Julio3000 (07-14-2017)
Julio3000 (07-14-2017)
I do care about the Patriot Act and the NDAA and think both should be abolished. Likewise, I dislike the use of drones for precisely the reason you mentioned - the loss of innocent civilians. I do care about Russia because I don't want a candidate for President selling us out to another foreign power in exchange for winning the election. Just because I'm interested in the Russia angle doesn't mean I approve of those other things you mentioned - I don't.
i think my favorite thing is watching a the board "freedom lover" libertarian continually gives a pass to the republican party and how it's supposed to be what his thinking is than anything democrats do
and makes it even better when democrats hold no power at all
it's just fun imo
"For there is always light, if only we are brave enough to see it. If only we are brave enough to be it." Amanda Gorman
"When Fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross"
The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is to make sure he doesn’t get a gun.
So the former GRU guy who was in the meeting with Junior, Manafort, and Kushner was accused in a lawsuit of being hired to run a hacking operation against a Russian mining company.
Odd that Junior's full disclosure and transparency omitted the mention of this guy at all.
CK86 (07-14-2017)
"For there is always light, if only we are brave enough to see it. If only we are brave enough to be it." Amanda Gorman
"When Fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross"
CK86 (07-14-2017)
Is there a member of the Trump Family / Inner Circle that has ever told the truth about anything to do with Russia ?
And let's be clear, Russia is not a distraction.
...
Steve InskeepVerified account @NPRinskeep 5h5 hours ago
Here the president (a) makes a false claim, (b) admits it may be false, then (c) goes on as if it were true.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/gracewyler/...erm=.bdRyeQjkM …
Last edited by 57Brave; 07-14-2017 at 12:08 PM.
The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is to make sure he doesn’t get a gun.
This talking point is so dumb and desperate that it's a wonder that it even bubbled up . . . the fact that it's being repeated on the record by the POTUS is just . . . ugh.
She was allowed to travel to the US to work on the case brought against her client. I'm game to see that discussed, though, because I'd love to hear the explanation for why that case was settled so precipitously and unfavorably by the Sessions DoJ.
Runnin (07-14-2017)
Lol. Donnie had me laughing when he said at the G20 everyone was talking about Podesta's emails.
Forever Fredi
Julio3000 (07-14-2017)
More "Fake News"
Nicholas KristofVerified account @NickKristof
CNN says 8 people, including 3 still unidentified, attended the Don Trump Jr. meeting with the Russians. Oops.
The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is to make sure he doesn’t get a gun.
just more misremembering, i guess, for a topic that is obviously nothing
i mean, this russia thing certainly isn't pizza gate.
"For there is always light, if only we are brave enough to see it. If only we are brave enough to be it." Amanda Gorman
"When Fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross"
CK86 (07-14-2017)
It may not be Pizza gate but it is a distraction.
Troubling
The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is to make sure he doesn’t get a gun.
Trump Jr.’s Russia meeting sure sounds like a Russian intelligence operation
By Rolf Mowatt-Larssen July 14 at 1:48 PM
Rolf Mowatt-Larssen is the director of the Intelligence and Defense Project at Harvard’s Belfer Center. He served for three years as director of intelligence and counterintelligence at the Department of Energy and for 23 years as a CIA intelligence officer in domestic and international posts.
Donald Trump Jr. is seeking to write off as a nonevent his meeting last year with a Russian lawyer who was said to have damaging information about Hillary Clinton. “It was such a nothing,” he told Fox News’s Sean Hannity on Tuesday. “There was nothing to tell.”
But everything we know about the meeting — from whom it involved to how it was set up to how it unfolded — is in line with what intelligence analysts would expect an overture in a Russian influence operation to look like. It bears all the hallmarks of a professionally planned, carefully orchestrated intelligence soft pitch designed to gauge receptivity, while leaving room for plausible deniability in case the approach is rejected. And the Trump campaign’s willingness to take the meeting — and, more important, its failure to report the episode to U.S. authorities — may have been exactly the green light Russia was looking for to launch a more aggressive phase of intervention in the U.S. election campaign.
Let’s start with the interlocutor: Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya. When arranging the meeting, music promoter and Trump family acquaintance Rob Goldstone referred to a “Russian government attorney.” Both Veselnitskaya and the Kremlin have subsequently denied any association. What’s beyond dispute is that she has lobbied for the United States to repeal Magnitsky Act sanctions against Russian officials, that she regularly represents the interests of the Moscow regional government and that her clients include the vice president of state-owned Russian Railways.
My read, as someone who has been part of the U.S. intelligence community for more than four decades, is that Veselnitskaya is probably too well-connected to have independently initiated such a high-level and sensitive encounter. If she had, her use of known Trump and Kremlin associates (Aras and Emin Agalarov) to help make introductions and the suggestion, in Goldstone’s account, that she wanted to share “official documents and information” as “part of Russia and its government’s support” for Trump could have gotten her into significant trouble. Her efforts to meet Trump associates would have surely come to the attention of Russian authorities at some point, given Russian government email monitoring and other means of surveillance. The Kremlin would look harshly on someone going rogue in a manner that would surely damage ongoing Russian intelligence operational efforts related to the U.S. presidential campaign.
A better explanation is that Veselnitskaya is far enough removed from Moscow’s halls of power to make her a good fit as an intermediary in an intelligence operation — as a “cut-out” with limited knowledge of the larger scheme and as an “access agent” sent to assess and test a high-priority target’s interest in cooperation. She may have had her own agenda going into the meeting: to lobby against the Magnitsky Act, which happens to impact some of her clients. But her agenda dovetailed with Kremlin interests — and it would have added another layer of plausible deniability. Russian intelligence practice is to co-opt such a person. News Friday that she was accompanied by Rinat Akhmetshin, a Russian-American lobbyist who is reportedly suspected of, though denies, having ties to Russian intelligence, further bolsters this reading.
.......
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlo...=.ef39496fd05a
"For there is always light, if only we are brave enough to see it. If only we are brave enough to be it." Amanda Gorman
"When Fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross"
CK86 (07-14-2017)
A lot of misremembering going on by Junior. Really takes after his father.
Forever Fredi