1. #21801
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    Quote Originally Posted by CSFFan View Post
    At what point does the Republican party step up?
    The republican party no longer exists, it has being replaced with the Anti-democrat party, much like that the Democratic party don't really exit also, but with the new crop in the house and Senate there seems to be an effort to revive it, nothing like that seems to be happening in the Anti-democrat party.
    What we have now is simple the right and left wing of the Business party.
    The sooner you fall behind, the more time you have to catch up.

  2. #21802
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    What happened to the ignorant MAGA clan. Suspect they are starting to see the reality.

  3. #21803
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    Quote Originally Posted by JPPR2 View Post
    What happened to the ignorant MAGA clan. Suspect they are starting to see the reality.


    Doubt it they just ran back to their safe space. Which is wiping billionaires asses and fucking themselves in the face.

  4. #21804
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    President Donald Trump-trumps-usa-png

    Donald Trump says he has not read 'total waste of time' Mueller report

    President Donald Trump-10851500-3x2-700x467-png

    US President Donald Trump says he has not read Robert Mueller's report investigating contacts between his 2016 campaign and Russia that his Democratic opponents say should be released in full.

    Key points:

    • US Attorney-General William Barr plans to make a redacted copy of the report public later this month
    • Congressional Democrats have indicated they will fight those redactions in court
    • Mr Barr concluded there was not enough evidence to show Mr Trump committed the crime of obstruction


    "I have not read the Mueller Report yet, even though I have every right to do so," Mr Trump wrote on Twitter. "Only know the conclusions, and on the big one, No Collusion."

    Here


    ... but we all know #45 reads little

    .
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails President Donald Trump-trumps-usa-png   President Donald Trump-10851500-3x2-700x467-png  
    Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago ...


  5. #21805
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    Speaking of the orange idiot not being able to read...
    "“I have to tell you, Judge Flores, whoever you may be, that decision is a disaster for our country,” Trump said during a meeting with border patrol officials."
    He's talking about the Flores Settlement, which is named after the kid: "The agreement was named not after a judge, but 15-year-old Jenny Lisette Flores, who fled El Salvador in the 1980s and was detained upon trying to enter the U.S. to live with her aunt. The teen was the lead plaintiff in the case, ".

    Further...he's talking about a settlement that entitles detained children "which protects migrant children from being held indefinitely in custody and grants them certain basic rights, like the right to food, medical assistance, drinking water, and toilets while in detention. "
    You cvnt, Trump. You think it a disaster that migrant kids get food and a toilet. What an absolute cvnt.

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    I don't think he's being a kunt in this instance, just a complete idiot. It's obvious he has no idea what he's talking about.
    The fact that he has no idea what the Flores settlement is, is no impediment to him expounding on it. As with most things.
    “If we stop testing right now we’d have very few cases, if any.” Donald J Trump.

  7. #21807
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cujo View Post
    I don't think he's being a kunt in this instance, just a complete idiot. It's obvious he has no idea what he's talking about.
    The fact that he has no idea what the Flores settlement is, is no impediment to him expounding on it. As with most things.
    Of course he's being a kvnt. He knows what Flores is about, his administration has been trying to modify it to have longer detention periods. He's a kvnt, and an ignorant, illiterate one to boot.
    It's a given that he doesn't know the oranges of Flores, though.

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    Trump Fires Kirstjen Nielsen…



    President Trump just announced DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen is ‘leaving her position.’ Trump did not say she was resigning, as initial reports stated, implying he may have fired Nielsen.



    “…Nielsen’s expected departure is a part of a massive DHS overhaul engineered and directed by top Trump adviser Stephen Miller, according to a senior U.S. official. It’s unclear whether Nielsen is deciding to resign voluntarily, or whether she has been pressured to resign. Nielsen has served as DHS secretary since December 2017, and questions about how much longer she might last have swirled for months, as the president continues to articulate his frustrations about illegal immigration…”

    https://www.citizenfreepress.com/bre...acement-named/

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    Quote Originally Posted by Klondyke View Post
    President Trump just announced DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen is ‘leaving her position.’
    It is not a surprise to anyone that someone wants out of his cabinet at this point is it? Nobody other then the dregs want to work for this president.

  10. #21810
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    ^ not disagreeing with you, but she's a pretty horrible person.

  11. #21811
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    Quote Originally Posted by Klondyke View Post
    Trump Fires...
    Otherwise it's been quite a bore...

  12. #21812
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    Ex-ICE head: Trump had 'single dumbest idea I've ever heard

    Former Acting Director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement John Sandweg says President Trump's suggestion to eliminate immigration judges is "the single dumbest idea I've ever heard" in terms of dealing with border crossings.

    Clip is here

  13. #21813
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    Quote Originally Posted by raycarey View Post
    not disagreeing with you, but she's a pretty horrible person.
    Soon to be seen as a regular on Fox News since nobody else will hire her.

  14. #21814
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    Quote Originally Posted by raycarey View Post
    ^ not disagreeing with you, but she's a pretty horrible person.
    she looks quite nasty, probably perceived as a threat to his authority for his crazy ideas

    too bad he didn't grab her by the pussy first, would have made a nice sex scandal

  15. #21815
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    Randolph Alles: US Secret Service director to leave post
    https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-47860037

    US President Donald Trump has reportedly fired the director of the US Secret Service.

    Randolph Alles is one of several Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials being ousted on Monday, says the BBC's US affiliate, CBS News.

    Mr Alles' departure comes a day after DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen tendered her resignation under pressure over the situation at the US-Mexico border.

    Dozens of top officials have exited the Trump administration since 2017.

    The White House confirmed Mr Alles would go, but did not say whether Mr Trump fired him.

    Press secretary Sarah Sanders said in a statement: "Randolph 'Tex' Alles has done a great job at the agency over the last two years, and the President is thankful for his over 40 years of service to the country."

    She said Secret Service careerist James Murray would take over as director in May.

    Mr Alles reported directly to Ms Nielsen, who announced her resignation on Sunday, after facing increasing pressure to do so from Mr Trump.

    The Republican president had repeatedly accused Ms Nielsen of not being tough enough on border security.

  16. #21816
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    The law or the President: The Trump appointees' dilemma

    Sooner or later, many of the President's subordinates face the same dilemma.They can respect the law or they can work for Donald Trump. It's often just not possible to do both.

    Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen became the latest Cabinet member to pay the price for not letting Trump do what he wants -- and on the issue he cares about more than any other -- when she was forced to resign on Sunday.

    It was a case of the Trump revolution eating one of its own, since Nielsen, an immigration hardliner, was seen as insufficiently doctrinaire despite becoming the face of the zero-tolerance immigration policy that led to child separations and caused outrage last year.

    But CNN reporting makes clear that Nielsen also lost her job because she ultimately came to believe that Trump's wilder impulses on immigration -- an issue that he sees as critical to his reelection in 2020 -- threatened America's security and may have run contrary to the law.

    Nielsen is not the first senior Cabinet official to lose their career after coming up against Trump's vision of his own authority -- or his instinct to elevate largely unaccountable appointees, such as domestic policy adviser Stephen Miller or his son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

    In their own ways, former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, former FBI Director James Comey and even former Attorney General Jeff Sessions -- the spiritual father of much of the administration's immigration policy -- suffered a similar fate.

    Unlike the President, these public servants eventually concluded that the Constitution, the rule of law and the norms of democratic governance rendered some of Trump's behavior unacceptable.

    Nielsen's departure, which was accompanied by a White House sweep against her department that also accounted for the director of the Secret Service, sends a signal that Trump is ready to do whatever it takes to stem the crisis on the US-Mexico border, which is threatening to expose his vows to stem the flows of migrants from Central America as hollow.

    That will be welcome news for Trump's supporters, who relish his bypassing of the Washington establishment and overwhelmingly back his hard line on immigration and warnings that the US is under siege by an invading tide of criminals.

    But the President's desire to honor the faith of his base on immigration eventually made Nielsen's position untenable.

    Crossing legal lines

    CNN's Jake Tapper reported on a series of clashes leading up to Nielsen's ouster on Sunday that reveal a President demanding obeisance to his orders, even if they cross legal lines.

    A "ranting and raving" Trump demanded the closure of the US-Mexico border at El Paso,Texas, in late March, despite being told by Nielsen it was a dangerous idea, according to an attendee at a White House meeting.

    Trump has also been pushing to reinstate and escalate the separations of undocumented migrant parents and children at the border, despite the practice being outlawed by the courts and causing bipartisan and international outrage.

    The newly purged Department of Homeland Security may well embark on a policy that has been discussed for months that would give migrants at the border a tough decision to make: Remain united as a family in detention or agree to be separated while the parents go through the immigration court process, a senior administration official told CNN's Jim Acosta.

    The President also told border agents last week not to let any more asylum seekers into the country, forcing officials to quietly countermand his instructions after he had left the room, Tapper reported.

    CNN also reported Monday that Trump is regretting his climb down on a vow to slam shut the southern border -- despite being warned that it could trigger an economic disaster for many Americans.

    As the final days of Nielsen's tenure were unfolding, it was Miller, perhaps the only top political figure to the right of Trump on immigration, who engineered a sweep to topple the top leadership in Nielsen's department.

    Miller is now in charge of all immigration and border-related issues, according to CNN's Abby Phillip.

    His rise is just one front in a widening war between Trump's inner circle and the infrastructure of permanent government that the President has vowed to disrupt.

    Trump has in recent months removed irritating checks on his power from the Defense Department and the Justice Department.

    Defense Secretary James Mattis left after being surprised by Trump's shock announcement of a Syria troop withdrawal, after being seen as an "adult in the room" for much of the first two years of the President's term.

    Trump's rhetorical assault on the Federal Reserve is now being stiffened with an attempt to put true believers, such as Stephen Moore and Herman Cain on its board, raising doubts about the independence of the world's most powerful central bank.

    On Tuesday, another key figure in Trump's power shuffle will face scrutiny on Capitol Hill.

    Democratic lawmakers are likely to question Attorney General William Barr over claims that he was appointed solely because he had written a memo to the Justice Department arguing that special counsel Robert Mueller's obstruction case was legally flawed.

    In office, and once Mueller ended his investigation last month, Barr wrote to Congress to say the special counsel had not reached a conclusion on whether Trump had obstructed justice -- but that Barr and his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, had decided there was not sufficient evidence to support such a claim.

    Barr has yet to release the full report so that members of Congress can make up their own minds.

    'Acting' secretaries bolster Trump's power

    Elsewhere in Trump's government, a Cabinet stocked with acting secretaries in key positions -- who in many cases lack relevant experience, authority or an independent power base -- seem ill prepared to resist the President.

    "I sort of like 'acting,'" Trump told reporters earlier this year, not hiding the attraction of the departure of Cabinet heavyweights. "It gives me more flexibility."

    The turmoil in the administration appears to be about more than Trump's effort to consolidate maximum power for himself.

    Nielsen's departure, like that of other prominent figures from the Cabinet, also appeared to have been driven by a desire to eradicate any voices that the President does not want to hear.

    One of the benefits enjoyed by the global dictators Trump admires so much is they do not have to put up with dissent.

    In the democratic context of the US government, the President now appears to be trying to create a similar echo chamber for himself.

    Chilling words with an authoritarian lineage such as staff "purge" and "unhinged" are now being uttered by officials who have spoken to CNN to describe Trump's attitude toward the government and his current mood.

    According to multiple reports, Nielsen was frequently put in the position of trying to explain to the President that his radical urges on immigration were dangerous, impossible or unlawful.

    In addition to CNN's reporting, The New York Times wrote that Trump used to call Nielsen in the mornings to demand actions that were "clearly illegal," such as halting all asylum claims.

    Nielsen is now among other former Trump appointees who discovered that the President's radical beliefs and vision of how to wield his power come up against legal or ethical constraints.

    Tillerson, for instance, said last year that he often had to stop Trump from trampling boundaries.

    "So often, the President would say, 'Here's what I want to do and here's how I want to do it,'" Tillerson told former CBS anchor Bob Schieffer.

    "And I would have to say to him, 'Mr. President I understand what you want to do, but you can't do it that way. It violates the law. It violates treaty,'" Tillerson said.

    Comey testified to Congress that he felt uncomfortable when Trump tried to establish a "patronage relationship" with him in violation of the invisible wall between the presidency and the Justice Department and asked him to go easy on his former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

    The President frequently railed against Sessions because Sessions followed his legal obligations and recused himself from the Russia investigation.

    And Kelly said his job often involved explaining to Trump the limits of his authority under the law.

    But the President never ordered him to do anything illegal, Kelly told the Los Angeles Times in an interview.

    https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/09/polit...ion/index.html

  17. #21817
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    crackerjack101's Avatar
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    Why haven't we seen information on this Russ bloke and his deep connections with Trump in the the past and connections with Russia?

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilbur_Ross

  18. #21818
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    Quote Originally Posted by crackerjack101 View Post
    Why haven't we seen information on this Russ bloke and his deep connections with Trump in the the past and connections with Russia?

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilbur_Ross
    You mean the official of a Cyprus bank a lot of Russians used to launder money through to buy....

    Oh never mind.

  19. #21819
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    let's be honest, Russia is the future, the US is the past

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    Quote Originally Posted by Dragonfly View Post
    too bad he didn't grab her by the pussy first, would have made a nice sex scandal
    Who says he didn't? Money talks... and it hushes.

  21. #21821
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dragonfly View Post
    let's be honest, Russia is the future, the US is the past
    Russia's not the future but the U.S. is becoming more and more irrelevant.

  22. #21822
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cujo View Post
    Russia's not the future but the U.S. is becoming more and more irrelevant.
    Sadly.....

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    Special counsel Robert Mueller's investigators didn't establish that Donald Trump criminally conspired with Russia in the 2016 presidential election. But it wasn't for lack of trying by Moscow.

    Russian affiliates made "multiple offers" to help Trump, according to Attorney General William Barr's synopsis of Mueller's report. A presidential campaign with even a shred of security-minded rectitude would have quickly notified the FBI about Russians dangling dirt on an opponent, rather than eagerly taking a meeting, but Team Trump evidently didn't give it a thought.
    Now this carelessness has followed the president into the Oval Office where, as it turns out, top-secret clearances are handed out like Halloween candy, and a Chinese woman with a thumb drive of malicious software (along with four cellphones and a laptop) talked her way past the Secret Service recently to enter Trump's "Winter White House" estate in Palm Beach, Florida.
    It all adds up to a fast-and-loose attitude toward security:

    ►News reports last year described scores of White House officials lacking long-term security clearances while background checks dragged on endlessly. Last month, Tricia Newbold — an 18-year career White House employee who handles those reviews — came forward as a whistleblower to reveal how 25 officials who failed background checks were subsequently granted access to the nation's secrets.

    The initial denials were based on such concerns as "foreign influence, conflicts of interest, concerning personal conduct, financial problems, drug use and criminal conduct," but higher-ups in the White House ordered denials reversed "without proper analysis, documentation, or a full understanding and acceptance of the risks," according to a summary of Newbold's interview by congressional staffers.

    The Washington Post, citing people familiar with documents and testimony provided to the House Oversight and Reform Committee, identified one of the 25 as Trump's son-in-law, senior adviser Jared Kushner, who adjudicators worried might be compromised by foreign influence, outside business activities or personal conduct uncovered in a background check.
    Even the CIA expressed serious concerns. But Trump intervened to order that Kushner receive top-secret clearance, overruling then-Chief of Staff John Kelly, according to The New York Times.
    Trump's frequent visits to Mar-a-Lago, his private Florida resort, challenge a Secret Service that says it must defer to club employees in crosschecking visitors. This might explain why Chinese national Yujing Zhang managed to enter the resort March 30 with all her electronic gear. After a receptionist grew suspicious, Zhang was arrested.

    Prosecutors said Monday that a search of her hotel room later turned up a slew of additional suspicious items, including a signal detector that can ferret out hidden cameras, another cellphone and nine USB drives. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called the incident evidence of threatening behavior by China. According to the Miami Herald, Zhang's case has been added to an ongoing FBI investigation involving former Florida massage parlor owner Cindy Yang, who has allegedly been selling Chinese businesses access to Mar-a-Lago and the Trump family.

    Trump dismissed Zhang's arrest as a fluke ("No, I'm not concerned at all"), but word came Monday that Secret Service Director Randolph Alles is on his way out. Senior Democratic leaders in Congress have rightly asked FBI Director Christopher Wray to assess whether the Mar-a-Lago operation is a national security risk, and one of the new Secret Service director's priorities should be to improve procedures at all of Trump's private clubs. Separately, the House Oversight Committee is investigating how the Trump White House issues security clearances.

    When it comes to guarding against foreign influence, it's hard to know whether Trump is naive or foolish, or whether he views the responsibility as a nettlesome inconvenience. Sure, he can vacation where he wants and, by law, hand out clearances to whomever he pleases, but he also has an obligation to protect the Nations secrets.
    https://news.yahoo.com/trump-apos-op...215932602.html
    Last edited by Cujo; 10-04-2019 at 07:03 PM.

  24. #21824
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cujo View Post
    Russian affiliates made "multiple offers" to help Trump, according to Attorney General William Barr's synopsis of Mueller's report. A presidential campaign with even a shred of security-minded rectitude would have quickly notified the FBI about Russians dangling dirt on an opponent, rather than eagerly taking a meeting, but Team Trump evidently didn't give it a thought.
    What a great debate question....

    Mr. President, why didn't you notify the FBI when the Russians tried to contact members of your campaign staff.

  25. #21825
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    MAGA..

    Unless you are an American wage earner..

    President Donald Trump-wagegrowth-jpeg
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails President Donald Trump-wagegrowth-jpeg  

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