192
   

monitoring Trump and relevant contemporary events

 
 
Builder
 
  -2  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 12:42 pm
@MontereyJack,
Quote:
Uh, you castigate fm for his name calling after you just referred to "creepy Joe"?


Thing is, I didn't make up the descriptor; Joe's victims did.

Unless you've been living in a cave for the last decade, you would be aware of this, as well.

Even slawart DNC members aren't safe from creepy Joe Biden, and if the DNC thinks he's their best shot at toppling Trump in 2020, you'd better get used to the descriptor, because we're only seeing the tip of the iceberg, as just how creepy the old bastard really is.
0 Replies
 
georgeob1
 
  0  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 12:54 pm
@revelette1,
revelette1 wrote:

House Speaker Pelosi to announce formal impeachment inquiry of Trump

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi plans to announce a formal impeachment inquiry into President Trump, a dramatic turnaround by the Democratic leader that sets up a constitutional and political clash pitting the Congress against the nation’s chief executive.

It turns out your report was incorrect on all points. Nothing has changed except perhaps the continuing denials on Pelosi's part that no preliminary impeachment proceedings are ongoing - despite near simultaneous pronouncements from House Judicial Committee Chairman Nadler that his Committee was doing just that. Pelosi's denials have stopped, but no select Committee of the House was formed to consider impeachment and no action on the part of the House is either imminent or underway to proceed with it. The situation today is hardly different from that of two days ago - the Nadler Committee comedy will continue as will the backup act in the House Intelligence Committee. Both are displaying the fixed and somewhat irrational (TDS?) prejudices of feckless Democrat leaders in the Congress, while, at the same time they ignore numerous opportunities for the development of needed bipartisan legislation on urgent issues ranging from Trade to immigration, infrastructure and energy policy and other vital issues.

The just released text of Trump's call with the Ukrainian PM, as well as his remarks in their just completed press conference make it fairly clear that the only damaged political figures in all this will be former VP Joe Biden and Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who increasingly appears to have lost control of the Democrat House delegation.

0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  2  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 12:57 pm
In seeking Ukraine favor, Trump was vulnerable to foreign spies: watchdog
Quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump potentially exposed himself to “serious national security and counter-intelligence risks” when he pressed his Ukrainian counterpart to investigate a leading political rival, Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden, and his son, the intelligence community’s inspector general warned.

The previously undisclosed warning, included in a Justice Department legal opinion released on Wednesday, reflected the concerns of a whistleblower who filed a complaint about a July 25 call between Trump and then newly elected Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.

The legal opinion does not spell out the counter-intelligence risks, but former U.S. officials have expressed fears to Reuters that Russian spies could have obtained detailed knowledge of the call before it was made public and used it to gain leverage over the U.S. president.

U.S. intelligence agencies accused Russia of interfering in the 2016 U.S. elections to favor Trump, a charge Moscow has denied.

The legal opinion also provided some more detail on the whistleblower, who has not been identified. It said the person had heard from White House officials that Trump had made statements on the call that the whistleblower viewed “as seeking to pressure (Zelenskiy) to take an official action to help the president’s 2020 re-election campaign.”

In a summary of the call released by the White House on Wednesday, Trump pressed Zelinskiy to investigate unsubstantiated allegations that Biden, as vice president, pressured the government to fire a prosecutor who was probing a Ukrainian gas company, on whose board Biden’s son Hunter served.

The intelligence community’s inspector general, Michael Atkinson, was concerned that Trump’s request violated U.S. campaign laws that prohibit any kind of foreign support to an election candidate, the Justice Department opinion said.

Atkinson, who was appointed by Trump, was also worried that “the alleged misconduct by a senior U.S. official to seek foreign assistance to interfere in or influence a federal election could potentially expose the official to serious national security and counter-intelligence risks,” said the opinion.

Atkinson said that while there were indications of political bias on the part of the whistleblower, he concluded that the allegations appeared credible, the opinion said.

The opinion was written by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel in support of acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire’s refusal to send the whistleblower complaint to the U.S. Congress. Maguire argued that he did not have jurisdiction over the subject of the complaint.

0 Replies
 
oralloy
 
  -3  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 02:04 pm
@tsarstepan,
tsarstepan wrote:

That makes a bit more sense. Thank you. The earlier article left out the part about criminal intent and just made it sound as if bomb-making lessons were illegal in general.
0 Replies
 
Builder
 
  -1  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 04:48 pm
Let's see how this all pans out for the DNC, shall we?

Quote:
To briefly recap: in February 2014, a US-backed coup spearheaded by ultra-rightists sent Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych fleeing and installed billionaire Petro Poroshenko in his place. This was bad news for a wealthy Yanukovych supporter named Mykola Zlochevsky who was widely accused of corruption and was in danger of losing all or some of his holdings. In an attempt to smooth things over with the Americans, Zlochevsky appointed Hunter Biden to a lucrative post with Burisma Holdings, a natural-gas company he founded in 2002. Hunter had just been discharged from the US Navy after testing positive for cocaine. He had no experience in the natural-gas business and knew nothing about the Ukraine. But he got the job anyway along with a salary of $50,000 a month.

But when the Ukrainian prosecutor general launched an investigation into Burisma, the Obama administration demanded that Viktor Shokin, the man who took over the office a year later, be removed. Indeed, Biden bragged that he threatened to withhold $1 billion in loan guarantees during a visit to Kiev if Poroshenko didn’t do as he was told.

“I said, ‘We’re leaving in six hours,’” he said last year. “If the prosecutor’s not fired, you’re not getting the money. Well, son of a bitch, he got fired.”




source
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  -1  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 04:51 pm
I gotta tell you—how this is a trump story and not a Biden one astonishes me.
Builder
 
  -2  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 04:54 pm
@Lash,
Quote:
how this is a trump story and not a Biden one astonishes me.


I think your prez is wising up to these shenanigans, and playing them at their own game.
0 Replies
 
georgeob1
 
  0  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 04:54 pm
@Lash,
I strongly suspect it will be a Biden story very soon. However a desperate Democrat leadership won't give up the impeachment effort at any cost, as they have given up hope of winning the election.
Builder
 
  0  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 08:11 pm
@georgeob1,
Quote:
..as they have given up hope of winning the election.


If creepy Joe is their best bet, they're dead in the water from the get-go.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  1  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 09:44 pm
@tsarstepan,
Donald is so mistreated.
0 Replies
 
blatham
 
  2  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 09:49 pm
@Lash,
Quote:
I gotta tell you—how this is a trump story and not a Biden one astonishes me.
I gotta tell you - how this post came from you does not astonish me. Or anybody else I expect.
snood
 
  0  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 10:54 pm
@blatham,
Yup, totally consistent. Still, unbelievable.
Sturgis
 
  1  
Wed 25 Sep, 2019 11:22 pm
@snood,
Not to worry. Her transformation is nearing completion. She seems to be moving towards support of the demonic looking Pence.

www.able2know.org/topic/532250-2#post-6902963
Quote:
Pence would be the strongest President...
Olivier5
 
  1  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 12:33 am
@Lash,
Lash wrote:
I gotta tell you—how this is a trump story and not a Biden one astonishes me.

High time to fry Trump on the electric chair for treason, if you ask me.
roger
 
  1  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 12:37 am
@Olivier5,
Maybe just condemn him to the golf course - with an honest scorekeeper? Some things are worse than death.
Lash
 
  1  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 12:37 am
@blatham,
You and your herd always march in lockstep, always deflecting anything your team does—no matter guilt or innocence. It the primary reason Clinton lost, the primary reason the left rose up, the primary reason trump is in office.

Decent regular Americans are sick of the corruption and the media cover ups.

That is exactly what this is.

You’re all hiding behind trump hate to try to deflect how corrupt Biden is.

It is clear Biden used his office to enrich his family.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bloomberg.com/amp/news/articles/2019-09-25/here-s-what-we-know-about-joe-and-hunter-biden-in-ukraine

Hunter Biden and Ukraine

After Joe Biden became vice president in 2009, Hunter, a lawyer by training, pursued business opportunities with foreign parties, often in ways that intersected with his father’s work. In May 2014, Cyprus-registered Burisma Holdings, one of the largest natural gas companies in Ukraine, announced that Hunter Biden had joined its board.

The company was at a sensitive point. Mykola Zlochevsky, who founded Burisma in 2002, later served as Ukraine’s environment minister under President Viktor Yanukovych. In February 2014, mass protests swept Yanukovych from power. Western governments encouraged Ukraine’s new leaders to investigate corruption. The U.K. froze $23 million in London bank accounts linked to Zlochevsky and sought Ukraine’s help to build a money-laundering case.


After the U.K. request, Ukrainian prosecutors opened their own investigation into Zlochevsky, first looking at whether he embezzled public funds. Burisma and Zlochevsky have denied any wrongdoing. Zlochevsky’s lawyer, Petro Boyko, declined to comment.

That spring, Burisma began adding several prominent foreigners to its board. In a statement announcing Hunter Biden’s role, Burisma said it was part of an effort to introduce “best corporate practices” at the firm. It said he would advise on “transparency, corporate governance and responsibility, international expansion, and other priorities.”

Hunter Biden’s compensation for serving on the board was apparently routed through Rosemont Seneca Bohai LLC, a U.S. company set up by one of his business partners, Devon Archer, who also served as a Burisma director. Bank records from 2014 and 2015, disclosed in unrelated litigation, show the company receiving funds from Burisma and paying more than $850,000 to the younger Biden. He remained on the board until this year.

——————————
This scandal almost kept Joe out of the race, but it looks like assurances that everybody would keep quiet about it made him feel secure enough that he’d be protected from having to answer for is corruption.


0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  1  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 12:46 am
@Olivier5,
One doesn’t preclude the other.

Prosecuting the corrupt shouldn’t be a team competition.
Lash
 
  1  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 12:52 am
@Sturgis,
Sturgis wrote:

Not to worry. Her transformation is nearing completion. She seems to be moving towards support of the demonic looking Pence.

www.able2know.org/topic/532250-2#post-6902963
Quote:
Pence would be the strongest President...


So, bad leaders can’t be strong...
Stalin wasn’t strong?
Mao wasn’t strong?
Hitler wasn’t strong?

As I said about Pence, normal Republicans would be thrilled with Pence as president.

0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  1  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 01:06 am
https://www.truthdig.com/articles/are-democrats-blowing-it-all-over-again/

Joe Biden is a throwback to an earlier time. Much of it could be called “the Clintonite era”— when Democratic presidential contenders openly cozied up to the wealthy by appearing at one high-dollar fundraising event after another. A time when they served up (consultant-approved) language about “feeling the pain” of “working families” . . . without identifying any corporate villains or transformative policies to fix the rigged system.

Donald Trump’s victory seemed to put a catastrophic end to that era in November 2016. Unfortunately, Biden and the Democratic establishment still haven’t gotten the memo.

Party leaders continue to believe that a Democrat can win the White House by catering to corporate donors and eagerly cashing their fat checks. Leading Democrats keep throwing their endorsements at Biden—as he spends day and night glad-handing the 1 percent at top-dollar fundraisers.


Wake-up alert to Democrats: Donald Trump may well be the most effective faux-populist in our country’s history. He was that in 2016, when he won “Rust Belt” swing states. And he remains that today for millions of voters—despite his barrage of policies favoring the rich and powerful.

Like Hillary Clinton in 2016 (with her Wall Street connections and well-paid speeches), Biden would be a perfect target in 2020 for Trump’s pretend-populism. Steve Bannon is gone, but Trump’s campaign team will make sure every swing-state voter knows about Biden’s record in the Senate serving big banks and credit card companies, as well as his 1993 vote to approve the disastrous NAFTA trade deal.

If there’s a single word that explains why Clinton lost Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania in 2016, it’s not “Russia” or “Comey.” It’s probably not “misogyny.” Most likely, that word is “NAFTA.” Biden supported NAFTA, alongside most Republicans and a minority of Democrats in Congress.

In recent months, when I’ve publicly discussed Biden’s long record of corporatism, some Democrats have complained that I’m “helping the Trump campaign”—as if that campaign has not already cataloged every Biden vote and quote that a populist charlatan like Trump can exploit.

In continuing to rally behind Biden, Democratic leaders seem compelled to relive the tragic 2016 defeat—as if trapped in a recurring bad dream. In fairness to Hillary Clinton, she was a far more informed candidate in 2016 than Biden is now and a far better debater, with campaign rhetoric and policies far more substantive than Biden’s (a low bar).

The developing Biden nightmare became more vivid to me last week when I started tracking his series of high-dollar fundraisers, as described by individual pool reporters the Biden campaign allows into each “finance event.” Here’s the beginning of Thursday’s report by Tina Sfondeles of the Chicago Sun-Times on a lavish lunch gathering:

At the first of three Chicago fundraisers, Joe Biden stopped by a luncheon at the residence of billionaire real estate and casino magnate Neil Bluhm, also co-hosted by GCM Grosvenor CEO Michael Sacks—who was not present due to a death in the family—and real estate developer Elzie Higginbottom. The fundraiser was in a sprawling 65th floor residence full of original art, including a Lichtenstein in the kitchen. Biden was introduced by Bluhm, who told his high-profile guests that both Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders “don’t represent the Democratic Party” that he supports. Bluhm said Biden “has the best chance of defeating Trump.”
Here’s the final paragraph:

Tickets to the fundraiser were $1,000 apiece, or $2,800 for a ticket which included a photo with Biden. There were less than 100 guests in attendance.
In between the first and last paragraphs, the Sun-Times reporter recounts that Biden served up 22 minutes of his standard stump speech, decrying “our standing in the world” and worrying about “the soul of this country.” It’s the kind of stale rhetoric guaranteed not to offend billionaires.

And unlikely to inspire many voters.

Lesson No. 1 from the 2016 catastrophe: In a time of anxiety, anger and rampant economic inequality, the candidate of status quo corporatism can be defeated by one spouting anti-elite populism, even a con artist like Trump.

Lesson No. 2: Without bold campaign proposals aimed at unrigging “the rigged economy,” a Democratic candidate will lose white working-class voters—and, more importantly, will fail to energize the base: voters of color and youth. For proof, check out Clinton’s low voter-turnout in cities like Detroit and Milwaukee, and the number of young voters who stayed home or went third-party.

It’s no surprise that Neil Bluhm, one of Biden’s billionaire supporters, fears Warren and Sanders. They are the two candidates in the race with the most low-dollar donors and most energized activists, with crowds rallying behind their candidates’ specific plans to address inequality, college affordability, debt, health care and climate . . . with programs paid for by increasing taxes on the wealthy.

Higher taxes on billionaires may mean fewer Lichtenstein paintings in Mr. Bluhm’s luxury condo.

As a throwback to the Clintonite 1990s, Biden says he feels the pain of victims but won’t name many villains. That approach no longer works—and actually plays into the hands of demagogues like Trump.

So do remarks like the one Biden made to the Brookings Institution last year: “I love Bernie, but I’m not Bernie Sanders. I don’t think 500 billionaires are the reason why we’re in trouble. . . The folks at the top aren’t bad guys.”

Let me be clear: Despite current polls showing Biden, Warren and Sanders each beating Trump in hypothetical match-ups, I can’t say for certain that the progressive populism of Warren or Sanders would defeat Trump in 2020.

But I’m convinced that either Warren or Sanders would fare better against Trump than a candidate like Biden, who is easily tied to moneyed elites and a blatantly unfair status quo. We’ve seen that movie before and it ended in the 2016 disaster.
0 Replies
 
Lash
 
  0  
Thu 26 Sep, 2019 01:13 am
Obama vetted Hunter Biden and Joe just gets loud.
Loud Joe cannot continue to yell down reporters.

https://freebeacon.com/politics/flashback-joe-biden-got-angry-when-obama-campaign-vetted-hunter-biden/

When former president Barack Obama's campaign vetted Joe Biden during the 2008 presidential race, it also looked into Biden's son, Hunter, angering the former vice president.

Obama campaign researchers found potential public relations issues with Hunter Biden's marriage, substance abuse history, and lobbying work, according to the New York Times. "Keep my family out of this," Joe Biden reportedly snapped. The Obama campaign did not press the issue any further.

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Hunter Biden has become an issue for his father's 2020 campaign due to his appointment to the board of Burisma, a Ukrainian energy company, during the Obama administration. The Ukrainian government dismissed the top prosecutor investigating the company.

The Obama administration repeatedly dodged questions about Hunter Biden's involvement with Burisma in 2014, amid heightened tensions between the United States and Russia following the annexation of Crimea.

Joe Biden came under renewed scrutiny in September when a whistleblower complained that President Donald Trump had pressured Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate Hunter Biden during a July phone call. Trump denied the claim, and the White House released a transcript of his phone call with Zelensky on Wednesday.

Joe Biden told reporters on Saturday that he has "never spoken" to Hunter "about his overseas business." This statement contradicted Hunter Biden's admission to the New Yorker in July that he and his father had discussed the affair during the Obama presidency.

Joe Biden announced on Tuesday he would support impeaching Trump if the president would not cooperate with Congress in its investigation. He walked out of the press conference without taking questions, leaving no time for reporters to ask about his son's dealings in Ukraine.
 

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