend," said Meals, 58. "But I didn't vote for her to be my best friend."

Down the road in Ringgold, some houses fly the Confederate battle flag, or the recently discarded Georgia state flag that includes the Stars and Bars. Another familiar sight through the district: the spires of churches, four of which line Nashville Street in downtown Ringgold.

Preston Brown, 49, a Republican who works in the area's fairly large tourism industry, said he didn't think it was right that Democrats made the decision to remove Greene from her congressional committees.

"That," he said, "seems like an overreach of authority.”

'It's pretty crazy.'
Residents said most people in Georgia's 14th Congressional District really aren't into politics, especially the way it's practiced now. Some residents don't even know who Greene is.

Others refused to talk about her. And others said they would discuss the congresswoman only on the condition that they not be named, fearful of blowback from friends and customers who ardently support Trump and Greene.

One business owner who asked his name not be used said people said "we're going to shut you down" if he came out against Trump. "It's pretty crazy," he said.

Greene does not represent the area in total, some residents said, particularly the African American population and a growing number of Latinos. The district is more than 80% white, according to Census figures.

Alexandros Cornejo, 41, an immigration attorney who said he doesn't belong to either political party, said Greene is certainly not representing clients who work hard for a living. "At this point, she's become a nuisance and a distraction – she needs to go."

Whether that happens in next year's election remains to be seen.

For one thing, Greene figures to be well-funded. Greene said on Jan. 29 she had raised more than $1.6 million off of negative media coverage of her. On Feb. 3, the day before the House voted to kick her off committees, Greene tweeted she had raised $175,000 in a single day, and told followers that "they are attacking me because I’m one of you."

Storey, the businessman who grew up in Rome, said people will be "scratching their head" for years over how Greene made it to Congress. He simply doesn't believe that most residents agree with the "divisiveness" and "meanness" displayed by Greene's campaign.

"That doesn't represent the community I grew up in," he said.
 
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