Evidence of Obama administration wiretapping Trump compelling
For the Journal
Donald Trump made allegations last week of the Obama Administration spying on the Trump campaign in the heat of the presidential election last year continuing on through December. The mainstream media reacted with shock, claiming the allegations lacked evidence and substance, and counter-alleged that Trump’s assertions were merely “fake news.” Apparently the media magnates don’t read their own papers, for all they would need to do is read their own publications to validate the President’s claims.
On March 4, President Trump tweeted a series of messages. Although limited to 144 characters per tweet, his message was a shocking one. “Is it legal for a sitting President to be ‘wire tapping’ a race for president prior to an election? Turned down by court earlier. A NEW LOW!” he said initially. The first message was followed immediately with, “I’d bet a good lawyer could make a great case out of the fact that President Obama was tapping my phones in October, just prior to Election!”
His final tweet concluded the allegation, “How low has President Obama gone to tapp [sic] my phones during the very sacred election process. This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!” What followed was a flurry of predictable media reactions.
The New York Times front-page story was titled, “Trump, Offering No Evidence, Says Obama Tapped His Phones.” CNN’s news crawl proclaimed, “Trump’s baseless wiretap claim.” And the Washington Post, not to be outdone, exclaimed, “Trump, citing no evidence, accuses Obama of ‘Nixon/Watergate’ plot to wiretap Trump Tower.”
Interestingly, all of those publications have been printing stories over the past several months that provide the very evidence they said Trump was lacking. Just over a month ago, on January 20th, the New York Times’ front-page story was titled, “Wiretapped Data Used In Inquiry of Trump Aides.” That story went on to reveal, “The FBI is leading the investigations, aided by the National Security Agency, the CIA and the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Unit. The investigators have accelerated their efforts in recent weeks but have found no conclusive evidence of wrongdoing, the officials said. One official said intelligence reports based on some of the wiretapped communications had been provided to the White House.”
In that one story, the NYT validates the following: that Trump aides were being wiretapped; data from the wiretaps were gathered; which government agencies (under the Obama Administration) were involved; that they’d accelerated their efforts (likely to forestall Trump’s inauguration); and that some of the data had been provided to the White House. And perhaps most significant, as far as Trump and his aides are concerned, they “found no conclusive evidence of wrongdoing.”
Following Trump’s tweets an Obama spokesman declared, “Neither President Obama nor any White House official ever ordered surveillance on any U.S. citizen. Any suggestion otherwise is simply false.” Please note the wording, claiming they didn’t “order” the wiretapping. Was it perhaps suggested, intimated, or simply allowed? That’s unknown, but clearly Obama’s White House knew what the results of the wiretap were. And that’s according to the NYT. And frankly, if there was no wiretapping, there would have been no data to share with the White House.
Trump’s first tweet that morning intimated involvement of FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) court involvement in the wiretapping of the Trump Tower in New York. Even that is validated by, not Trump tweets or administration officials, but by the media.
According to news site Heat Street, “Two separate sources with links to the counter-intelligence community have confirmed to Heat Street that the FBI sought, and was granted, a FISA court warrant in October, giving counter-intelligence permission to examine the activities of ‘U.S. persons’ in Donald Trump’s campaign with ties to Russia.”
The article continues, “Contrary to earlier reporting in the New York Times, which cited FBI sources as saying that the agency did not believe that the private server in Donald Trump’s Trump Tower which was connected to a Russian bank had any nefarious purpose, the FBI’s counter-intelligence arm, sources say, re-drew an earlier FISA court request around possible financial and banking offenses related to the server. The first request, which sources say, named Trump, was denied back in June, but the second was drawn more narrowly and was granted in October…While the Times story speaks of metadata, sources suggest that a FISA warrant was granted to look at the full content of emails and other related documents that may concern US persons.”
The facts surrounding Obama Administration FISA Court requests were later validated and reported by UK news sources, The Guardian, and BBC. Conspicuously absent was follow-up reporting by U.S. mainstream media. No wonder there is record low confidence in U.S. mainstream media.
And inexplicably, in the final days of his administration, President Obama in January “expanded the power of the National Security Agency to share globally intercepted personal communications with the government’s 16 other intelligence agencies before applying privacy protections,” according to the New York Times. Obama’s directive expanded Executive Order 12333. As the Times reported, they “found no conclusive evidence of wrongdoing.” Yet, based on much of the information being leaked, it was obviously not just data and factual information that was shared, but also rumor, innuendo, and hearsay; in short, political propaganda.
The facts clearly lay out a systematic series of events and intelligence-gathering efforts where the Obama Administration was wiretapping and monitoring Trump and his associates in the midst of the presidential campaign. This is further confirmed and validated by the well-placed leak from the FBI of the discussions between erstwhile National Security Advisor, Michael Flynn, and the Russian Ambassador to the U.S.
Clearly, based on news stories by the same media that is now denouncing Trump’s allegations, the Obama administration actively sought authorization to eavesdrop on the Trump campaign, and was eventually granted that authorization. They continued to monitor the Trump campaign even after no evidence of wrongdoing was discovered. Obama then relaxed the national intelligence rules to allow evidence to be shared broadly within the government, virtually assuring that such information would be leaked to news sources.
Some claim this to be merely attempts at obfuscation of the “Russian meddling” in the campaign. This is highly unlikely since the only thing the FBI and the other 16 intelligence agencies have produced for all their efforts to link Trump to purported Russian hacking of the Hillary campaign, is the leaked Michael Flynn conversation with the Russian Ambassador. Even the allegations against Attorney General Jeff Sessions are moot since his first meeting with the Russian Ambassador included several high-ranking U.S. military officers, and the second was at an event organized by the Obama Administration.
Some, including Mark Levin, former chief of staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese in the Reagan Administration, claim the Obama Administration’s targeting of the Trump organization, in the middle of a presidential campaign, was a more egregious abuse of executive power than Nixon exercised with the Watergate break in. He avers that it was tantamount to an attempted coup to prevent Trump from assuming office.
Regrettably, many government employees, who overwhelmingly are supportive of Democrats, are involved in the efforts to undermine, discredit, and delegitimize the Trump administration. These “public servants” who by a nearly 10:1 margin donated to the Clinton campaign, are obviously more loyal to their party than they are to the nation they are paid to serve. They are committing felonies with their leaks to the press, and arguably committing treason and sedition in attempting to destabilize the government.
These “deep state” government employees, including some in the intelligence services, are evidently colluding with three other factions in a veritable war against our democratically elected President. The others include, as one commentator refers to them, the “Snowflake Faction,” including paid protestors; the Democrat Party; and the mainstream media establishment. They are not just striving to discredit the President, but to destabilize the administration and destroy him utilizing every conceivable means available to them to do so.
The question is not whether the Obama Administration was spying on the Trump campaign, but how many laws they bent or broke for nearly exclusively political purposes in doing so, and whether anyone will be held accountable for it. The Watergate scandal pales by comparison.
Award-winning columnist Richard Larsen of Pocatello is president of the brokerage firm Larsen Financial. He graduated from Idaho State University with degrees in history and political science. Larsen grew up in Bingham County and his father is the late Allan Larsen, former Idaho House Speaker, state senator and gubernatorial candidate.
Q-tweeter should be listening to Fox right now.
ReplyDeleteNapolitano is talking law and Presidential power to keep people out of the USA.
ReplyDeleteThe Tweetster has reduced the budget issue discussion to 'guns or butter'. (see last thread)
Bwabwabwagroangroangroan
The man's a brain dead simpleton.
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DeleteProvide something more insightful, dipshit.
Or, simply keep on with your annoying carping.
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DeleteThe issues we are talking about, healthcare and the budget, are important issues. They affect lives, they involve all the promises Trump made during his campaign, promises he made to the people who put him over the top.
You may think you are funny, others may find it cathartic to takes snipes at me or Ash for that matter, but it does nothing to add to the conversation on these issues.
If you believe in what Trump is doing, make a logical argument for it.
Spare me the whining and carping every time Trump screws up, or lies, or goes back on his earlier promises. You are doing exactly what he does, blame it on others. It's never Trump's fault. It's the media, it's Dem operatives, it's the intelligence agencies, it's the GOP establishment, it's the Deep State, it's anyone who disagrees with Trump.
It's paranoid bullshit.
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DeleteIf you have something to say about Trump's budget priorities, say it.
That would start a discussion, maybe an argument.
Bwabwabwagroangroangroan is an ass-clown braying.
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ReplyDeleteAnother ridiculous article repeating the same bull that has been reported before. Humorous only in that the 'proof' they offer is an obviously screwed up story put out by the NYT a source the routinely dismiss unless as in this case it fits their meme. The other sources they talk of (BBC and Guardian) simply quoted the NYT story. The Heet Street article subsequently repeated and expanded on by Levin and Breitbart have been widely denied and ridiculed.
The 'deep state' references and comments on the intelligence agencies political preferences in the last election is filler, bullshit designed to dissemble and confuse.
There was no doubt a political purpose behind Obama's decision the allow NSA to share its info with other agencies but that is not a crime.
Trump accused Obama of a crime, a crime the author says is worse than Watergate. He did so based only on a phony story he read in Breitbart. A news story is NOT proof.
Trump is the friggin president.
He knows if there is proof of the crime he has accused Obama of.
All he has to do is come forward with it. If it exists.
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You're o'er stressed, Quirk.
ReplyDeleteYou need to watch some NCAA basketball.
Gonzaga up in an hour, 10am Pacific.
Try that.
Before you turn to the NCAA, inform us if the $54 billion in proposed new defense spending does or does not simply restore the money sequestered from the Defense Budget.
DeleteI am unclear on this, so I turn to you, Mr Clarity.
Here's a starting point, one of many -
Trump says he's boosting defense spending by $54 billion. The real number is $18 billion.
Updated by Yochi Dreazen Feb 28, 2017, 10:26pm EST
....The problem is that Trump and his aides are comparing the wrong figures. Obama himself had called for blowing past the congressional spending caps and spending a total of $585 billion on national security, including $557 billion for the Pentagon and $28 billion for the Department of Energy and other related agencies. The actual difference between what Obama had projected spending and what Trump is now proposing is just $18 billion. That, Cancian notes, “is what John McCain is so angry.”
“It’s a much smaller increase than people first thought,” he added.....
http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/2/28/14765492/trump-pentagon-budget-billion-state-department-misleading-54-billion
I'm heading out to find a Big Screen....
Cheers ! and Ciao
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DeleteLet me clarify it for you. It's a bullshit argument.
Who wrote the rule that defense spending has to go up vertically? Where is that rule in law or in the Congressional Record?
Replace the defense money they would have got except for sequestration? What about all the other budget items that didn't get money because of sequestration? Do we have to fund them with more money to make up for sequestration?
The argument on the $18 billion is equally absurd. It doesn't matter what Obama "proposed". The money was never allocated. Trump's $54 billion was measured from the 'actual' base level.
It represents the 'actual' increase in spending.
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Just cause you say it doesn't matter doesn't mean it doesn't matter, Quirkie.
DeleteI've heard that it doesn't matter one before.
I didn't buy it then, if you recall, and I ain't buyin' it now.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThere's no arguing with Dada.
Delete
ReplyDeleteROGER’S RULES
Grandstanding Judicial Supremacy Must End
BY ROGER KIMBALL MARCH 16, 2017
This December 2015 photo shows U.S. District Judge Derrick Watson in Honolulu. Hours before it was to take effect, President Donald Trump's revised travel ban was put on hold Wednesday, March 15, 2017, by Watson, a federal judge in Hawaii who questioned whether the administration was motivated by national security concerns. (George Lee/The Star-Advertiser via AP)
Here we go again. Last month it was Seattle District Judge James L. Robart who decided he had the authority to contravene the president's executive order "on a nationwide basis," temporarily banning entry into the United States of people from seven terrorist hot spots (Somalia, Yemen, Iraq, Iran, Libya, etc.). Come on in folks, don't mind the laws of the United States! All are welcome.
Judge Robart, whom no one had ever heard of before, got a lot of play in the anti-Trump media (which is to say, the media tout court) and has doubtless been dining out on that sever since.
As I said at the time, Judge Robart's restraining order, especially its nationwide application, struck me as legally dubious and, practically speaking, unworkable. Can we really have six or seven hundred district judges making policy for the entire country? For make no mistake, that's what Judge Robart did. At the behest -- or with the collusion -- of a couple of blue state attorneys general, Judge Robart decided that he had the authority to contravene a legally framed executive order issued by the president of the United States and to make himself, Judge James L. Robart, the supreme law of the land....
https://pjmedia.com/rogerkimball/2017/03/16/grandstanding-judicial-supremacy-must-end/
Tillerson: Diplomacy has “failed” with North Korea, so who’s up for … something “different”?
ReplyDeletePOSTED AT 2:01 PM ON MARCH 16, 2017 BY ED MORRISSEY
More than twenty years after the US agreed to fund a supposedly peaceful nuclear-energy program in North Korea in exchange for promises not to develop nuclear weapons, Rex Tillerson declared diplomacy dead in dealing with the Stalinist regime in Pyongyang. The Kim regime can’t be trusted to stick to the deals when offered carrots, and sanctions as a stick doesn’t appear to work all that much better. The Secretary of State, speaking on his first trip to visit allies in Asia, said the Pacific Rim needed a new strategy to deal with North Korea:
It’s time to take a “different approach” to dealing with North Korea, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said in Tokyo on Thursday, because 20 years of diplomacy had “failed” to convince the regime in Pyongyang to abandon its pursuit of nuclear weapons.
Tillerson’s comments will fuel fears in the region that military options might be on the table to deter North Korea — an approach that could prove devastating for Seoul, where more than 20 million people live within North Korean artillery range.
And that would be … what, exactly? Tillerson didn’t offer any specifics, but the subtext wasn’t exactly subtle:
He declined to go into specifics about what a “different approach” might entail. The Trump administration is now conducting a review of North Korea policy and some in Washington are advocating “kinetic options” — a euphemism for military action.
However, Tillerson also sounded something of a [conciliatory] note. “North Korea and its people need not fear the United States or their neighbors in the region who seek only to live in peace with North Korea,” he said in opening remarks.
DeleteThe declaration took place in Japan, which has the second-most to lose in a new war on the Korean peninsula. Tillerson’s remarks didn’t appear out of step with Tokyo’s take, however, as his counterpart Fumio Kishida also stated that the threats from North Korea had entered “a new stage.” That might relate to its recent advancement in solid-fuel missiles, or perhaps the fact that Pyongyang has engaged in assassinations with VX nerve agent — in a public airport of one of its few friends, Malaysia, which has suspended all diplomatic contacts as a result. Clearly, diplomacy didn’t matter to North Korea in that instance, so it’s unlikely to matter much to the Kim regime when it comes to the US and Japan.
If diplomacy with Pyongyang is useless, where does that leave the US and its allies? None of them want to start a war now, especially not South Korea, which just impeached its president and is in the middle of a political crisis. Short of war, the only option is to put pressure on China, and that seems to be the point of all the talk about “kinetic options,” too. Beijing trotted out a compromise last week that would have had North Korea suspend its missile tests if the US and South Korea suspended its joint military exercises, but the Kim regime rejected it even before the US did. Tillerson and Kishida are telling China that they have tired of Beijing’s excuses and protection of the Kims, and the time has come for them to take action. The rattling of sabers — and especially the deployment of the THAAD anti-ballistic missile system — is obviously designed to let Beijing know that the US sees the options coming down to someone taking action, and a hint that China might prefer to handle it themselves rather than have American and Japanese troops on their doorstep taking care of business instead.
Speaking of Malaysia, North Korea now insists that the assassination of Kim Jong-nam was a conspiracy between Seoul and Washington. They want the body, and in the meantime both nations are still holding each other’s citizens as hostages:
A North Korean diplomat said Thursday the killing of a man confirmed by Malaysian police to be the estranged half-brother of North Korea’s leader was a political conspiracy engineered by Washington and Seoul.
Pak Myong Ho, a minister at North Korea’s embassy in Beijing, said the Feb. 13 murder of Kim Jong Nam in Malaysia was a “despicable and extremely dangerous” plot by the U.S. and South Korea aimed at smearing North Korea’s image and subverting its regime. …
North Korea has blocked Malaysians from leaving the country until a “fair settlement” of the case is reached. Malaysia then barred North Koreans from exiting its soil. The two countries have also scrapped visa-free travel for each other’s citizens.
With friends like this, what use is there for diplomats?
http://hotair.com/archives/2017/03/16/tillerson-diplomacy-has-failed-with-north-korea-so-whos-up-for-something-different/
Quit stalking immigrants at California courthouses, chief justice tells ICE
ReplyDeleteCalifornia Supreme Court Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye on Thursday told federal immigration officials to stop “stalking undocumented immigrants” at California courthouses.
Cantil-Sakauye said she was “deeply concerned” that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents are apparently seeking out undocumented immigrants for deportation at courthouses and courtrooms from San Francisco to Los Angeles.
“Courthouses should not be used as bait in the necessary enforcement of our country’s immigration laws,” she said in a letter sent to U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly on Thursday. “Enforcement policies that include stalking courthouses and arresting undocumented immigrants, the vast majority of whom pose no risk to public safety, are neither safe nor fair. They not only compromise our core value of fairness but they undermine the judiciary’s ability to provide equal access to justice. I respectfully request that you refrain from this sort of enforcement in California's courthouses.”
Since January, Cantil-Sakauye has received several reports from lower court judges, private attorneys and Legal Aid lawyers, that U.S. immigration agents are arresting people after court proceedings, said Cathal Conneely, a public information officer for the Judicial Council of California.
http://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article138935588.html#storylink=cpy
ReplyDelete"Cantil-Sakauye is organizing a court “working group” to provide information and legal resources to immigrants, Conneely said."
Nothing like an impartial judge, no conflict of interest there!
If your in the country illegally then you should be afraid of arrest/deportation anywhere you go.
Sounds like something Justice Quirk would pull out of his judicial ass hole.
DeleteRegardless of the fact that mooslim immigrants hold that women are 1/2 of a human being, and that half is a sexual fiend from hell that must be covered up from head to toe, with only eye slits showing, lest they tempt those paragons of manly virtue, the mooslim male-children.
We should count our lucky stars that The Tweetster went into advertising.
DeleteA few days ago, the self-described all-knowing Quirk blurted one of his ill-informed putdowns by explaining to me that Google relies most heavily on decades old practices like page rank and etc. in response to my comment about the top pages having become almost exclusively dominated by liberal links in many searches about political matters.
ReplyDeleteThe reality is, the criteria involved in searches and search algorithms have changed greatly, to include contracted "fact checkers" artificial intelligence, and other methods, all subject to the subjectivity of the overwhelmingly liberal population in the tech industry in general, and Silicon Valley in particular.
At 87 minutes in this podcast, 3 or 4 highly informed, intelligent, LIBERAL tech commentators have a discussion about what Google is up to these days wrt to search.
...it ain't Quirk's grandmother's Google anymore.
https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google/episodes/396?autostart=false
Google launches new effort to flag upsetting or offensive content in search
DeleteUsing data from human "quality raters," Google hopes to teach its algorithms how to better spot offensive and often factually incorrect...
http://searchengineland.com/
http://searchengineland.com/google-flag-upsetting-offensive-content-271119
DeleteWikiFeet
https://www.wikifeet.com/
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DeleteThe reality is, the criteria involved in searches and search algorithms have changed greatly, to include contracted "fact checkers" artificial intelligence, and other methods, all subject to the subjectivity of the overwhelmingly liberal population in the tech industry in general, and Silicon Valley in particular.
What hasn't changed is the ability of someone with half a brain to read an article no matter what priority it is assigned in a search engine, discard the bubblegum and bullshit, determine the exact point of the article, and determine, even if it requires going to alternate sources for verification, what is logical, reasonable, and 'provable' in the article.
Liberal or conservative subjectivity has little to do with facts, logic, or proof. Well, at least, not to anyone with a brain and the willingness to use it.
Any sane person can read a statement purporting to be fact and see if evidence for that opinion is provided. To accept that statement as true with no evidence to support it is an act of faith and bespeaks of credulity unacceptable this side of mysticism or religion.
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Hilarious
DeleteSad
Detached from reality.
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DeleteCome on, Doug, admit it. You are just upset because alt-reality sites like Breitbart, whiteworld.com, killamuslimforchrist.com, and trumpworld.net aren't given primacy on search engines thus taxing your computer abilities to the limit by forcing you to try to get to page two on the links.
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act of faith and bespeaks of credulity unacceptable this side of mysticism or religion
DeleteFor a cogent discussion of 'mysticism' and faith, see:
The Varieties of Religious Experience
William James
It is explained there that the two are not related. 'Mysticism' is explained to be a matter of direct experience without any reference to 'faith'.
It is the difference between 'knowing' and 'believing'.
These boundaries should be keep in mind when discussing, or seeming to discuss, worthy matters of this sort.
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ReplyDeleteI've heard that it doesn't matter one before.
I didn't buy it then, if you recall, and I ain't buyin' it now.
You ae buying into the same canard politicians have used to fool the sheeple for decades. Dreazen's argument is a corollary of the one illustrated below.
'The GOP passes a 10 year budget that has military spending projected to increase by 5% per year. Then, the Dems or budget hawks gain the majority or just force a revision to the budget to one where military spending only increases by 4% per year. In response, the hawks and neocons scream that he Dems are gutting defense by cutting funds to the military. In fact, all they did was cut the rate of increase in the funds going to the military. The military would still see the funds coming to them increase by 4% a year.
Dreazen's argument falls into the same category. Every budget represents a 10 year plan that gets modified with each subsequent FY budget. Obama's proposed increase for 2018 was a sellout to the GOP in order to get additional increases in non-military spending. It is meaningless until passed by Congress through the appropriations process and then implemented.
If the military spends the $549 billion actually allocated in FY 2017, to argue that it is only an $18 billion increase if they spend $603 billion in FY 2018 is either delusional or perverse depending on the intent.
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If only you wouldn't try to do politics, Quirkie.
DeleteYou always get twisted up like a pretzel, when you should be a strong straight upstanding man.
Sigh.
(Quirk must be drinking. He's arguing with Dada. He should know by now NOT to argue with Dada.)
Delete.
ReplyDeleteAmazon to begin delivering booze to homes in selected areas. Estimated delivery time? Two hours.
Eventually, Doug will no longer need to change out of his pajamas and leave the house to get his Pina Colada ingredients.
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And you'll be drunk 24 hours a day.
DeleteOnly a confirmed prehab would be interested in that news, much less post it.
DeleteI've got Quirkie cutting back a bit.
DeleteHe doesn't start til around noon now.
Sometimes when Quirkie has been drinking a lot he'll say -
Delete"C'mon here, Dada, I like a little beef with my ale"
Then he always laughs like a jackass.
Is it irritating, Dada ?
DeleteExtremely, Bob.
DeleteSometimes I feel like ripping the fool's eyes out, but never do.
Why don't you leave him, Dada, tell him to get lost ?
DeleteO I never could, Bob, he's usually so kind and gentle, loving, funny, and witty too.
DeleteHe doesn't know it but he would be a flat tire without me.
He really ought to shut up about politics, though.
President Trump Wiretapping Investigation Continues - Sara Carter –
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mqx2JIz2VgM
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DeleteContinues?
:o)
Perhaps, among the Illiterati including those who watch the Hannity show.
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Oh, it continues.
DeleteI urge you to watch Napolitano for some real skinny.
(Here 'real skinny' is used in an older sense, meaning the real deal, or inside knowledge of some matter)
Maddow is so HOT !
ReplyDeletehttp://images.outbrain.com/Imaginarium/api/uuid/cf2f5841951fd913f59160b03050a492e985f12dda12c950319f9f8da1c9bfc9/311/134/1.0
McCain accuses Rand Paul of working for Pooty.
ReplyDeleteRand Paul replies that McCain is the poster boy for term limits.
Rand 100
DeleteJohn 0
This will solve the starvation problem in Venezuela -
ReplyDeleteVenezuela seizes bakeries amid bread shortage....DRUDGE
When Lorenzo Mendoza attends baseball games, crowds treat him like a star player. Baseball is Venezuela’s national sport and Mendoza, head of the Caracas-based food and drink producer Empresas Polar and once an avid amateur player, remains a big follower.
ReplyDelete...
“He is a Venezuelan committed to Venezuela,” says Henrique Capriles, who has twice run unsuccessfully for the presidency, first against Chávez then losing narrowly to Maduro in 2013. Mendoza, he says, is a tipazo (a super guy).
...
“Ordinary people say that even if the government wants to trounce Polar, they will stand up and defend it,” affirms a Polar executive. “The more the government punches us, the more the people love us.”
"What hasn't changed is the ability of someone with half a brain..."
ReplyDelete===
Everyday people don't spend great amounts of time each day carefully ferreting out and checking facts from the news.
To pretend that the extreme leftwing bias of the MSM is harmless is ridiculous and dishonest.
Likewise for Leftwing-biased search sites.
DeleteDonald Trump press secretary sensationally claims GCHQ may have colluded with Obama to spy during US election
ReplyDeleteSean Spicer claimed British spies were drafted in to avoid any “American fingerprints" on the alleged surveillance
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/donald-trump-press-secretary-sensationally-10042597
*******
Spicer links Obama spying claims to British Intelligence...
GCHQ REBUKE....DRUDGE
Quirk will latch on to the GCHQ rebuke.
Most folks will want to see and read about and consider the sources from Fox that are cited.
Meanwhile the allegations that the Rooskies were directly teamed with Trump during the election seem to have turned out to be all smoke, no fire.
Delete.
DeleteMost folks will want to see and read about and consider the sources from Fox that are cited.
I know I want to see them.
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DeleteI love Spicer's last sentence,
Putting the published accounts and common-sense together, this leads to a lot.'"
It sure does, Sean. It sure does.
Does this guy have a political death wish?
Anyone who would use Judge Napolitano as his go to source (well, admittedly, maybe it is his 'last gasp' source) is desperate.
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DeleteSean Spicer says British intelligence could have been involved in Barack Obama's 'wiretapping of Trump Tower'
British officials were quick to rubbish Mr Napolitano's claims earlier this week. A government source reportedly said the claim was "totally untrue and quite frankly absurd".
Not only is Trump embarrassing himself in front of the whole US, he's embarrassing the US in front of the entire world.
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Britain's communications intelligence agency GCHQ has issued a statement denying it wiretapped Donald Trump during the US presidential campaign.
ReplyDelete...
The GCHQ claims were initially made by former judge Andrew Napolitano.
Mr Spicer quoted Mr Napolitano as saying: "Three intelligence sources have informed Fox News that President Obama went outside the chain of command.
...
It is unusual for GCHQ to comment directly on a report about its intelligence work, normally preferring to stick to the policy of neither confirming nor denying any activity.
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ReplyDeleteIt is explained there that the two are not related. 'Mysticism' is explained to be a matter of direct experience without any reference to 'faith'.
It is the difference between 'knowing' and 'believing'.
These boundaries should be keep in mind when discussing, or seeming to discuss, worthy matters of this sort.
Once again, the English major proves his inability to read a simple English sentence and perceive its meaning.
The coordinating conjunction 'or' indicates a difference between the two nouns, mysticism and religion. There is nothing in the sentence that argues that the meaning of the two words taken by themselves are the same or related as to their essence.
The only relationship that is drawn is through the use of the word 'credulity' in referring to the two words and asserting that both require a level of credulity that is not conducive to objective proof of facts.
Mysticism can be defined in a couple of ways...
1. A belief that union with or absorption into the Deity or the absolute, or the spiritual apprehension of knowledge inaccessible to the intellect, may be attained through contemplation and self-surrender.
or as
2. A belief characterized by self-delusion or dreamy confusion of thought, especially when based on the assumption of occult qualities or mysterious agencies.
The very subjectivity of how mysticism is viewed makes it a poor basis for judging objective fact.
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DeleteEnglish major?
:o)
It took Bob two terms to finish the 8th grade, Truman's and Eisenhower's.
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Poor Quirk.
DeleteAll unknown to himself, he is like a resident of Plato's Cave, fascinated by the dancing of the light and shade on the wall of the cave, towards which he faces, chained. He does not understand that this display is caused by a fire behind, and takes it for reality. Nor does he know at all that there is an 'upper air', the surface of earth above. One fine time, one of the residents of the Cave happens somehow manages to escape to the upper air, the surface of the earth, and is overwhelmed by what he sees there, all new and unexpected. When he returns to the Cave and tries to tell his companions of this new thing, they think he is nuts, and kill him.
Many Hindu sages know better. They consider trying to teach....then think, impossible, a waste of time....and retire to the forest, buck naked, begging bowl in hand, and watch the monkeys play until, in due time, their bodies drop away 'like a leaf yellowing to its fall in autumn'.
Jesus, on the other hand, tries to share, in public too, an error, and is killed for his effort.
The Buddha takes a middle way, and teaches only to a select few, and lives to a ripe old age, having succeeded in making one, just one, fellow actually 'see it', the fellow that finally recognized the raised rose in the hand of the Buddha for what it symbolized, and was.
We have no option, no option but to let Quirk mire in the carnal arms of Dada Le Boeuf, for Quirk is truly unteachable, the living exemplar of ignorance among us, thus come, a fool of fools.
We shall not despair. We know the way is long, but sure, and Quirk, yes even Quirk shall one fine day, in some other life, unimaginably far off, unimaginably far away, come to the upper air in his due time.
Will Quirk ever, in this life, hear the sound made by no two things striking together, the sound that signals the beginning of the proper spiritual life ?
DeleteWe cannot say for certain.
What we do know:
Time is short, and the sands are running out of his current hour glass....but hope, like love, abides.
(personally, I don't think he's gonna make it this time around....his noggin is hard as a walnut, and no larger)
DeleteImages of walnuts (Quirk's noggin) here:
https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS698US698&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=images+of+walnuts&*
I think you will agree, the material does not look hopeful as to enlightenment.
.
Delete...come to the upper air in his due time...and looking around sees its shadow and retreats back into its den, foretelling six more weeks of winter. Before dozing off, it notices the crusty and
odoriferous figure in a dark corner of the burrow move, a figure that has lain there in the same spot for millennia if the tales of the old ones are to be believed. With a feeling of apprehension and unease, the groundhog then settles in to await spring.
And as the groundhog slowly settles into a peaceful somnolence, the creature in the corner, a creature who in his fevered consciousness self identifies as Idaho Bob, glances at the groundhog and murmurs "Quirk", his distorted perceptions calling to mind the legendary demigod Quirk of the Detroit Suburbs. After a moment, Bob starts again his endless incantation, the same incantations he has repeated thousands of times before...
Poor Quirk.
All unknown to himself, he is like a resident of Plato's Cave, fascinated by the dancing of the light and shade on the wall of the cave, towards which he faces, chained. He does not understand that this display is caused by a fire behind, and takes it for reality. Nor does he know at all that there is an 'upper air', the surface of earth above. One fine time, one of the residents of the Cave happens somehow manages to escape to the upper air, the surface of the earth, and is overwhelmed by what he sees there, all new and unexpected. When he returns to the Cave and tries to tell his companions of this new thing, they think he is nuts, and kill him.
Many Hindu sages know better. They consider trying to teach....then think, impossible, a waste of time....and retire to the forest, buck naked, begging bowl in hand, and watch the monkeys play until, in due time, their bodies drop away 'like a leaf yellowing to its fall in autumn'.
Jesus, on the other hand, tries to share, in public too, an error, and is killed for his effort.
The Buddha takes a middle way, and teaches only to a select few, and lives to a ripe old age, having succeeded in making one, just one, fellow actually 'see it', the fellow that finally recognized the raised rose in the hand of the Buddha for what it symbolized, and was.
We have no option, no option but to let Quirk mire in the carnal arms of Dada Le Boeuf, for Quirk is truly unteachable, the living exemplar of ignorance among us, thus come, a fool of fools.
We shall not despair. We know the way is long, but sure, and Quirk, yes even Quirk shall one fine day, in some other life, unimaginably far off, unimaginably far away, come to the upper air in his due time.
Having completed this arcane ritual for the umpteenth time, the foul creature then turned his face to the dank, moist, dirt wall of the burrow and retreated to the Stygian depths of the continuous loop that was eons ago, in a time before having read a copy of Mysticism for Dummies by a proto William James, a somewhat functioning mind.
And from across the vast expanse of burrow, in a little groundhog voice inflated by anger came the command, "Shut out the damn light.'
Groundhog Day
Again.
.
Over in a corner it notices the crusty
The comments from leaders in Congress follows Trump and the White House retreating from the President's stunning accusation in a tweet two weeks ago.
ReplyDelete"When I say wiretapping, those words were in quotes. That really covers -- because wiretapping is pretty old-fashioned stuff -- but that really covers surveillance and many other things.
And nobody ever talks about the fact that it was in quotes, but that's a very important thing," Trump told Fox News Wednesday.
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DeleteIf you didn't laugh, you would have to cry.
.
Only an obvious fool like Quirk would fall for an obvious fraud like this -
ReplyDeleteAN FBI-INVESTIGATED ISLAMIST TAKES OVER THE VERMONT DEMOCRATS
A Norquist Islamist reinvents himself as a Bernie leftist.
March 17, 2017 Daniel Greenfield
Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is a New York writer focusing on radical Islam
Vermont Democrats have something else to celebrate besides the creation and failure of the first statewide socialized medicine system in America. Recovering from that glorious triumph, Vermont Democrats have elected their first Muslim state party chairman.
The lucky fellow is Faisal Gill who called his victory a rebuke of President Trump. "To have a Muslim and immigrant to be the state party chair sends a really strong message to Trump and his type of politics that this is not where the country is at."
Gill’s election doesn’t send much of a message about where America is at. But it certainly sends a message about where the Democrats are at.
Back when Gill was playing a Republican, courtesy of Grover Norquist, left-wing media outlets like Salon were willing to report on his troubling Islamist ties. But Faisal Gil has been reborn as a supporter of Bernie Sanders and Keith Ellison. The left has become a warm and moist safe space for Islamists. The Salon article which Gill blamed for many of his problems would be nearly inconceivable today. Could anyone really imagine a leftist publication today describing the Muslim Brotherhood as a terror nexus?
But did Faisal Gill really go from Norquist Republican to Sanders Democrat? Did he shift from believing in free enterprise to embracing Socialism? Or did Gill always hold to an overriding ideology in whose shadow the distinction between Capitalism and Socialism becomes pointless infidel quibbling?
When revelations first emerged that Faisal Gill had been under FBI surveillance, he blamed Islamophobia. When Snowden’s enemy espionage operation exposed national security documents which were published by left-wing terror apologist Glenn Greenwald and The Intercept, a site whose former writer is now charged with some of the terroristic bomb threats aimed at Jewish centers, Gill’s email appeared on a list of alleged terrorist suspects and supporters, including Al Qaeda leader Anwar Al-Awlaki.
Glenn Greenwald had claimed that the Al Qaeda leader’s only crimes were “speak[ing] effectively to the Muslim world about violence that the U.S. commits in [Yemen] and the responsibility of Muslims to stand up to this violence.” Examples of this could include Anwar Al-Awlaki quotes such as, “Jihad against America is binding upon myself, just as it is binding on every other able Muslim”, “Don't consult with anybody in killing the Americans, fighting the devil doesn't require consultation” and “We will implement the rule of Allah on earth by the tip of the sword.”....
https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/266121/fbi-investigated-islamist-takes-over-vermont-daniel-greenfield
FreedomPop is Britian's #1 FREE mobile phone provider.
ReplyDeleteWith voice, text & data plans starting at £0.00/month.