Results 1 to 10 of 10

Thread: 2 YRS in & a source, POLITICO, enumerates 25 PLOTLINES in the TRUMP story

  1. #1 | Top
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    14,413
    Thanks
    308
    Thanked 7,511 Times in 4,834 Posts
    Groans
    17
    Groaned 1,798 Times in 1,605 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default 2 YRS in & a source, POLITICO, enumerates 25 PLOTLINES in the TRUMP story

    How many times have we talked about each angle, each story line, some connected, some seemingly not, within the story. I've never seen a NUMBER ascribed to it! I never counted them. I just knew there were a bunch. This is POLITICO. (NOT RAW STORY). They've assigned a #. This was published this AM before the report release.

    (You may wanna store or print this one out! "A roadmap for amateurs" into the TRUMP CORRUPTION/COLLUSION cases).

    PS THE MSM GOT THESE STORIES, ONE BY ONE, DAY AFTER DAY. THEY DID THEIR JOBS. Well!!

    I'm splitting this into 2 so as NOT to edit it, as it is over 25,000 characters the limit here... 2 RED HIGHLIGHTS are mine


    25
    subplots to watch in the Mueller Investigation


    (Politico photo illustration / Getty Images)


    By DARREN SAMUELSOHN, JOSH GERSTEIN, CORY BENNETT and KYLE CHENEY |
    03/23/2019 2:58 PM EST| Updated 04/17/2019 10:33 AM EST


    The world will finally see much of Robert Mueller’s long-awaited report on Thursday morning. The document — stretching nearly 400 pages — will lay out, with some redactions, the special counsel’s findings after nearly two years of investigations.

    Some passages will likely rehash and round up information that’s already in the public domain. Mueller has indicted 34 people and companies, and filed thousands of pages in legal briefs that all exposed slivers of his probe. But the report is also expected delve into the crevices of the investigation, detailing findings that the public — and even President Donald Trump himself — have never seen.

    With just hours to go before the report is released, we’ve compiled a handy compendium to get you up to speed on the intertwined storylines, subplots and characters that could show up in the report.


    ACT I: FIVE SUBPLOTS

    Trump at the center of it all

    As most things do, it starts and ends with the president
    1
    Trump fires James Comey

    Special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigators have focused on whether President Donald Trump obstructed justice by firing FBI Director James Comey. Trump gave differing reasons to justify his decision, including saying in an NBC interview that the firing happened because of “this Russia thing.” The president’s lawyers have countered that as chief law enforcement officer, Trump has the power to fire anyone, for any reason. Additionally, they say he can also shut down any investigation he wants, an argument meant to head off numerous reports that Trump privately pushed to have Mueller fired. In a letter summarizing Mueller’s top-line findings, Attorney General Bill Barr said the special counsel’s report lays out evidence “on both sides of the question” as to whether Trump obstructed the Russia probe and notes that while the document “does not conclude the president committed a crime, it does not exonerate him.” Separately, Barr said he would not bring obstruction charges against the president after reading the report.


    Trump leans on his own DOJ

    The president’s attacks on his own Justice Department have long defied norms, and they’ve put the government investigators in an awkward spot where their only real recourse is to ignore the commander in chief. That’s hardly easy when one considers Trump repeatedly griped about Sessions, berating him in the Oval Office after Mueller’s appointment and later telling Hill.TV, “I don’t have an attorney general.”

    Others at DOJ haven’t been spared either, with the president turning the firehose on everyone from the FBI agents and DOJ prosecutors assigned to the special counsel’s team to Mueller himself.

    These verbal strikes — and Mueller’s interpretation of them — could easily show up in the report’s section on obstruction.

    Trump tweets his anger

    The president isn’t known to use email. He eschews more than one-page briefing materials. But he sure loves Twitter. And Trump’s incessant social media feed — logged forevermore as official presidential records — have represented something else for Mueller and his investigators: evidence that can be used to establish intent.

    “They’re a gold mine,” a former DOJ prosecutor told POLITICO just weeks after the special counsel’s appointment. While not all of the nearly 7,000 posts since Trump’s inauguration are about the special counsel probe, many of them are, including a March 2017 suggestion that Flynn “should ask for immunity” and his December 2018 post calling cooperating witness Michael Cohen, the president’s former personal lawyer and fixer, a “Rat.”

    Mueller has examined these heated missives to determine whether they constitute obstruction or perhaps even witness intimidation. The report could reveal his thinking on the matter.

    Trump makes hush-money payments

    Mueller’s investigators were interested in Michael Cohen early on in their probe, requesting a search warrant on him in July 2017.

    The following spring, the FBI raided Cohen’s office, home, safety deposit box and a hotel room, collecting evidence eventually used to charge the president’s personal lawyer for his role in a hush-money payment scheme to keep two women silent about alleged extramarital affairs with Trump. According to court documents, Trump directed Cohen to make these payments, essentially making the president an unindicted co-conspirator in the crime.

    Cohen ultimately pleaded guilty and has been cooperating against Trump both with Mueller and with investigators in the Southern District of New York. Whether any of what he’s privately shared comes out in the special counsel’s report remains to be seen.

    Trump’s lawyer talks

    Trump’s first White House counsel, Don McGahn, met repeatedly with Mueller’s investigators for interviews to discuss how the White House — and the president — handled several key moments central to the Russia probe.

    McGahn and his entire staff had to recuse themselves from working on the Russia probe — but not before having a role in the firings of national security adviser Michael Flynn and James Comey. Trump also tried to get McGahn to convince Attorney General Jeff Sessions to undo his recusal from overseeing the Russia investigation. McGahn threatened to quit after Trump tried to get him to fire Mueller in June 2017.

    The report could potentially contain more insight into McGahn’s interviews with Mueller’s team about these events.


    ACT II: FOUR SUBPLOTS

    The Democrats get hacked

    The crime that started it all.
    6.
    Russian hackers hit the DNC and Clinton campaign

    Much of the story of how private emails were taken from the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign has already been told. In a detailed indictment last July, Mueller’s team explained how Russian military agents digitally infiltrated, surveilled and extracted data from Democratic organizations.

    Another indictment laid out an astonishing Russian influence campaign that dispatched online trolls to manipulate America’s homegrown social media platforms to exacerbate the country’s racial, religious and political divides. Several Russians even traveled in person to the U.S. to gather intelligence and organize political rallies U.S. intelligence agencies have also put their own stamp on Russia’s digital disinformation efforts, accusing Russian President Vladimir Putin himself of ordering the effort, which eventually morphed into an attempt to get Trump elected.

    Julian Assange releases Democrats’ private emails

    WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange orchestrated several online dumps of the stolen Democratic emails during the 2016 campaign. The releases created endless distractions for the Clinton campaign and provided Trump with regular rally fodder.U.S. intelligence agencies have blamed Russian agents for stealing those emails and laundering them through WikiLeaks, although officials have not explained how Russia got its purloined cache to the activist organization. Assange has repeatedly denied that the Kremlin was his source.

    After much speculation, Assange was arrested last week at the Ecuadorian embassy in London. The move was made in response to a U.S. extradition request. But the charges Assange is wanted for are unrelated to the 2016 election. Instead, the Justice Department indicted the WikiLeaks founder with aiding Chelsea Manning’s hacking of classified material on U.S. government computers in 2010.

    Roger Stone tries to talk to WikiLeaks

    Roger Stone, a veteran GOP lobbyist who embraces his reputation as a practitioner of the political dark arts, spent years encouraging Trump to run for president. When the reality TV star finally did make a White House bid, Stone was a pugilistic supporter — briefly with the campaign and then as an outside booster.

    As part of those efforts, Stone made several attempts to get in touch with WikiLeaks to learn about its strategy for releasing information on Clinton. Stone claims that those efforts amounted to no more than passing information through an intermediary.

    But in a February court filing, Mueller’s team included a tantalizing nugget suggesting federal prosecutors might have obtained "Stone's communications" with WikiLeaks, raising the possibility that Mueller knows about more direct communications than Stone has acknowledged. The report may shed more light on the situation.


    Cambridge Analytica enters the picture

    There are also outstanding questions about the relationship between the Trump campaign and Cambridge Analytica, a data analytics firm that helped the Trump campaign target voters using information it harvested from millions of Facebook users.

    Mueller’s team has been gathering information from the firm amid accusations that the company’s data was accessed from Russia, as well as reports about Cambridge Analytica’s possible business ties to Russian firms
    __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________________________
    ACT III: FOUR SUBPLOTS

    How the Russia probe started

    Not just the Steele Dossier
    10.
    George Papadopoulos hears about Russian dirt

    George Papadopoulos, originally a campaign aide to Ben Carson who was a late appointee to Trump’s foreign policy advisory team, is arguably the reason the FBI launched its investigation into the Trump campaign’s contacts with Russia.

    Papadopoulos purportedly learned early on that the Russians had obtained damaging emails on Hillary Clinton from a conversation in London with Joseph Mifsud, a mysterious professor the FBI says was connected with the Russian government. Papadopoulos pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about his interactions with Mifsud and later served two weeks in prison. But since his guilty plea, Papadopoulos has been making the rounds claiming he was the victim of a “deep state” setup.

    Trump’s supporters will be looking to see if the report gives any credence to Papadopoulos’ claims.


    The Steele Dossier is created

    The so-called Steele Dossier is a collection of raw intelligence memos compiled by former British spy Christopher Steele that describes a years-long Russian plot to cultivate and compromise Trump and propel him to the White House.

    Steele himself also delivered some of his findings to the FBI around the same time the bureau was picking up indications the Russians had hacked the Democratic Party and that another Trump aide, Papadopoulos, had been told the Russians had dirt on Hillary Clinton.

    But revelation’s that the Clinton campaign indirectly bankrolled Steele’s work fueled Republican claims that the dossier and its explosive allegations were exaggerated, inaccurate or downright fictional. Yet its central allegations have never been clearly proven or disproven. Mueller’s report may for the first time lay out whether the FBI verified any explosive elements of the dossier.


    Russia tries to recruit Carter Page

    The Trump foreign policy adviser traveled to Moscow in July 2016 for a speech and meetings with Kremlin officials. Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski’s blessed the trip on the condition Page not say he was representing the campaign.

    The FBI in a wiretap application said it believed Page had “been the subject of targeted recruitment by the Russian government...to undermine and influence the outcome of the 2016 U.S. presidential election in violation of U.S. criminal law.” Page has acknowledged working as an informal adviser to the Russian government but denies being a spy.

    The Steele Dossier also formed part of the FBI’s justification for the wiretap warrant on Page.


    The Agalarovs play organizer

    Trump’s ties to Russia also included a warm relationship with Aras Agalarov, a Kremlin-aligned Russian billionaire who helped Trump bring Miss Universe to Moscow in 2013.

    It was Agalarov’s son, pop musician Emin, who reached out to Donald Trump Jr. to facilitate the mysterious Trump Tower meeting in June 2016 between Trump Jr., Jared Kushner, Paul Manafort and a Russian lawyer promising “dirt” on Hillary Clinton.


    ACT IV: EIGHT SUBPLOTS

    Trump’s team talks to Russians

    Despite initial denials, they definitely chatted.
    1.
    The Trump campaign meets with Russians offering “dirt”

    Fewer events exemplify the mystery of the Trump-Russia saga than the Trump Tower meeting in June 2016 involving several top Trump campaign officials and Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya.

    The meeting was organized on the premise that the Russian government had “dirt” on Hillary Clinton that it wanted to offer to the Trump campaign. Hearing about the offer, Donald Trump Jr. enthusiastically responded, “I love it.” Jared Kushner and Paul Manafort, the Trump campaign’s chairman at the time, also attended.

    Questions remain about what, if anything, Trump knew about the meeting, and what, exactly, was said during the gathering.


    Michael Flynn talks to the Russian ambassador

    The former Trump national security adviser admitted to lying about conversations he had during the presidential transition with Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. In those chats, Flynn discussed just-imposed Obama administration sanctions with the Kremlin official, causing Moscow to “moderate” its response, according to prosecutors.

    It appears that at least two transition team members, Jared Kushner and K.T. McFarland, knew about or gave input on the calls. Since pleading guilty, Flynn has also participated in 19 interviews with the special counsel and other DOJ investigators, another trove of information that the Mueller report might detail.


    Jared Kushner has lots of Russian contacts


    The senior White House adviser and Trump son-in-law has been under scrutiny since the start of Mueller’s probe on multiple fronts. During the 2016 campaign, he handled everything from financing to scheduling, speechwriting and polling, giving him insight into the campaign’s innerworkings. But perhaps most notably for Mueller, Kushner served as a point of contact with foreign government officials throughout the 2016 run.

    After the election, Kushner was forced to make repeated updates to his security clearance forms to reflect undisclosed interactions with foreign officials, including the 2016 meeting at Trump Tower with a Russian attorney promising dirt on Hillary Clinton. Kushner also reportedly talked to the Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak during the presidential transition about arranging a secret line of communication with the Kremlin, using secure lines at Russian diplomatic offices to avoid intelligence monitoring.

    Kushner also urged Michael Flynn to contact the Russian ambassador in December 2016 ahead of a pending U.N. vote related to Israeli settlements — one of the conversations Flynn later admitted to lying about to the FBI about.

    But insight into these conversations remains limited, putting the onus on the Mueller report to flesh out additional details.


    Paul Manafort shares data with a Russian-linked associate


    The former Trump campaign chairman is currently serving 7.5 years in prison for a series of lobbying, financial fraud and witness tampering crimes, the longest sentence by far for anyone ensnared in the Mueller probe.

    As his case proceeded, Manafort’s lawyers inadvertently disclosed that their client had shared political polling data with a longtime business associate who has ties to Russian intelligence — an interaction that Mueller’s prosecutors said goes “very much to the heart” of their mandate to probe Russian influence on the 2016 campaign.

    Manafort met 12 times with special counsel prosecutors and the FBI and made two grand jury appearances after pleading guilty. A federal judge later ruled, however, that Manafort intentionally lied during some of those sessions. Prosecutors also said that Manafort offered little of value during his cooperation period.

    Jeff Sessions has undisclosed meetings with Russian ambassador

    Trump’s first attorney general recused himself from the Russia probe in March 2017 because of the prominent role he played in Trump’s presidential campaign. He also stepped back from the case after it was revealed that he had failed to mention several meetings he held with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak during the 2016, while he was serving as a prominent Trump campaign surrogate.

    Sessions decision opened himself up to withering criticism from Trump, attacks that have been part of Mueller’s look into whether the president obstructed justice. The former attorney general was pushed out the day after the 2018 midterm elections.


    The RNC platform is mysteriously changed

    Another long-standing mystery from 2016 centers around the Republican convention in Cleveland and an internal party fight over whether to make the GOP platform more friendly to Russia. Trump’s campaign pushed to remove proposed language that had called for arming Ukraine, one in a series of policy moves that were seen as attempts to develop closer ties with the Kremlin.
    Questions remain about whether a Trump representative pushed for the language change at the behest of Kremlin officials — a charge Trump’s team has denied.


    The Russians talk to the NRA

    Mueller and FBI investigators have questioned Trump campaign aides about the president’s relationship with the National Rifle Association and reportedly explored whether Russians with ties to the Kremlin used the gun-rights group to illegally donate money to Trump’s 2016 campaign.

    Federal prosecutors in December 2018 secured a guilty plea and cooperation from Maria Butina, a Russian gun-rights proponent who cultivated close ties to the NRA and conservatives, on charges she acted as a Kremlin agent. The DOJ in February also charged Butina’s boyfriend, Paul Erickson, with financial fraud. During the 2016 campaign, Erickson, an NRA member and conservative, emailed a senior Trump campaign official about establishing “a good relationship” between Trump and Putin. He also passed along an offer for Trump to visit the Kremlin before the election.

    Duelling pro-Russian Ukrainian peace plans

    During the election, foreigners were trying to get at least two “peace plans” before Trump’s team in the hopes of ending the conflict between Moscow and Ukraine over the Kremlin’s 2014 annexation of Crimea. But the plans both appeared to favor Russia and were funnelled through Trump associates now caught up in Mueller’s investigation.

    The first plan brought together Michael Cohen, Trump’s personal attorney, Felix Sater, a Trump business associate involved in the Trump Tower Moscow project, and Andrii Artemenko, a Ukrainian politician and member of a pro-Russian political party. According to The New York Times, the plan involved leasing Crimea to Russia for 50 years in exchange for ending the ongoing war in Ukraine’s Donbass region. The pact also called for the Trump administration drop sanctions against Russia imposed by the Obama White House.

    After Sater introduced Artemenko to Cohen, the offer made it all the way to Flynn’s desk during his brief tenure as national security adviser, the Times reported. Cohen has denied that account, saying he threw the document away instead of giving it to Flynn. Artemenko was ejected from his party when his back-channel scheming was revealed, and later investigated for treason. Mueller subpoenaed him and he appeared before a grand jury last May.

    The second plan was apparently a plot hatched between Paul Manafort, the now-imprisoned former Trump campaign manager, and Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian-Ukrainian national that Mueller’s team said has ties to Russian intelligence.

    The contours of that deal are less clear, but according to court filings, Manafort “‘conceded’ that he discussed or may have discussed a Ukraine peace plan with Mr. Kilimnik on more than one occasion.” Mueller accused Manafort of initially lying to authorities about these talks, which may have occurred both during and after the election.


    ACT V: FOUR SUBPLOTS
    Influence buying

    The Emiratis and Saudis are also under scrutiny.
    22.
    Trump’s inauguration committee

    Federal prosecutors in New York are investigating Trump’s inaugural committee, focusing on whether foreigners sought to gain influence with the new administration by donating to the group and by attending inaugural events. Tom Barrack, a billionaire financier and longtime Trump friend with close ties to the royal families in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, chaired the committee.

    Last August, lobbyist Sam Patten pleaded guilty to failing to register as a foreign agent and admitted that he paid $50,000 to get a Ukrainian oligarch inaugural tickets. Last week, he was sentenced to three years’ probation for the offense.

    Several other foreigners also appear to have used shell companies to donate to the Trump inauguration, which raised a record $107 million.

    ---end of part 1---

    WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
    WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
    WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
    WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
    WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
    WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
    WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
    WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same

  2. #2 | Top
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    14,413
    Thanks
    308
    Thanked 7,511 Times in 4,834 Posts
    Groans
    17
    Groaned 1,798 Times in 1,605 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default

    ----part 2---

    A Trump donor meets a well-connected Russian banker

    Erik Prince, a Trump donor and campaign supporter, as well as the brother of future Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, met in January 2017 with Russian banker Kirill Dmitriev in the Seychelles, a tiny country in the Indian Ocean. Prince testified to a House panel that the visit was impromptu, lasted only about 20 minutes in a beachside hotel bar and centered around business opportunities.

    But multiple media outlets have reported that Mueller has evidence the meeting was pre-planned via Lebanese-American fixer George Nader — who cooperated with the special counsel and testified in early 2018 to a grand jury — and came at the behest of United Arab Emirates Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan.

    A trial over ties to Turkey

    Another spinoff from Mueller’s investigation is the case against Bijan Rafiekian, or simply “Kian,” who’s facing trial on charges of acting as an unregistered foreign agent for Turkey and conspiracy. Rafiekian was Flynn’s partner at the former military general’s consulting firm.
    Prosecutors say the pair’s lobbying effort was aimed at persuading the U.S. to hand over a Turkish cleric, Fethullah Gulen, who has lived in Pennsylvania for decades under a claim of asylum. Turkish authorities have accused Gulen of leading a cult that attempted a coup against the Turkish government in 2016.

    Flynn is expected to be the star witness at Kian’s trial, which is set to open July 15.


    Deutsche Bank brings together Germany and Russia

    The German investment bank became Donald Trump’s primary lender in recent years after most of Wall Street had turned its back on the real estate mogul after six bankruptcies. Since 2012, the bank has lent the future president more than $300 million.

    While New York and congressional investigators have expressed interest in whether Trump inflated his net worth to the bank while seeking loans, Mueller watchers have latched on to the bank’s possible role in a Russian money laundering plot. The New York Times also raised eyebrows with a report that Trump had ordered advisers to shut down Mueller’s probe after hearing the news — later apparently shown to be inaccurate — that Mueller had subpoenaed Deutsche Bank for his business records.

    If Mueller doesn’t detail any findings about Trump’s interactions with Deutsche Bank, Democrats are poised to conduct their own investigation.

    https://www.politico.com/interactive...ubplots/?plots
    WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
    WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
    WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
    WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
    WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
    WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
    WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
    WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same

  3. #3 | Top
    Join Date
    May 2018
    Posts
    47,509
    Thanks
    17,005
    Thanked 13,151 Times in 10,077 Posts
    Groans
    452
    Groaned 2,450 Times in 2,265 Posts
    Blog Entries
    2

    Default

    Too long for me to read, but ... I guess we know what the next two years are going to be like for Trump.

    (Jesus, I'm getting a headache just thinking about Truth Detector drooling all over himself, calling everybody a 'Moron', and posting his Album of Pictures over and over)

  4. #4 | Top
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    14,413
    Thanks
    308
    Thanked 7,511 Times in 4,834 Posts
    Groans
    17
    Groaned 1,798 Times in 1,605 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Jack View Post
    Too long for me to read, but ... I guess we know what the next two years are going to be like for Trump.

    (Jesus, I'm getting a headache just thinking about Truth Detector drooling all over himself, calling everybody a 'Moron', and posting his Album of Pictures over and over)
    I've printed it out before it goes away. I'm serious, I thought how many times, how many PARTS are there to this crazy ass bunch of people! I didn't know the #, certainly not a round 25.

    I'll read the report over the next ____days but then we'll have to read it again after the SLICED and DICED parts are available.
    Last edited by Centerleftfl; 04-18-2019 at 01:29 PM.
    WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
    WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
    WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
    WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
    WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
    WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
    WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
    WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same

  5. The Following User Says Thank You to Centerleftfl For This Post:

    Jack (04-18-2019)

  6. #5 | Top
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
    Posts
    12,526
    Thanks
    2
    Thanked 8,341 Times in 5,714 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 374 Times in 355 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Jack View Post
    Too long for me to read, but ... I guess we know what the next SIX years are going to be like for Trump.
    yes we do, and no one to blame but yourselves

    wake up
    This just In::: Trump indicted for living in liberals heads and not paying RENT

    C̶N̶N̶ SNN.... Shithole News Network

    Trump Is Coming back to a White House Near you

  7. The Following User Says Thank You to Getin the ring For This Post:

    Stretch (04-18-2019)

  8. #6 | Top
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    land-locked in Ocala,FL
    Posts
    27,321
    Thanks
    30,862
    Thanked 16,758 Times in 11,557 Posts
    Groans
    1,063
    Groaned 889 Times in 847 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Getin the ring View Post
    yes we do, and no one to blame but yourselves

    wake up
    Yup. FISA apps and 302's are on the way to being released.
    Abortion rights dogma can obscure human reason & harden the human heart so much that the same person who feels
    empathy for animal suffering can lack compassion for unborn children who experience lethal violence and excruciating
    pain in abortion.

    Unborn animals are protected in their nesting places, humans are not. To abort something is to end something
    which has begun. To abort life is to end it.



  9. #7 | Top
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    14,413
    Thanks
    308
    Thanked 7,511 Times in 4,834 Posts
    Groans
    17
    Groaned 1,798 Times in 1,605 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch View Post
    Yup. FISA apps and 302's are on the way to being released.
    Yepper 4 JUDGES who signed off on COINTEL who got the FISA requests wrong. Must all be OBAMA or CLINTON appointees. You believe that right folks?

    Agents and senior F.B.I. officials had grown suspicious of Mr. Trump’s ties to Russia during the 2016 campaign but held off on opening an investigation into him, the people said, in part because they were uncertain how to proceed with an inquiry of such sensitivity and magnitude.
    WK1 3/28-/4 _Cases 301k--Dead 18.1k Lethality 2.72%
    WK2 4/5-/13 _Cases 555k--Dead 22.1K Lethality 3.9%
    WK3 4/20-/21 Cases 774k -Dead 37.2K Lethality 4.8%
    WK4 4/22-/29 Cases 1M --Dead 58.8K Lethality 5.9%
    WK5 5/1-/8__ Cases 1.3M -Dead 75.7K Lethality 6.1%
    WK6 5/9-16__Cases 1.4M --Dead 85.8K Lethality 6.1%
    WK7 5/17-24_Cases 1.7M - Dead 97.6K Lethality 5.9%
    WK8 5/28 Cases 1.7M - DEAD 101.2K - Same

  10. #8 | Top
    Join Date
    Oct 2016
    Location
    land-locked in Ocala,FL
    Posts
    27,321
    Thanks
    30,862
    Thanked 16,758 Times in 11,557 Posts
    Groans
    1,063
    Groaned 889 Times in 847 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Centerleftfl View Post
    Yepper 4 JUDGES who signed off on COINTEL who got the FISA requests wrong. Must all be OBAMA or CLINTON appointees. You believe that right folks?

    Agents and senior F.B.I. officials had grown suspicious of Mr. Trump’s ties to Russia during the 2016 campaign but held off on opening an investigation into him, the people said, in part because they were uncertain how to proceed with an inquiry of such sensitivity and magnitude.
    We already know that Comey presented and signed off on the 1st one. Stick around for Horowitz report in May. The FISA apps will be released then.
    Abortion rights dogma can obscure human reason & harden the human heart so much that the same person who feels
    empathy for animal suffering can lack compassion for unborn children who experience lethal violence and excruciating
    pain in abortion.

    Unborn animals are protected in their nesting places, humans are not. To abort something is to end something
    which has begun. To abort life is to end it.



  11. #9 | Top
    Join Date
    May 2018
    Posts
    47,509
    Thanks
    17,005
    Thanked 13,151 Times in 10,077 Posts
    Groans
    452
    Groaned 2,450 Times in 2,265 Posts
    Blog Entries
    2

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Getin the ring View Post
    yes we do, and no one to blame but yourselves

    wake up
    What's it like being a Partisan Hack?

  12. #10 | Top
    Join Date
    Feb 2018
    Posts
    14,413
    Thanks
    308
    Thanked 7,511 Times in 4,834 Posts
    Groans
    17
    Groaned 1,798 Times in 1,605 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Jack View Post
    What's it like being a Partisan Hack?
    A partisan hack to a POS (SCUM).

  13. The Following User Says Thank You to Centerleftfl For This Post:

    Jack (04-18-2019)

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 9
    Last Post: 04-09-2019, 06:37 PM
  2. Lanny Davis Says He Was A Source For CNN’s Trump Tower Story
    By volsrock in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 13
    Last Post: 08-28-2018, 11:58 AM
  3. Replies: 3
    Last Post: 08-14-2018, 10:08 AM
  4. Donald Trump might be more popular than you think (Politico)
    By BRUTALITOPS in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 56
    Last Post: 02-05-2017, 10:24 AM
  5. DNC pre-screens Politico Articles Before Publishing
    By Face, Your in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 07-26-2016, 03:11 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Rules

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •