Comey Fires Off Tweet After Trump Threatens Former FBI Chief With JAIL – Twitter Responds

Comey Fires Off Tweet After Trump Threatens Former FBI Chief With JAIL – Twitter Responds

President Trump unleashed on James Comey Sunday morning in a ferocious tweetstorm and even threatened the former FBI chief with jail for leaking classified information.

James Comey fired off a tweet a few hours later and Trump supporters on Twitter torched him.

Crooked cop Comey is set to embark on a book tour to peddle his fictional memoir “A Higher Loyalty.”

Excerpts of the book have made their rounds ahead of the April 17 release date.

Comey personally attacked President Trump by trashing his marriage to First Lady Melania and poked fun at his appearance.

The disgraced former FBI Director had the nerve to say Trump “is unethical, and untethered to truth and institutional values.”

Sunday morning Trump hit Comey hard and even threatened him with jail.

Trump tweeted: “The big questions in Comey’s badly reviewed book aren’t answered like, how come he gave up Classified Information (jail), why did he lie to Congress (jail), why did the DNC refuse to give Server to the FBI (why didn’t they TAKE it), why the phony memos, McCabe’s $700,000 & more?”

Round 2: Comey throws AG Lynch “under the bus!” Why can’t we all find out what happened on the tarmac in the back of the plane with Wild Bill and Lynch? Was she promised a Supreme Court seat, or AG, in order to lay off Hillary. No golf and grandkids talk (give us all a break)!

Round 3: I never asked Comey for Personal Loyalty. I hardly even knew this guy. Just another of his many lies. His “memos” are self serving and FAKE!

Round 4: Slippery James Comey, a man who always ends up badly and out of whack (he is not smart!), will go down as the WORST FBI Director in history, by far!

James Comey tweeted a few hours later about “ethical leadership.”

No Bible verses or cryptic philosophical quotes this time around, Comey?

Comey tweeted: My book is about ethical leadership & draws on stories from my life & lessons I learned from others. 3 presidents are in my book: 2 help illustrate the values at the heart of ethical leadership; 1 serves as a counterpoint. I hope folks read the whole thing and find it useful.

Comey’s sit-down interview with sycophant George Stephanopoulos airs Sunday night at 10 PM EST on ABC.

Trump supporters on Twitter torched Comey.

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via The Gateway Pundit

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‘Mission Accomplished?’: Networks Desperately Move the Goalposts on Syria

On Sunday morning, television news personalities begrudgingly showed a small degree of satisfaction with President Trump’s recent military action in Syria. Evidently disturbed by their support for anything Trump, cable and network media hosts collectively lifted the goalposts in unison and hurriedly ran them downfield. 

In a bid for something — anything — to take issue with in regards to the recent military strike in Syria, network hosts frantically coalesced around a common shelling point: the President’s Twitter account. Specifically, the point of contention was a tweet in which the President used the phrase, “Mission accomplished,” which as many talking heads helpfully pointed out, was the same ill-advised terminology President Bush had used to declare the Iraq war a success prematurely. 

ABC Chief Global Affairs Correspondent Martha Raddatz opined in regards to that Trump tweet: 

It’s not wise the to use the term mission accomplished in an ongoing conflict. If what you wanted was a limited, punishing strike, as safe for U.S and allied forces as you can possibly make it, with no unintended casualties on the ground and no escalation in the conflict, then the mission was accomplished. 

In other words, if the Trump administration had intended to accomplish exactly what these airstrikes had achieved, then sure, maybe the mission was technically “accomplished.” But, Raddatz shrewdly observed, the alleged destruction of Assad’s chemical weapons caches would not “change the dynamics of the war on the ground.” 

This Week host George Stephanopoulos neatly tied a bow on the cognitive dissonance inherent in Raddatz’s analysis: “Martha Raddatz said perhaps the initial mission was accomplished, but that the overall declaration of ‘mission accomplished’ is premature.” 

 

 

On CBS’s Face The Nation, Margaret Brennan pushed a similar talking point. “President Trump says the strike was perfectly executed and that the mission was accomplished, but some in Congress say the strikes didn’t go far enough,” she nitpicked. Brennan failed to mention that the members of Congress to whom she was referring were predominantly Democrats. But that was probably just an oversight. She continued, “Either way, the question remains — what exactly is the strategy in Syria and the conflict that’s now in its seventh year?”

Meet The Press host and NBC News political director Chuck Todd took the same angle, demanding to know what precisely the administration’s strategy in Syria would be. “I know they believe the tactical mission was a success, but do we know what the strategy is on Syria going forward?” he huffed. New York Times News Magazine chief national correspondent Mark Liebovich reiterated Todd’s assessment: “Mission accomplished is a short-term declaration, and when you tweet about it, this is not a substitute forefather a message or a strategy.” 

Though the tweet was the specific headline issue that hosts were criticizing, their talking points in panel discussions about Syria bore a curious resemblance to criticism of the strike voiced by Democrats in Congress. The main thrust of their arguments appeared to be that while they believed the airstrikes were a success, there would not be satisfied until a precise plan of action going forward was released. 

On CNN, the demands went a step further, with Inside Politics host John King appearing unlikely to be satisfied until Assad was either deposed or dead and the civil war in Syria was over: 

But the question is where are we today and what next? The Syrian Presidency tweeting out a picture of Bashar al-Assad walking to work, going to an office building, essentially trying to say nothing changed. The conversation among a lot of people, even Trump administration supporters, is that Assad has factored this in: “If once a year I have to take a rein of cruise missiles, but I get to stay in power, so be it.”

Moving the goalposts in a political discussion is not often regarded as an impressive strategy. But the sheer coordination with which Sunday’s cable and network news hosts managed to achieve this feat of across-the-board narrative shifting was enough to impress even the most blackhearted of cynics. 

via NewsBusters – Exposing Liberal Media Bias

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Forget ‘Climate Change’… Now It’s ‘Climate Restoration’

Same scam, different name.

Via PJ Media:

In the end, somehow we knew it would come to this. The Left, in the form of the think thank, RAND, has gone full Luddite:

Since the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, society has organized efforts to limit the magnitude of climate change around the concept of stabilization — that is, accepting some climate change but holding it within acceptable bounds. This report offers an initial exploration of the concept of climate restoration — that is, approaches that seek to return atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases to preindustrial levels within one to two generations. Using a simple integrated assessment model, the analysis examines climate restoration through the lens of risk management under conditions of deep uncertainty, exploring the technology, economic, and policy conditions under which it might be possible to achieve various climate restoration goals and the conditions under which society might be better off with (rather than without) a climate restoration goal. This report also explores near-term actions that might help manage the risks of climate restoration.

Take a moment and try to grasp how utterly demented this is. So great is the cultural-Marxist hatred for modernity — Marx himself was a child of the Industrial Revolution and developed his crackpot scheme based on mid-19th century conditions — that, like the Luddite, they wish to return to some halcyon period before… well, you draw the line wherever you like.

Keep reading…

via Weasel Zippers

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MSNBC Paints NRA As Anti-Black, Ignores Work Defending Black Gun Owners

On Sunday’s AM Joy, during a discussion of her interview with pro-gun liberal rapper Killer Mike, host Joy Reid suggested that the NRA had railed against President Barack Obama because he is black, and MSNBC contributor Toure Neblett accused the pro-gun group of not doing anything to defend minority gun owners.

The segment seemed oblivious to a recent video released by NRA TV’s Colion Noir which recounted NRA’s history of defending gun rights for blacks, including in recent years helping residents of Chicago and Delaware sue for their gun ownership rights.

Toward the end of the show, after her interview with Killer Mike from the previous segment, Reid went to Neblett for his reaction, and he wrongly seemed to suggest that the NRA was founded as a reaction to the Black Panther movement of the 1960s. Neblett: “If he (Killer Mike) wants to talk about increasing gun ownership, right, where is the NRA for black and brown people? It starts as a reaction to the Black Panthers, as you note.”

After noting the cases of Philando Castile and John Crawford — innocent black men who were tragically shot and killed by police because of a misunderstanding — he continued: “Is the NRA there for black people? And we know that the NRA is consistently using black men as a boogeyman to motivate gun sales. Where are you on that, Mike?”

Reid soon complained about NRA reaction to President Obama:

Speaking of using black men to sell guns, you know, the NRA have been pretty explicit about the fact — gun manufacturers have been explicit that having a black man in the white house really helped gun sales. They scaremongered around Barack Obama — made a lot of money — they actually stockpiled guns to sell thinking then there’s going to be a woman who’s going to come and bring the black helicopters.

She lost, and now companies like Remington that make the AR-15 are financially down the tubes because they don’t have a black man to use to scaremonger.

But the NRA’s Noir recently recorded a commentary in which he responded to accusations by liberals that the NRA is racist, and recalled that the pro-gun group has a history of defending gun ownership by black Americans:

Where media engages in the most egregious form of willful ignorance is when they push the narrative that the NRA doesn’t care about minority gun owners. But the NRA has been fighting for the rights of all gun owners for more than 100 years, including minority gun owners. But because these so-called reporters with degrees from top universities are incapable of researching, I now have to do their job at the risk of pandering to my own people.

In 2008, the Supreme Court ruled that Chicago’s 28-year-old ban on gun ownership was unconstitutional. The case was brought in part by a 76-year-old black man who lived in a Morgan Park neighborhood that had been taken over by gangs and drug dealers. The NRA supported and argued on behalf of McDonald, a black man whose gun rights, according to the mainstream media, the NRA is not supposed to care about. 

Josephine Byrd, an elderly black woman, her building was overrun with crime, drugs, and prostitutes. Josephine wanted a gun for protection, but the Wilmington Housing Authority banned their elderly tenants from owning a gun for protection. Did any of the people who claim the NRA doesn’t care about minority gun ownership step up and help Ms. Byrd? No. But the NRA did. 

They helped her sue the housing authority where the Delaware Supreme Court ruled in her favor. Ms. Byrd was later specially recognized at the NRA membership meeting, and was also featured in a national TV ad paid by the NRA. And, as you guessed, most of the media ignored it.

via NewsBusters – Exposing Liberal Media Bias

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DA King: GOP Blocks Georgia Immigration Enforcement Bill, But OKs Traffic Cameras

The Republican Speaker of the Georgia House blocked a bill that would help deport criminal illegal aliens, but he pushed through a last-minute bill touted by his lobbyist son, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. 

The paper reported April 12:

Georgia House Speaker David Ralston delayed the end of this year’s legislative session past a midnight deadline so lawmakers could vote on a bill to allow speeding ticket cameras in school zones.

The bill was pushed by Ralston’s son, a lobbyist for an Arizona-based company, American Traffic Solutions, that sells the camera systems to local governments.

Ralston and Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle, the president of the state Senate, agreed to continue working past midnight to allow the House to approve the bill after it had passed the Senate a few minutes earlier, said Kaleb McMichen, a spokesman for Ralston, a Blue Ridge Republican.

In contrast, Ralston refused to allow a vote on a public safety bill in the GOP-dominated House before ended its annual session on March 30. Corporate-funded anti-borders groups took credit for the defeating the bill, which would have required state officials to notify federal immigration-enforcement officers of illegal migrants in the state’s jails. 

GOP leaders offered excuses for blocking the popular immigration-reform bill

“We ran out of time before we had finished all the bills that were worthwhile,” said House Majority Whip, Christian Coomer. “Other bills took priority and SB452 wasn’t called before the clock struck midnight,” he told the liberal Atlanta Journal-Constitution newspaper. 

GOP Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle originally backed the immigration enforcement legislation but stayed quiet when the bill was narrowed to exclude migrants who did not commit “serious crimes.” But after the bill was blocked, Cagle issued a statement saying:

Law enforcement agencies at every level of government should work together to make sure that criminal illegal aliens who commit serious crimes are arrested, convicted, deported, and never allowed back inside our nation’s borders.

Cagle is one of four GOP politicians vying for this year’s gubernatorial nomination. 

Ralston faces a May 22 primary election against Margaret Williamson

Ralston is an attorney, with clients that include construction companies. Many construction companies rely on black-market labor hired by subcontractors. His website says:

The firm also represents the interests of both home builders and contractors, as well as home owners in litigation issues arising over construction.  With over 35 years of courtroom experience in the construction law area, our firm has successfully litigated and defended against a range of matters in the construction area.

Majority whip Coomer told excused the decision by telling the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the GOP establishment might approve a similar bill in 2019 and – if public pressure continues. 

“If the state’s interest in reasonable law enforcement approaches to criminal aliens and misdemeanor bail issues remains high, then another version of the bill may see movement next year,” he said. 

In its final version, the criminal alien measure required law enforcement to notify federal officials when police detained an illegal alien convicted of a felony, a ‘high and aggravated misdemeanor’ or DUI. Language in the legislation also would have required the state Department of Corrections to post quarterly reports on the immigration status and number of non-citizens in the state prison system.

According to federal estimates, Georgia is home to more illegal aliens than Arizona.

As Breitbart reported, the bill easily passed the Senate in a tougher form but was held up in the House when it was gutted in the Public Safety and Homeland Security sub-Committee led by GOP Rep. Heath Clark, who compared immigration enforcement to “Nazi Germany.” 

Clark later told Breitbart the Nazi term was ‘… definitely, probably a little far.” Clark eventually apologized for his remark to this writer and was reportedly willing to speak in support of final passage of the bill on House floor.

 When asked about the failure of the legislation and the likelihood of Georgians becoming victims of future criminal activity by illegal aliens in the Peach State, Billy Inman, father of Dustin Inman, a sixteen-year-old Georgia youth who was killed by an illegal alien in 2000, told me “one is too many.”

The illegal alien who skilled Dustin Inman and put Mrs. Inman in a wheelchair, according to the U.S. Department of Justice, is living in Mexico.

Inman condemned the lack of action by the Republican House and cited a 2003 book,  ‘A National Party No More: The Conscience of a Conservative Democrat’ written by former Democrat Georgia governor and U.S. Senator, Zell Miller. “As Zell put in his book, “no one in a position to do anything about it wants to do anything about it,” said Inman.

D.A. King is the founder of the Dustin Inman Society, which advocates for immigration enforcement in Georgia. 

via Breitbart News

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‘Gun-Free’ Britian Has a Machete Epidemic… Every 90 Minutes Someone Gets Attacked

All America needs to do to end violent crime is ban AR-15s and handguns, right?

Wrong, at least if our friends in Britain are any indication.

The United Kingdom is often held up as an example of effective gun control by those on the left, but an out-of-control crime trend should make everyone rethink the wisdom of its approach.

Contrary to the liberal narrative, it looks like sweeping gun control doesn’t do much to stop violence. It just shifts the tactics used by criminals to kill.

The new favorite weapon in England is the machete. A study by The Daily Mail found the rate of machete attacks has has a fivefold increase in only three years — and the trend has no signs of stopping.

“Machete attacks are taking place every 90 minutes on our streets,” admitted the British newspaper.

“Figures uncovered using freedom of information requests show that in the last two months of 2017, police dealt with 928 crimes involving machetes. This is an average of 15 a day,” the Mail reported.

If that sounds like a lot, that’s because it is. The once-proud city of London now has a higher homicide rate than the mean streets of New York City.

Are Britain’s gun and knife bans actually making crime worse?

“More than 50 people have been killed in London since the start of 2018, with stabbing being the main cause of death,” confirmed BBC News. “For the first time in modern history, the city’s murder rate in the months of February and March exceeded that of New York City, which has a similar population.”

Acid attacks, a favorite tactic of “ethnic minorities,” are also on the rise, leaving many victims deformed and scarred for life.

London’s first Muslim mayor, Sadiq Khan, seems to be in a bit of denial about the situation. Last year, he boasted about how “safe” England’s capital city was, even after a terrorist attack rocked the United Kingdom.

“I’m reassured that we are one of the safest global cities in the world — if not the safest global city in the world,” Khan insisted after the 2017 London Bridge attack.

Apparently “safest city” now means “more dangerous than New York with a stabbing every hour and a half.” Semantics.

RELATED: Parents Face Criminal Charges After Tying Up ‘Predator’ Creeping On Teen Daughter

What is London’s solution to the crime wave? The city has doubled down on the same kinds of policies that got them into the mess in the first place. Instead of being honest about disastrous migrant policies being part of the problem or allowing law-abiding Brits to defend themselves, Khan believes  more “bans” are the answer.

Forget gun control. Britain has moved on to knife control.

“There is never a reason to carry a knife,” Khan declared last week. “Anyone who does will be caught, and they will feel the full force of the law.”

Use a Swiss army knife to open packages? You’re a criminal. Carry a small folding knife on your pocket? Criminal. Work a job where a knife is an everyday tool? Definitely a criminal.

This is the British civilization that once ruled the waves, gave us Horatio Nelson and Winston Churchill, and held back the Luftwaffe by sheer grit. It has fallen so far that carrying a gentleman’s pocket knife now terrifies the masses.

Remember, the United Kingdom is the “best case” for gun control. It’s literally an island. It doesn’t have a 2,000-mile long unsecured border with Mexico or entrenched gangs like MS-13.

Despite even that best-case situation, authorities are still unable to stop gun and knife crimes. “Rape in the capital rose by 18.3 per cent, while there were 2,551 incidents of gun crime, representing a rise of 16.3 per cent on the previous year,” reported Breitbart News.

Yes, in “gun-free” Britain, gun crime is going up, not down.

Case in point: An image published by The Daily Mail recently showed a highly illegal Czech-made Skorpion machine pistol found in a London raid.

This is a select-fire automatic weapon, and even on an island with no land border, criminals were able to smuggle it into Britain and use it for crime.

How is that possible? It turns out that gang members aren’t in a hurry to comply with new laws.

Here’s the reality: Trying to ban everything in existence that can be used as a weapon is not just an exercise in futility, it ends up making citizens easier targets for criminals who refuse to comply.

Humans have been killing each other since the dawn of time. One look at the FBI statistics shows that even hands and fists kill more people than rifles, along with all manner of improvised weapons in between.

The answer isn’t to make everything, including pointed sticks, illegal. The solution, to Khan’s chagrin, is to stop importing people who openly hate western culture and to give Brits the ability to defend themselves.

Hopefully, our British friends will wake up and take corrective action before the country degrades into more chaos. At the same time, Americans should pay close attention and learn a key lesson: Feel-good laws don’t magically stop murder.

What do you think? Scroll down to comment below!

via Conservative Tribune

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Trump’s Red Line


Dennis Miller sets it out simply so we can see how preposterous a notion this is:


Dennis Miller✔@DennisDMZ


Obviously Trump is a Russian Agent. Sent to a Soviet Front military school in US and then from age 18 on chasing tail while becoming the quintessential capitalist billionaire. All for that moment at age 70 when Putin flipped the Red Queen and activated the Ghost in the Machine.


Despite this absurdity (and the fact that the Clintons had far more and very lucrative documented links to Russia), it was the predicate of an effort to topple the President, or, at a minimum, cripple what is becoming nevertheless a very consequential presidency.


In much the same way, a handful of miscreants, aided by a partisan press and Democratic leaders, tried to use the office of the special counsel to persuade the public that the war in Iraq — which the Democrats voted for on the same basis of information in President Bush’s hands — was based on lies. The specific target was Vice-President Richard Cheney. Every rotten trick in the book was used to convict Lewis Libby, Cheney’s top aide, as well to hide the fact that Libby was not a leaker and Valerie Plame was not at the time a covert agent. Richard Armitage was the leaker, something that Patrick Fitzgerald, along with the head of the FBI Robert Mueller and the acting Attorney General James Comey, knew before they sicced him on his witch-hunt. On these pages, I documented the course of that trial. In the Weekly Standard, I reported what was known at the time of Libby’s conviction. 


It is a dark mark against the former president George W. Bush that he only commuted the jail portion of the sentence Libby received, and failed to fully pardon him. This week, the President rectified that, noting that the D.C. Court of Appeals that reinstated Libby’s law license had fully investigated the matter and found there was “credible evidence to support Libby’s claim of innocence of the crime for which he had been charged.” 


In 2015, one of the key witnesses against Mr. Libby recanted her testimony, stating publicly that she believes the prosecutor withheld relevant information from her during interviews that would have altered significantly what she said.  The next year, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals unanimously reinstated Mr. Libby to the bar, reauthorizing him to practice law.  The Court agreed with the District of Columbia Disciplinary Counsel, who stated that Mr. Libby had presented “credible evidence” in support of his innocence, including evidence that a key prosecution witness had “changed her recollection of the events in question.”


News accounts of this pardon have been willfully misleading, from the AP and NY Daily News to the tweets of Jake Tapper and David Gregory. (In contrast to my policy of giving links to sources — these are such disgusting spectacles of rotten journalism I don’t want to increase even by my small readership the traffic on their sites.)


Typical of the biased coverage, however, which uniformly ignored the stated basis and sound facts underlying the pardon, was Saturday’s Washington Post front-page article authored by Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey, and Matt Zapotsky, The hard copy headline states “Critics question the pardon of Libby.” In the online version, the header is more blatantly partisan: “Trump grants pardon to former Bush official; some say he is using the law as a political tool”


The lead sentence is a model of partisan opinion masking as news:


In his decision Friday to pardon a former Bush administration official convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice, President Trump telegraphed his open hostility to the criminal justice system and his desire to use the power of the presidency as a personal political tool.


In support of this non-news news, the paper’s sources were Valerie Plame, the anti-Semitic blonde who was the putative “victim” of the leak BY ARMITAGE, and Patrick Fitzgerald, who by imputation the D.C. Court of Appeals had considered the perpetrator of the unjust conviction of Lewis Libby.


In contrast, we have the editors of the Wall Street Journal, a paper that closely and fairly reported on the events at the time:


Mr. Fitzgerald knew from his first days on the job that Mr. Libby hadn’t leaked Ms. Plame’s name. Yet rather than close up shop, he pursued dubious obstruction of justice charges based on the flimsiest of evidence. For two years Mr. Fitzgerald also let the country think a crime may have been committed by people close to President Bush or President Cheney when he already knew better.


As it happens, Mr. Fitzgerald was appointed by his good friend, James Comey, who was then Deputy Attorney General. This is the Jim Comey who told Congress last year that his goal in leaking information to the press about his conversations with Donald Trump after he was fired was to trigger a special counsel investigation that is now led by Mr. Mueller. This special counsel’s work isn’t done, but the Fitzgerald episode is worth keeping in mind as it unfolds.


The Washington Post Saturday front-page (Bezos’ vanity press, it seems) also shows a marked contrast to what Richard Cohen, writing for the Post in 2007, noted:


With the sentencing of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Fitzgerald has apparently finished his work, which was, not to put too fine a point on it, to make a mountain out of a molehill. At the urging of the liberal press (especially the New York Times), he was appointed to look into a run-of-the-mill leak and wound up prosecuting not the leaker — Richard Armitage of the State Department — but Libby, convicted in the end of lying. [snip]


The upshot was a train wreck — mile after mile of shame, infamy, embarrassment and occasional farce, all of it described in the forthcoming “Off the Record,” a vigorously written account of what went wrong, by Norman Pearlstine, Time Inc.’s former editor in chief. The special counsel used the immense power of the government to jail Judith Miller and to compel other journalists, including Time’s Matt Cooper, to suspend their various and sacred vows of silence just so they could, understandably, avoid jail. The press held itself up to mockery, wantonly promising confidentiality, anonymity — what’s the diff, anyway? — and virtual life after death to anyone with a piece of gossip to peddle. Much heroic braying turned into cries for mercy as the government bore down. As any prosecutor knows — and Martha Stewart can attest — white-collar types tend to have a morbid fear of jail.


As Fitzgerald worked his wonders, threatening jail and going after government gossips with splendid pluck, many opponents of the Iraq war cheered. They thought — if “thought” can be used in this context — that if the thread was pulled on who had leaked the identity of Valerie Plame to Robert D. Novak, the effort to snooker an entire nation into war would unravel and this would show… who knows? Something. For some odd reason, the same people who were so appalled about government snooping, the USA Patriot Act and other such threats to civil liberties cheered as the special prosecutor weed-whacked the press jailed a reporter and now will send a previously obscure government official to prison for 30 months.


The latest nonsense from the special counsel’s office includes interfering with the press again.


Just as Fitzgerald overreached in jailing its own reporter Judith Miller, the New York Times thinks the feds can ignore the First Amendment and beset the National Enquirer.


Making fun of the NYT suggestion that it’s okay for the special counsel to look into the Enquirer’s editorial decisions and payment of sources, Tom Maguire observes:  


Hmm. Is paying for stories a “legitimate press function”? That is how the National Enquirer broke the case of the murderer of Bill Cosby’s son. They also paid Rush Limbaugh’s housekeeper for the scoop that got Rush busted for his oxycontin habit — I bet that looked legit to Common Cause.


To paraphrase slightly, the dark night of fascism is always descending on the right yet arriving from the left.


As for Mueller’s conduct in getting a local prosecutor to seize Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen’s records, that seems to be devolving into farce. The President has been allowed to intervene to protect his interests as Cohen’s client and Cohen has argued he cannot be compelled to testify in the former porn star’s case respecting breach of her nondisclosure agreement because of his Fifth Amendment privilege. Will the next step be Stormy Daniel’s lawyer seeking to intervene and quash the search and seizure warrant on Cohen as having been improperly entered?


And the prosecutorial leaks continue — McClatchy suggesting there was a basis to go after Cohen because of a purported meeting he had in Prague, something long discredited.


Cohen’s response:


Michael Cohen

‏Verified account @MichaelCohen212

8m8 minutes ago


Bad reporting, bad information and bad story by same reporter Peter Stone @McClatchyDC. No matter how many times or ways they write it, I have never been to Prague. I was in LA with my son. Proven!


But the press falls for this nonsense every time. 


The next person who suggests the appointment of a special counsel under the now existing law where there is no court oversight ought to be committed. Twice now they’ve devolved into unconstitutional, partisan witch-hunts.


My suspicion is that the raid on Cohen’s office is more related to his suit against GPS Fusion than it is against anything else. A correspondent shares my belief:


This is an old story that’s been completely debunked. The claim that Cohen traveled to Prague was part of the Steele “dossier” that was put out by Fusion GPS = The Hillary Campaign. It turns out that there is more than one Michael Cohen in the world — yes, imagine that! A different Michael Cohen went to Prague. And that’s where things get interesting.


Have you ever tried to access the travel records of another person? Yeah, good luck with that, right?​ Well, then, how did Fusion GPS manage to do that? It turns out, via a FISA Court report, that the FBI employed “private contractors” who weren’t cleared and gave them extensive access to government records. Yep. Fusion GPS was a “private contractor,” meaning the FBI had given them access to just about everything in order to do oppo research for Hillary. Are you comfortable with that? Fusion GPS’s big mistake in keeping this from coming out is that they didn’t check to make sure they had the right Michael Cohen and went with the attempted smear.


So, what does Michael Cohen do? In very early January of this year he filed a defamation law suit against Fusion GPS! Uh oh! Imagine the stuff he’s gonna be asking for in discovery! What happens next? Mueller’s jackbooted FBI break down the doors to every place associated with Cohen, seize all his records, and start leaking accusations against him.


Does this sound like the whole Mueller operation is really just a coverup for Hillary and the Deep State? It does to me.


B. Trump tweets, the Russians Turn Tail


In the meantime as Scott Adams (the creator of “Dilbert”) writes:



After he wrote that, the President masterfully played Bashar Assad, Russia, and Iran with tweets suggesting he had proof that Assad was behind the chemical attack on civilians and that we had big missiles to deal with this. The Russians skedaddled from the major port and the chemical weapon production sites and the Iranians hightailed it back home along with, it is reported, Assad and his family. We did nothing for a few days but certainly learned a lot of valuable information about the operations of the Iranians and Russians there as we listened in to their communications and watched their movements. In the meantime, Trump got the French and British to join us and wiped out specific targets:


The Pentagon said Saturday that the U.S.-led allied missile strikes in Syria successfully hit all three targets and have “significantly crippled” Syrian President Bashar Assad’s ability to make more chemical weapons.


“I think we dealt them a severe blow,” Lt. Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at the Pentagon after the overnight bombing. “We’ve attacked the heart of the Syrians’ chemical weapons program.”


McKenzie identified the targets as Barzah Research and Development, the Him Shinshar Chemical Weapons Storage Site and the Him Shinshar Bunker Facility. He also said 105 missiles were launched by air and sea.


The fabled Soviet anti-missile systems didn’t seem to work, nor did their radar, This should be a blow to their weapons sales and a message to Iran and Syria which bought this equipment encouraged in their aggression by the now proven false belief that they are immune from counterattack.


It all reminds me of those Spanish language novellas. Trump tweets, the mother-in-law (in this case the MSM, Democrats, and the market) faint, and in the next episode all is well and they sit down to dinner. He does not want to invade Syria. He wants to allow the Syrians to take charge of their fate without outside interference or attacks on the innocent. Period. How can anyone complain? Trump waited until we had evidence that Assad’s troops were responsible. The chemical weapons were not supposed to be there: Assad, John F. Kerry when Secretary of State, and the Russians told us they’d all been destroyed. Are we now to hear complaints about destroying what we were assured did not exist?


On Facebook, Harry Lewis sums it up nicely:


Trump’s missile strikes on Syria (with British and French support) expose three truths devastating to the Syrians, Iranians, Russians, and Democrats (America’s adversaries): (1) unlike Obama, under the right circumstances, Trump will pull the trigger; (2) Russia lied to John Kerry and Obama about disposing of Assad’s chemical weapons in exchange for American inaction, and until Trump, we never called Russia or Syria on their lies; (3) the Russian anti-missile systems for which Syria and Iran paid high prices are useless, and were a waste of money, a huge loss of face for Moscow.


And Syria is unlikely to pull such atrocities off again:


@Sunrise51052

5m5 minutes ago


Nikki Haley to UN: I spoke with a President Trump this morning, he said if the Syrian regime uses this poisonous gas again, the United States is locked and loaded. When our president draws a red line, our President enforces the red line.


This is the way to show Never Again, not by marching or diplomatic cant. This president will not allow such things to occur again whenever we have evidence they are occurring and we are in a position to end it.










A. Droogs in Blue Suits and Their Press Accomplices


The Mueller Special Counsel appointment is predicated on the notion that President Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia to assure the defeat of Hillary Clinton — a notion so ludicrous only a Democrat could fall for it.


Dennis Miller sets it out simply so we can see how preposterous a notion this is:


Dennis Miller✔@DennisDMZ


Obviously Trump is a Russian Agent. Sent to a Soviet Front military school in US and then from age 18 on chasing tail while becoming the quintessential capitalist billionaire. All for that moment at age 70 when Putin flipped the Red Queen and activated the Ghost in the Machine.


Despite this absurdity (and the fact that the Clintons had far more and very lucrative documented links to Russia), it was the predicate of an effort to topple the President, or, at a minimum, cripple what is becoming nevertheless a very consequential presidency.


In much the same way, a handful of miscreants, aided by a partisan press and Democratic leaders, tried to use the office of the special counsel to persuade the public that the war in Iraq — which the Democrats voted for on the same basis of information in President Bush’s hands — was based on lies. The specific target was Vice-President Richard Cheney. Every rotten trick in the book was used to convict Lewis Libby, Cheney’s top aide, as well to hide the fact that Libby was not a leaker and Valerie Plame was not at the time a covert agent. Richard Armitage was the leaker, something that Patrick Fitzgerald, along with the head of the FBI Robert Mueller and the acting Attorney General James Comey, knew before they sicced him on his witch-hunt. On these pages, I documented the course of that trial. In the Weekly Standard, I reported what was known at the time of Libby’s conviction. 


It is a dark mark against the former president George W. Bush that he only commuted the jail portion of the sentence Libby received, and failed to fully pardon him. This week, the President rectified that, noting that the D.C. Court of Appeals that reinstated Libby’s law license had fully investigated the matter and found there was “credible evidence to support Libby’s claim of innocence of the crime for which he had been charged.” 


In 2015, one of the key witnesses against Mr. Libby recanted her testimony, stating publicly that she believes the prosecutor withheld relevant information from her during interviews that would have altered significantly what she said.  The next year, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals unanimously reinstated Mr. Libby to the bar, reauthorizing him to practice law.  The Court agreed with the District of Columbia Disciplinary Counsel, who stated that Mr. Libby had presented “credible evidence” in support of his innocence, including evidence that a key prosecution witness had “changed her recollection of the events in question.”


News accounts of this pardon have been willfully misleading, from the AP and NY Daily News to the tweets of Jake Tapper and David Gregory. (In contrast to my policy of giving links to sources — these are such disgusting spectacles of rotten journalism I don’t want to increase even by my small readership the traffic on their sites.)


Typical of the biased coverage, however, which uniformly ignored the stated basis and sound facts underlying the pardon, was Saturday’s Washington Post front-page article authored by Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey, and Matt Zapotsky, The hard copy headline states “Critics question the pardon of Libby.” In the online version, the header is more blatantly partisan: “Trump grants pardon to former Bush official; some say he is using the law as a political tool”


The lead sentence is a model of partisan opinion masking as news:


In his decision Friday to pardon a former Bush administration official convicted of perjury and obstruction of justice, President Trump telegraphed his open hostility to the criminal justice system and his desire to use the power of the presidency as a personal political tool.


In support of this non-news news, the paper’s sources were Valerie Plame, the anti-Semitic blonde who was the putative “victim” of the leak BY ARMITAGE, and Patrick Fitzgerald, who by imputation the D.C. Court of Appeals had considered the perpetrator of the unjust conviction of Lewis Libby.


In contrast, we have the editors of the Wall Street Journal, a paper that closely and fairly reported on the events at the time:


Mr. Fitzgerald knew from his first days on the job that Mr. Libby hadn’t leaked Ms. Plame’s name. Yet rather than close up shop, he pursued dubious obstruction of justice charges based on the flimsiest of evidence. For two years Mr. Fitzgerald also let the country think a crime may have been committed by people close to President Bush or President Cheney when he already knew better.


As it happens, Mr. Fitzgerald was appointed by his good friend, James Comey, who was then Deputy Attorney General. This is the Jim Comey who told Congress last year that his goal in leaking information to the press about his conversations with Donald Trump after he was fired was to trigger a special counsel investigation that is now led by Mr. Mueller. This special counsel’s work isn’t done, but the Fitzgerald episode is worth keeping in mind as it unfolds.


The Washington Post Saturday front-page (Bezos’ vanity press, it seems) also shows a marked contrast to what Richard Cohen, writing for the Post in 2007, noted:


With the sentencing of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Fitzgerald has apparently finished his work, which was, not to put too fine a point on it, to make a mountain out of a molehill. At the urging of the liberal press (especially the New York Times), he was appointed to look into a run-of-the-mill leak and wound up prosecuting not the leaker — Richard Armitage of the State Department — but Libby, convicted in the end of lying. [snip]


The upshot was a train wreck — mile after mile of shame, infamy, embarrassment and occasional farce, all of it described in the forthcoming “Off the Record,” a vigorously written account of what went wrong, by Norman Pearlstine, Time Inc.’s former editor in chief. The special counsel used the immense power of the government to jail Judith Miller and to compel other journalists, including Time’s Matt Cooper, to suspend their various and sacred vows of silence just so they could, understandably, avoid jail. The press held itself up to mockery, wantonly promising confidentiality, anonymity — what’s the diff, anyway? — and virtual life after death to anyone with a piece of gossip to peddle. Much heroic braying turned into cries for mercy as the government bore down. As any prosecutor knows — and Martha Stewart can attest — white-collar types tend to have a morbid fear of jail.


As Fitzgerald worked his wonders, threatening jail and going after government gossips with splendid pluck, many opponents of the Iraq war cheered. They thought — if “thought” can be used in this context — that if the thread was pulled on who had leaked the identity of Valerie Plame to Robert D. Novak, the effort to snooker an entire nation into war would unravel and this would show… who knows? Something. For some odd reason, the same people who were so appalled about government snooping, the USA Patriot Act and other such threats to civil liberties cheered as the special prosecutor weed-whacked the press jailed a reporter and now will send a previously obscure government official to prison for 30 months.


The latest nonsense from the special counsel’s office includes interfering with the press again.


Just as Fitzgerald overreached in jailing its own reporter Judith Miller, the New York Times thinks the feds can ignore the First Amendment and beset the National Enquirer.


Making fun of the NYT suggestion that it’s okay for the special counsel to look into the Enquirer’s editorial decisions and payment of sources, Tom Maguire observes:  


Hmm. Is paying for stories a “legitimate press function”? That is how the National Enquirer broke the case of the murderer of Bill Cosby’s son. They also paid Rush Limbaugh’s housekeeper for the scoop that got Rush busted for his oxycontin habit — I bet that looked legit to Common Cause.


To paraphrase slightly, the dark night of fascism is always descending on the right yet arriving from the left.


As for Mueller’s conduct in getting a local prosecutor to seize Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen’s records, that seems to be devolving into farce. The President has been allowed to intervene to protect his interests as Cohen’s client and Cohen has argued he cannot be compelled to testify in the former porn star’s case respecting breach of her nondisclosure agreement because of his Fifth Amendment privilege. Will the next step be Stormy Daniel’s lawyer seeking to intervene and quash the search and seizure warrant on Cohen as having been improperly entered?


And the prosecutorial leaks continue — McClatchy suggesting there was a basis to go after Cohen because of a purported meeting he had in Prague, something long discredited.


Cohen’s response:


Michael Cohen

‏Verified account @MichaelCohen212

8m8 minutes ago


Bad reporting, bad information and bad story by same reporter Peter Stone @McClatchyDC. No matter how many times or ways they write it, I have never been to Prague. I was in LA with my son. Proven!


But the press falls for this nonsense every time. 


The next person who suggests the appointment of a special counsel under the now existing law where there is no court oversight ought to be committed. Twice now they’ve devolved into unconstitutional, partisan witch-hunts.


My suspicion is that the raid on Cohen’s office is more related to his suit against GPS Fusion than it is against anything else. A correspondent shares my belief:


This is an old story that’s been completely debunked. The claim that Cohen traveled to Prague was part of the Steele “dossier” that was put out by Fusion GPS = The Hillary Campaign. It turns out that there is more than one Michael Cohen in the world — yes, imagine that! A different Michael Cohen went to Prague. And that’s where things get interesting.


Have you ever tried to access the travel records of another person? Yeah, good luck with that, right?​ Well, then, how did Fusion GPS manage to do that? It turns out, via a FISA Court report, that the FBI employed “private contractors” who weren’t cleared and gave them extensive access to government records. Yep. Fusion GPS was a “private contractor,” meaning the FBI had given them access to just about everything in order to do oppo research for Hillary. Are you comfortable with that? Fusion GPS’s big mistake in keeping this from coming out is that they didn’t check to make sure they had the right Michael Cohen and went with the attempted smear.


So, what does Michael Cohen do? In very early January of this year he filed a defamation law suit against Fusion GPS! Uh oh! Imagine the stuff he’s gonna be asking for in discovery! What happens next? Mueller’s jackbooted FBI break down the doors to every place associated with Cohen, seize all his records, and start leaking accusations against him.


Does this sound like the whole Mueller operation is really just a coverup for Hillary and the Deep State? It does to me.


B. Trump tweets, the Russians Turn Tail


In the meantime as Scott Adams (the creator of “Dilbert”) writes:



After he wrote that, the President masterfully played Bashar Assad, Russia, and Iran with tweets suggesting he had proof that Assad was behind the chemical attack on civilians and that we had big missiles to deal with this. The Russians skedaddled from the major port and the chemical weapon production sites and the Iranians hightailed it back home along with, it is reported, Assad and his family. We did nothing for a few days but certainly learned a lot of valuable information about the operations of the Iranians and Russians there as we listened in to their communications and watched their movements. In the meantime, Trump got the French and British to join us and wiped out specific targets:


The Pentagon said Saturday that the U.S.-led allied missile strikes in Syria successfully hit all three targets and have “significantly crippled” Syrian President Bashar Assad’s ability to make more chemical weapons.


“I think we dealt them a severe blow,” Lt. Gen. Kenneth McKenzie, director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said at the Pentagon after the overnight bombing. “We’ve attacked the heart of the Syrians’ chemical weapons program.”


McKenzie identified the targets as Barzah Research and Development, the Him Shinshar Chemical Weapons Storage Site and the Him Shinshar Bunker Facility. He also said 105 missiles were launched by air and sea.


The fabled Soviet anti-missile systems didn’t seem to work, nor did their radar, This should be a blow to their weapons sales and a message to Iran and Syria which bought this equipment encouraged in their aggression by the now proven false belief that they are immune from counterattack.


It all reminds me of those Spanish language novellas. Trump tweets, the mother-in-law (in this case the MSM, Democrats, and the market) faint, and in the next episode all is well and they sit down to dinner. He does not want to invade Syria. He wants to allow the Syrians to take charge of their fate without outside interference or attacks on the innocent. Period. How can anyone complain? Trump waited until we had evidence that Assad’s troops were responsible. The chemical weapons were not supposed to be there: Assad, John F. Kerry when Secretary of State, and the Russians told us they’d all been destroyed. Are we now to hear complaints about destroying what we were assured did not exist?


On Facebook, Harry Lewis sums it up nicely:


Trump’s missile strikes on Syria (with British and French support) expose three truths devastating to the Syrians, Iranians, Russians, and Democrats (America’s adversaries): (1) unlike Obama, under the right circumstances, Trump will pull the trigger; (2) Russia lied to John Kerry and Obama about disposing of Assad’s chemical weapons in exchange for American inaction, and until Trump, we never called Russia or Syria on their lies; (3) the Russian anti-missile systems for which Syria and Iran paid high prices are useless, and were a waste of money, a huge loss of face for Moscow.


And Syria is unlikely to pull such atrocities off again:


@Sunrise51052

5m5 minutes ago


Nikki Haley to UN: I spoke with a President Trump this morning, he said if the Syrian regime uses this poisonous gas again, the United States is locked and loaded. When our president draws a red line, our President enforces the red line.


This is the way to show Never Again, not by marching or diplomatic cant. This president will not allow such things to occur again whenever we have evidence they are occurring and we are in a position to end it.





via American Thinker

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Environmentalist Burns Himself To Death To Protest Fossil Fuels

An environmental activist committed suicide on Saturday in a park in Brooklyn, New York, by setting himself on fire.
The man was protesting the use of "fossil fuel" — which he said was leading to an environmental disaster in the world — when he poured gasoline on himself and burned himself to death in Prospect Park.

via Daily Wire

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Biden: Republicans ‘Don’t Want Black Folks Voting’

Biden: Republicans ‘Don’t Want Black Folks Voting’



Sunday on MSNBC’s “PoliticsNation,” former Vice President Joe Biden told host Al Sharpton that Republicans didn’t want African-Americans voting.

Partial transcript as follows:

SHARPTON: Let me ask you about voting rights. That was another thing the Obama-Biden administration was heavy on under attorney general well as Lynch going in with lawsuits against voter ID and doing in to deal with voter suppression. They have said that foreigners are voting.

BIDEN:  It’s a lie. It’s a flat lie. The assertion the president made from the beginning is a flat lie. Every study, every program -every commission that looked at it said it’s simply not true. It’s part of the big lie. You realize just in past year, in 24 states, the administration’s allies have introduced 60 pieces of legislation, or maybe 70 pieces of legislation, to curtail the franchise. It’s what these guys are all about, man. These Republicans don’t want working-class people voting. They don’t want black folks voting. Look what we are doing now. There’s a movement. You have George Will making the argument that felons should have their—after serving their time—their right restored to vote. What is the one thing we want people getting out of prison to do? We want them to engage in society again. What’s the most significant thing you can do to engage? Get in and vote. These guys, you’re talking about 1.5 million people who have served their time who are unable to vote. Of those there are 30% or more that are African American. We should have like other countries have, automatic registration. You turn 18, you go to any government agency, Department of Motor Vehicle, get your Social Security number clarified and you are automatically registered to vote in your district. We should be be engaged. That’s the one thing that keeps people focused on what’s going on in their country. It’s totally crazy.

Follow Pam Key on Twitter @pamkeyNEN

via Breitbart News

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