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Sensitive Young Artist Named Hunter Discovers His Paintings Were Always About Access To His Father

A sensitive young artist named Hunter has finally discovered that his favorable art career was the unfortunate result of a shadowy Democratic donor seeking access to his father, Joe Biden.

Tragic but true. Hunter was a prolific painter of his works. I got a handsome total When former President Joe Biden was at the peak of his power. Now he is once again a hungry artist, baring his soul and rubbing himself in a harsh, commercial world hostile to art and his amazing creations.

Hunter's Lawyer Disclosed in a recent court filing He “has lost a lot in revenue” and earned “a substantial debt in the millions of dollars.” To save his former eldest son the extra money, they asked a California judge to dismiss a 2023 lawsuit against former White House aide Garrett Ziegler, who allegedly hacked and tampered with the contents of his laptop. (Subscribe to Mr. Right, a weekly newsletter on modern masculinity)

“Given the positive feedback and reviews of my artwork and memoirs, I was hoping to get paid talk engagement and paid appearances, but that didn't happen,” Hunter said in the submission. “I knew my financial situation had deteriorated significantly over time, but it wasn't in the past month that I realized that I had to take dramatic actions to alleviate this situation.”

Hunter also revealed that during his father's presidency he sold 27 pieces of art for about $55,000 per pop. However, since December 2023, Hunter was able to sell one painting for $36,000. His memoirs have also been cratered. (Related: Democrat donors purchased the “majority” of Hunter Biden's art, Comer says.

A tough scene for the eldest son. He gets a big pardon from his pop, but the Hunter passes it in front of the painting. I don't want to know what it does to the artist's ego. Place gently and shatter.

Hopefully, the hunters will bounce off the artistic limbo and produce new batches of new finger paintings that can be sold at the Farmers Market in Malibu or Essie. At a reasonable price, I would buy it. They don't get close to the asking price for oval office access – I'm thinking about $100 per canvas, but that's something. Making art has always been a struggle, and Hunter is now joining millions of other hungry painters whose father, let alone the United States, who have never become president.

I hope Hunter is the best as he embarks on this new chapter.

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