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And it Begins:Special Prosecutor To Investigate Trump And Russia

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Quote Originally Posted by Elfiero View Post
So you are a member of the Reich Wing? You admit as much
I do? Do tell me where?

Once again, you violate the intent of the TONE IT DOWN edict.


Ironic that Elfie would mention the 3rd Reich, when the term NAZI refers to the National Socialist Party.
 
Quote Originally Posted by Elfiero View Post
So you are a member of the Reich Wing? You admit as much
I do? Do tell me where?

Once again, you violate the intent of the TONE IT DOWN edict.


Ironic that Elfie would mention the 3rd Reich, when the term NAZI refers to the National Socialist Party.
She is always confused. Lol

Sent from my SM-G950U using Steeler Nation mobile app
 
Yeah I did and this was the gist of it:

We will not allow posts calling for people to spray bullets on any crowd of people or posts calling for the death of anyone on this site

I dont see what that has to do with what I posted, the irony of course was that one of the members here while not threatening me directly, wished me dead.

I have never done that in return. Not even to the sorriest racist individuals here.

the post says to tone down the rhetoric, the spraying bullets was just an example. Read any of you posts for other examples..
 
Debate?

Have you not learned from the relentless intellectual beatings I have served to you clowns over the years?

Sometimes I just like to stick your heads in the toilet for ***** and giggles.......but yeah, keep living in that alternate reality.

If you consider always chasing your own tail and being made to look like a complete blithering idiot as giving intellectual beatings then you certainly have.
 
Mueller investigating funds used for Trump inauguration



Trump's inaugural committee raised massive amounts of cash, much of which is still unaccounted for.

And here is yet another Russian connection....but hey " no collusion!....no collusion!"

Russians just like giving contributions to American politicians because they like America............


Robert Mueller is looking into the curious case of Donald Trump’s record inaugural fundraising, according to a report by ABC News.

The report on Friday said the Russia special counsel and his team of investigators have questioned “several witnesses,” including Trump’s friend and chair of the organizing committee Tom Barrack, about contributions to the fund — particularly “donors with connections to Russia, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.”

Mueller’s interest in the inaugural committee seems to overlap with some figures who have entered the public spotlight recently thanks to disclosures of shifty payments to Trump fixer Michael Cohen.

Andrew Intrater, who runs Columbus Nova, gave $250,000 to the inaugural fund. He is a business associate of and relative to Russian billionaire oligarch Viktor Vekselberg, who is close to Vladimir Putin. Intrater and Vekselberg attended Trump’s inauguration.

Another likely person of interest is Leonard Blavatnik, who has extensive business ties in Russia and is no stranger to attention from Mueller’s team over contributions to Trump — he gave $1 million to the committee through his company, Access Industries.

AT&T — which came under fire for the “big mistake” it made after Trump was elected in paying Michael Cohen $600,000 to do very little — gave $2,082,483 to the inaugural fund (second only to Sheldon Adelson’s $5 million contribution).

Pfizer, Lockheed Martin, Dow, Bank of America, Qualcomm, and Boeing each contributed $1 million to the fund, and many other corporations gave hundreds of thousands, which is not unheard of for an inaugural committee. Yet Trump’s corporate contribution total hit $45 million, which is $8 million less than the $53 million Barack Obama’s 2009 inauguration raised in total from individuals and corporations.

What happened to the money Trump collected? Apart from huge perks to top donors, it’s not fully clear.

The committee Trump formed to fund his inaugural festivities raised $107 million, the most in history, about twice the previous record. While prior administrations used donations limits to allay fears of bribery and influence-buying, Trump’s committee had no such limits.

Obama banned corporate, PAC, and lobbyist money — a rule that was abandoned by Trump. Bill Clinton and George W. Bush refused corporate contributions over $100,000 (Bush increased the limit to $250,000 for his second inaugural). The complete lack of any such limits on Trump’s inaugural fund, and the corresponding lack of transparency of how the money was actually spent after the relatively smaller festivities died down fostered concerns of graft and bribery.

Yeah, Mueller has no evidence............Lol

https://thinkprogress.org/mueller-probes-trump-inaugural-fundraising-ec0049f3fdde/
 
And from the Washington Examiner; the right wing rag that makes Mein Kampf read as leftist. Even they see what's coming down the pike.

Put a fork in that orange rotten POS....your boy is DONE.

The money is the means of Robert Mueller's investigation into Trump

by Tom Rogan
| May 11, 2018 04:46 PM


It should shock absolutely no one that special counsel Robert Mueller is focusing in on President Trump's money flows. Mueller is specifically interested in the Trump organization's receipt of payments from foreign individuals connected to foreign governments.

Russia, of course, stands out here.

As ABC News reported on Friday, one particular area in Mueller's focus is the payments Trump received towards his inauguration costs. That said, I have been confident since late last year that Mueller has at least two other focus areas related to foreign money and the Trump Organization. The most relevant concern here is the question of Trump benefiting from Russian actors who retain close links to President Vladimir Putin.

Yet Mueller's interest in accounting records has a special significance for the special counsel in that it allows him to attempt to paint a forensic picture of a quid pro quo relationship between the Russians and the Trump Organization.

This isn't a fishing trip in the darkness. As one source told me, "This allows Mueller to gather evidence for trial proceedings without needing to publicize sensitive intelligence community sources and methods." The source added that this is an especially operative concern in that some of the investigative material Mueller has acquired was provided from foreign intelligence partners. Those partners demand that their information remains highly classified and out of the public domain.

What does this mean for Trump?

While the Mueller team has been portraying itself as largely disinterested in the president, that effort is a textbook example of a legal dangle designed to lure Trump or those in his inner circle into a false sense of security. In flowing vein, it's a mistake to believe those Mueller critics (notably joined this week by Vice President Mike Pence) who claim that the special counsel is throwing out lines hoping to catch anything. The harder truth is that Mueller is a patient investigator who is biding his time and slowly painting his picture.

More indictments will arrive in the coming weeks.
 
If you consider always chasing your own tail and being made to look like a complete blithering idiot as giving intellectual beatings then you certainly have.

You have either not been here long enough, or not paying attention.

Because it could never be that some are too stupid to comprehend the back and forth.....not on your side....no never...
 
I Mueller really had something, it would have been leaked by now.

And I have been here long enough and been paying attention. I lost count of how many times Steeltime gave you a beatdown, with nothing but facts.
 
And from the Washington Examiner; the right wing rag that makes Mein Kampf read as leftist. Even they see what's coming down the pike.

Put a fork in that orange rotten POS....your boy is DONE.

The money is the means of Robert Mueller's investigation into Trump

by Tom Rogan
| May 11, 2018 04:46 PM


It should shock absolutely no one that special counsel Robert Mueller is focusing in on President Trump's money flows. Mueller is specifically interested in the Trump organization's receipt of payments from foreign individuals connected to foreign governments.

Russia, of course, stands out here.

As ABC News reported on Friday, one particular area in Mueller's focus is the payments Trump received towards his inauguration costs. That said, I have been confident since late last year that Mueller has at least two other focus areas related to foreign money and the Trump Organization. The most relevant concern here is the question of Trump benefiting from Russian actors who retain close links to President Vladimir Putin.

Yet Mueller's interest in accounting records has a special significance for the special counsel in that it allows him to attempt to paint a forensic picture of a quid pro quo relationship between the Russians and the Trump Organization.

This isn't a fishing trip in the darkness. As one source told me, "This allows Mueller to gather evidence for trial proceedings without needing to publicize sensitive intelligence community sources and methods." The source added that this is an especially operative concern in that some of the investigative material Mueller has acquired was provided from foreign intelligence partners. Those partners demand that their information remains highly classified and out of the public domain.

What does this mean for Trump?

While the Mueller team has been portraying itself as largely disinterested in the president, that effort is a textbook example of a legal dangle designed to lure Trump or those in his inner circle into a false sense of security. In flowing vein, it's a mistake to believe those Mueller critics (notably joined this week by Vice President Mike Pence) who claim that the special counsel is throwing out lines hoping to catch anything. The harder truth is that Mueller is a patient investigator who is biding his time and slowly painting his picture.

More indictments will arrive in the coming weeks.

posting op-eds and claiming them as fact? quite a desperation move, elfie.
 
thinkprogress.org/mueller-probes-trump-inaugural-fundraising-ec0049f3fdde/[/url]

thinkprogress?
more fake news from the alt-left
 
Last edited:
I Mueller really had something, it would have been leaked by now.

And I have been here long enough and been paying attention. I lost count of how many times Steeltime gave you a beatdown, with nothing but facts.

Really?

Steeltime even lost an argument over the Paula Jones settlement case which is ironic since he claims to be a lawyer. After I posted the facts, and the amounts paid by Clinton's homeowners policy he ran away.

His whole argument was based on the idea that this money was paid to lawyers representing Jones from a policy usually held by employers.

WRONG on both counts.

I've dragged him kicking and screaming from " There is no man made global warming" to " we know the warming is happening, but how much is caused by man? And "we can't modify our whole economy if we don't know exactly how much warming will take place."

Yet he keeps the front up for you clowns while rolling on the ground at my feet.

Please.....don't even get me started on the "Nazis were Christians" beatdown.

Meanwhile I am steady with my positions,and with the facts as they pertain.

Don't be fooled by his 50 fake graphs from some oil funded web site, or immigration studies from the Heritage Foundation......LMAO.
 
More fantasy from Thinkprogress.
 
Cope, LOL...SMH...who is the key principal in the "campaign of Donald Trump?"

DONALD TRUMP. It doesn't say everyone "except" Trump and only those people in the campaign that are NOT Trump.

The key Principal(s) are the ones who have already been questioned starting with Paul Manafort and Richard Gates.

Fox news has a pretty good run down of the investigation here:

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/04/27/trump-and-russia-investigation-what-to-know.html

To tell you the truth, i think Trump was to busy with his businesses and campaign to devote the amount of time it would have taken to actively collude in this election. People doing it for his benefit is more believable to me.
 
Apparently investigating fictious businesses is keeping Mueller in business.
 
The key Principal(s) are the ones who have already been questioned starting with Paul Manafort and Richard Gates.
.

Let us not forget the one horned loser that contributed to the false narrative.

MCcain_Dossier.jpg
 
Well isn't this special?

Old, honest, full of integrity, never-to-be-questioned Robert Republican Mueller...has ties with Russian oligarchs? Egads...

Morning Joe will not be covering this...

Mueller may have a conflict — and it leads directly to a Russian oligarch

Special counsel Robert Mueller has withstood relentless political attacks, many distorting his record of distinguished government service.

But there’s one episode even Mueller’s former law enforcement comrades — and independent ethicists — acknowledge raises legitimate legal issues and a possible conflict of interest in his overseeing the Russia election probe.

In 2009, when Mueller ran the FBI, the bureau asked Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska to spend millions of his own dollars funding an FBI-supervised operation to rescue a retired FBI agent, Robert Levinson, captured in Iran while working for the CIA in 2007.



Yes, that’s the same Deripaska who has surfaced in Mueller’s current investigation and who was recently sanctioned by the Trump administration.

The Levinson mission is confirmed by more than a dozen participants inside and outside the FBI, including Deripaska, his lawyer, the Levinson family and a retired agent who supervised the case. Mueller was kept apprised of the operation, officials told me.

Some aspects of Deripaska’s help were chronicled in a 2016 book by reporter Barry Meier, but sources provide extensive new information about his role.

They said FBI agents courted Deripaska in 2009 in a series of secret hotel meetings in Paris; Vienna; Budapest, Hungary, and Washington. Agents persuaded the aluminum industry magnate to underwrite the mission. The Russian billionaire insisted the operation neither involve nor harm his homeland.

“We knew he was paying for his team helping us, and that probably ran into the millions,” a U.S. official involved in the operation confirmed.

One agent who helped court Deripaska was Andrew McCabe, the recently fired FBI deputy director who played a seminal role starting the Trump-Russia case, multiple sources confirmed.

Deripaska’s lawyer said the Russian ultimately spent $25 million assembling a private search and rescue team that worked with Iranian contacts under the FBI’s watchful eye. Photos and videos indicating Levinson was alive were uncovered.

Then in fall 2010, the operation secured an offer to free Levinson. The deal was scuttled, however, when the State Department become uncomfortable with Iran’s terms, according to Deripaska’s lawyer and the Levinson family.

FBI officials confirmed State hampered their efforts.

“We tried to turn over every stone we could to rescue Bob, but every time we started to get close, the State Department seemed to always get in the way,” said Robyn Gritz, the retired agent who supervised the Levinson case in 2009, when Deripaska first cooperated, but who left for another position in 2010 before the Iranian offer arrived. “I kept Director Mueller and Deputy Director [John] Pistole informed of the various efforts and operations, and they offered to intervene with State, if necessary.”

FBI officials ended the operation in 2011, concerned that Deripaska’s Iranian contacts couldn’t deliver with all the U.S. infighting. Levinson was never found; his whereabouts remain a mystery, 11 years after he disappeared.

“Deripaska’s efforts came very close to success,” said David McGee, a former federal prosecutor who represents Levinson’s family. “We were told at one point that the terms of Levinson’s release had been agreed to by Iran and the U.S. and included a statement by then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pointing a finger away from Iran. At the last minute, Secretary Clinton decided not to make the agreed-on statement.”

The State Department declined comment, and a spokesman for Clinton did not offer comment. Mueller’s spokesman, Peter Carr, declined to answer questions. As did McCabe.

The FBI had three reasons for choosing Deripaska for a mission worthy of a spy novel. First, his aluminum empire had business in Iran. Second, the FBI wanted a foreigner to fund the operation because spending money in Iran might violate U.S. sanctions and other laws. Third, agents knew Deripaska had been banished since 2006 from the United States by State over reports he had ties to organized crime and other nefarious activities. He denies the allegations, and nothing was ever proven in court.

The FBI rewarded Deripaska for his help. In fall 2009, according to U.S. entry records, Deripaska visited Washington on a rare law enforcement parole visa. And since 2011, he has been granted entry at least eight times on a diplomatic passport, even though he doesn’t work for the Russian Foreign Ministry.

Former FBI officials confirm they arranged the access.

Deripaska said in a statement through Adam Waldman, his American lawyer, that FBI agents told him State’s reasons for blocking his U.S. visa were “merely a pretext.”

“The FBI said they had undertaken a careful background check, and if there was any validity to the State Department smears, they would not have reached out to me for assistance,” the Russian said.

Then, over the past two years, evidence emerged tying him to former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, the first defendant charged by Mueller’s Russia probe with money laundering and illegal lobbying.

Deripaska once hired Manafort as a political adviser and invested money with him in a business venture that went bad. Deripaska sued Manafort, alleging he stole money.

Mueller’s indictment of Manafort makes no mention of Deripaska, even though prosecutors have evidence that Manafort contemplated inviting his old Russian client for a 2016 Trump campaign briefing. Deripaska said he never got the invite and investigators have found no evidence it occurred. There’s no public evidence Deripaska had anything to do with election meddling.

Deripaska also appears to be one of the first Russians the FBI asked for help when it began investigating the now-infamous Fusion GPS “Steele Dossier.” Waldman, his American lawyer until the sanctions hit, gave me a detailed account, some of which U.S. officials confirm separately.

Two months before Trump was elected president, Deripaska was in New York as part of Russia’s United Nations delegation when three FBI agents awakened him in his home; at least one agent had worked with Deripaska on the aborted effort to rescue Levinson. During an hour-long visit, the agents posited a theory that Trump’s campaign was secretly colluding with Russia to hijack the U.S. election.

“Deripaska laughed but realized, despite the joviality, that they were serious,” the lawyer said. “So he told them in his informed opinion the idea they were proposing was false. ‘You are trying to create something out of nothing,’ he told them.” The agents left though the FBI sought more information in 2017 from the Russian, sources tell me. Waldman declined to say if Deripaska has been in contact with the FBI since Sept, 2016.

So why care about some banished Russian oligarch’s account now?

Two reasons.

First, as the FBI prepared to get authority to surveil figures on Trump’s campaign team, did it disclose to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that one of its past Russian sources waived them off the notion of Trump-Russia collusion?

Second, the U.S. government in April imposed sanctions on Deripaska, one of several prominent Russians targeted to punish Vladimir Putin — using the same sort of allegations that State used from 2006 to 2009. Yet, between those two episodes, Deripaska seemed good enough for the FBI to ask him to fund that multimillion-dollar rescue mission. And to seek his help on a sensitive political investigation. And to allow him into the country eight times.

I was alerted to Deripaska’s past FBI relationship by U.S. officials who wondered whether the Russian’s conspicuous absence from Mueller’s indictments might be related to his FBI work.

They aren’t the only ones.

Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz told me he believes Mueller has a conflict of interest because his FBI previously accepted financial help from a Russian that is, at the very least, a witness in the current probe.

“The real question becomes whether it was proper to leave [Deripaska] out of the Manafort indictment, and whether that omission was to avoid the kind of transparency that is really required by the law,” Dershowitz said.

Melanie Sloan, a former Clinton Justice Department lawyer and longtime ethics watchdog, told me a “far more significant issue” is whether the earlier FBI operation was even legal: “It’s possible the bureau’s arrangement with Mr. Deripaska violated the Antideficiency Act, which prohibits the government from accepting voluntary services.”

George Washington University constitutional law professor Jonathan Turley agreed: “If the operation with Deripaska contravened federal law, this figure could be viewed as a potential embarrassment for Mueller. The question is whether he could implicate Mueller in an impropriety.”

Now that sources have unmasked the Deripaska story, time will tell whether the courts, Justice, Congress or a defendant formally questions if Mueller is conflicted.

In the meantime, the episode highlights an oft-forgotten truism: The cat-and-mouse maneuvers between Moscow and Washington are often portrayed in black-and-white terms. But the truth is, the relationship is enveloped in many shades of gray.
 
Then there's this gem...

Russia is saying "Prove it." As Rush said, Mueller targeted this organization and 13 Russians knowing they wouldn't come to court...except. WHOOPS. They wanna come to court. And there...is...no...evidence. This oughta be good.

The Russians Try to Call Mueller’s Bluff, File Request to View Secret Grand Jury Info

Attorneys for an alleged component of Russian trolling efforts during the 2016 presidential election are demanding that special counsel Robert Mueller be forced to reveal the grand jury instructions used in count one of the government’s indictment against Concord Management and Consulting LLC.

The nine-page motion (plus supporting documents) filed with the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia relies upon Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e)(3)(E)(ii) which provides:

The court may authorize disclosure—at a time, in a manner, and subject to any other conditions that it directs—of a grand-jury matter…at the request of a defendant who shows that a ground may exist to dismiss the indictment because of a matter that occurred before the grand jury.

The motion further specifies that Concord Management is requesting a private “inspection of the legal instructions provided to the grand jury regarding Count One of the Indictment…in order to determine whether the instructions provided could support a motion to dismiss Count One of the Indictment.”

Concord’s argument is that Mueller failed to include a necessary knowledge requirement in count one of the indictment against Concord Management and other Russian entities and therefore, may need to be dismissed. (A knowledge requirement refers to intent or knowledge of criminal wrongdoing. Thus, an allegedly offending party would have knowledge of the criminality they’re alleged to have engaged in.) The motion notes, “violations of the relevant federal campaign laws and foreign agent registration requirements administered by the DOJ and the FEC require the defendant to have acted ‘willfully,’ a word that does not appear anywhere in Count One of the Indictment.”

The motion continues, “As such, Count One of the Indictment appears to be facially invalid because it fails to charge an essential element of the offense of conspiracy to defraud the United States by impairing, obstructing and defeating the functions of the FEC and the DOJ, that is, that the Defendant acted willfully, in this case meaning that Defendant was aware of the FEC and FARA requirements, agreed to violate those requirements, and ultimately acted with intent to violate those requirements.”

Concord Management’s Monday motion contains at least one reference to U.S. case law where similar indictments were dismissed because they failed to adequately track statutory language. In other words, Concord Management is arguing that Mueller and his army of attorneys charged Concord Management (and other Russian entities) with a vague-sounding “crime” that isn’t actually a crime.

In fact, Concord Management’s motion explicitly says as much, claiming, “[T]he DOJ never brought any case like the instant Indictment, that is, an alleged conspiracy by a foreign corporation to ‘interfere’ in a Presidential election by allegedly funding free speech. The obvious reason for this is that no such crime exists in the federal criminal code.”

Because Mueller’s indictment was apparently sloppy (or intentionally vague) in this regard, Concord Management is asking the court to inspect the language of the grand jury instructions–with the hope that the court agrees the indictment actually failed to include all of the elements of the crime charged. As the motion notes, under U.S. law, indictments must contain all such elements.

The motion also takes some rhetorical license to savage Mueller’s mandate and his apparent focus on private Russian businesses. A representative section reads, in relevant part:

[T]he Deputy Attorney General acting for the recused Attorney General has rejected the history and integrity of the DOJ, and instead licensed a Special Counsel who for all practical political purposes cannot be fired, to indict a case that has absolutely nothing to do with any links or coordination between any candidate and the Russian Government. The reason is obvious, and is political: to justify his own existence the Special Counsel has to indict a Russian – any Russian.

The footnotes also contain a sarcastic reference to “Casablanca” and increase the rhetorical reach of Concord’s potshots at Mueller’s initial indictment.

One such footnote alleges, “Count One of the Indictment is devoid of any specificity about what any officer or employee of Concord actually did other than to generally allege that Concord funded an ‘Organization’ that the Special Counsel imagined and created.” Ouch.
 
The Mueller investigation is going down in flames. The timing will be interesting. It is only a matter of time before Sessions fires Rosenstein,........or Trump fires Sessions. But I think there is more happening with the IG report that will blow this ****** up Then the Mueller Investigation gets exposed for the coverup that it is. I just got to shake my head.

Oh....and Stormy Daniels will go back to the dustbin of porn has beens. Avenatti will go to work for MSNBC....for 6 mos.

Then the world will begin to right itself.
 
Even Pelosi is getting tired of the ****-show.

Dem rep rips Pelosi for undermining Trump impeachment push
Adam Shaw Fox News

A Democratic lawmaker who has tirelessly campaigned for President Trump's impeachment blasted House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi on Monday for undermining his effort.

Pelosi, in an interview with The Dallas Morning News, had said she wishes Democrats like Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, would not make impeaching Trump a rallying cry.
"We have elections," she said. "Go vote if it's a policy thing and a behavior thing. I don't know if you can get impeached for being a jerk, but if we did, this guy would be long gone. But that's not unifying."

But Green, who has spearheaded the push to impeach Trump, criticized Pelosi, saying that reducing Trump to a jerk “trivializes the impact of his bigoted policies on Jews, Latinos, African-Americans, women and the LGBTQ community.”

“Trivializing his bigotry also allows Trump supporters to hypothesize that while Trump may be an objectionable jerk he is not an impeachable bigot, which is not true,” he said in a statement.

Green went on to say that Trump is “the quintessential person that impeachment was designed for.”

The House overwhelmingly rejected an impeachment resolution by Green in December, and again in January shortly after Trump was reported to have called some African and Latin American countries as “s---hole” countries. Both were comfortably rejected by the House, although 66 Democrats voted against the motion to table the January effort.

DEMOCRATIC REP. AL GREEN INTRODUCES ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT AGAINST TRUMP -- AGAIN

Last month, Pelosi told reporters that talk of impeachment is a "gift" to Republicans, and urged Democrats to instead focus on promoting policies that help address the needs of everyday Americans.
The New York Times reported recently that ahead of the November midterms, Republicans are using the Democratic push for impeachment as a way to energize conservatives -- warning of a “coup” from the anti-Trump left.

Earlier this month, Pelosi told Politico that impeachment was popular in her district, but that she still didn’t support it: “I’m not walking away from impeachment for political reasons and I’m not walking toward it for political reasons. I just think it’s divisive and I think what we should do is always try to unify.”

Re: the bolded, uh, the guy might be the most pro-Israel POTUS I can remember us having, and he promoted the first ever African-American female to Brigadier General in the Marine Corps. Not to mention his other female appointments including Gina Haspel. And isn't Black & Hispanic unemployment at an all-time low? And is Green ultimately saying there's no meat on any collusion or illegal activity bone, but that Trump is simply an objectionable bigot and the “the quintessential person that impeachment was designed for”? Wow. Embarrassing this guy got elected to any position of government.
 
Even Pelosi is getting tired of the ****-show.



Re: the bolded, uh, the guy might be the most pro-Israel POTUS I can remember us having, and he promoted the first ever African-American female to Brigadier General in the Marine Corps. Not to mention his other female appointments including Gina Haspel. And isn't Black & Hispanic unemployment at an all-time low? And is Green ultimately saying there's no meat on any collusion or illegal activity bone, but that Trump is simply an objectionable bigot and the “the quintessential person that impeachment was designed for”? Wow. Embarrassing this guy got elected to any position of government.
Maybe the D beside his name is his performance grade?

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