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I figured out why he wants to the NFL players to choose ppl to pardon.

He gon Pardon his friends and say he just doing the same thing he did for black players.


We cant fall for this one. He playing chess with this shit

Duh nigga. I assumed all that was common knowledge.
 
https://www.mediaite.com/online/tru...-wh-aide-who-made-nasty-comment-about-mccain/

Trump Reportedly Went Off Over Firing of WH Aide Who Made Nasty Comment About McCain


Of all the people the White House could fire, press aide Kelly Sadler was an obvious choice.

But President Donald Trump was not happy about the decision to let her go, according to new reporting in The Wall Street Journal.

Sadler caused a furor on both sides of the political aisle when she said in a private White House meeting that Senator John McCain‘s vote on Gina Haspeldidn’t matter because “he’s dying anyway.”

After Sadler’s comment was made public, Meghan McCain powerfully condemned her on The View, and many came to the McCains’ support on social media.

Sadler was left on staff for a month after making the comment; she was quietly dismissed from her position earlier this month.

According to officials speaking to WSJ, Trump expressed his displeasure with this choice during an Oval Office meeting and criticized White House communications adviser Mercedes Schlapp for the move.

Chief of Staff John Kelly then spoke up, telling the president that Schlapp didn’t fire Sadler, saying: “I did.”

The fact that Trump doesn’t know who does the letting go in his own administration is puzzling enough, but his opinion that Sadler ought not to have been fired raises even more eyebrows. McCain and Trump have been known to disagree politically, with McCain being a key vote in stopping a GOP-backed healthcare bill from reaching Trump’s desk. But would that be reason for Trump to not support the firing of someone who made a joke about him dying from brain cancer?
 
https://www.mediaite.com/online/tru...istance-over-the-idea-of-a-summit-with-putin/

Trump Reportedly Facing Serious Internal Resistance Over the Idea of a Summit With Putin

For months, President Donald Trump has been pushing for a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Yet according to one U.S. official who spoke to The Washington Post, his top aides were not too keen no the plan and hoped that Trump might simply move on to another idea.

In November, Trump met with Putin in Vietnam on the sidelines of an economic summit. Since that meeting, Trump has apparently been calling for a bilateral meeting with the Russian leader and even called for Putin to come to the White House.

“After that meeting [in Vietnam], the president said he wanted to invite Putin to the White House,” one U.S. official said.

The response was less than enthusiastic.

“We ignored it,” the official told WaPo.

The top aides in the National Security Council also tried to adopt a wait-and-see attitude on a potential Trump-Putin meet-up.

“They decided: Let’s wait and see if he raises it again,” the official told WaPo.

It appears, however, that the plan to wait out Trump did not work.

Angela Stent, a Russia expert who worked in the George W. Bush administration acknowledged that Trump’s “advisers have been skeptical from the beginning.”

Yet, according to Stent, in the wake of the North Korean meeting in Singapore, Trump is more eager than ever.

“From Trump’s point of view, he’s had one successful meeting with Kim Jong Un, and now he wants to do the same with Putin,” Stent said.

Trump is possibly meeting with Putin at the NATO Summit in Europe over the summer.

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https://www.mediaite.com/tv/random-...-camera-hey-its-that-guy-thats-going-to-jail/

Random New Yorker Calls Out Michael Cohen on Camera: ‘Hey! It’s That Guy That’s Going to Jail’

President Donald Trump‘s former lawyer, Michael Cohen hasn’t had the best of weeks recently.

Just today, it was reported that federal authorities puzzled together pages and pages of documents he thought he had shredded and accessed his encrypted messages.

His attempt to get a gag order on Stormy Daniels‘ lawyer Michael Avenatti did not go as planned.

Cohen also parted ways with his lawyers recently and seemed poised to cooperate with the feds and Trump parted ways with him, telling reporters earlier today that Cohen was no longer his lawyer.

Trump also implied that they haven’t even talked recently.

“I haven’t spoken to Michael in a long time,” Trump said. “No, he’s not my lawyer anymore, but I always liked Michael. And he’s a good person,”

Yet, that didn’t stop Cohen from walking outside on the streets of New York on Friday where he was, not surprisingly, swarmed with cameras.

He also got ribbed by those nearby.

Cohen successfully deflected questions from the press about if he was going to cooperate with prosecutors, avoiding them without a glance.

A pair of New Yorkers, though, were not so easy to ignore.

“Good luck, Mr. Cohen,” one guy shouted out to Cohen, prompting Cohen to thank him.

Then another guy shouted this: “Hey! It’s that guy that’s going to jail.”

“Yeah,” Cohen said, with a finger point.

“Awesome, way to go bud,” the guy replied.
 
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/15/business/media/pittsburgh-cartoonist-fired.html

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Cartoonist Fired as Paper Shifts Right

PITTSBURGH — Rob Rogers joined The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as a staff editorial cartoonist in 1993 and for years his cartoons have appeared in the newspaper roughly five days a week. But in late May, around Memorial Day, he said, they began disappearing.

In just over a week, Mr. Rogers said, six of them were killed, one after it had been placed on a page. The first of the killed cartoons, which Mr. Rogers posted to social media and on his website, depicted President Trump placing a wreath on a tombstone that read “Truth, Honor, Rule of Law.”

Over the past three months, Mr. Rogers said, 19 cartoons or proposals for cartoons were rejected by either the editorial page editor, Keith Burris, or the publisher, John Robinson Block.

Mr. Rogers did not receive an official explanation for why the cartoons were killed, he says, but he was presented with a set of guidelines that included setting certain conditions on his work and an approval process for his cartoons.

“I felt they were going to be able to restrict my ability to do my job,” said Mr. Rogers, who declined to give specifics about the guidelines.

“I think they were definitely trying to send me a message,” he added. “It felt like they were pushing me out.”

On Thursday, his suspicions were confirmed when he was fired during an off-site meeting with two Post-Gazette human resources representatives.

“They said, ‘This is your last day,’” he said. “It was like those movies you see on TV where the cop has to hand in his badge and his gun, only I was afraid they were going to ask for my pen.”

Mr. Burris said The Post-Gazette offered to allow Mr. Rogers to continue working as an independent contractor, but Mr. Rogers declined.

The firing is the latest controversy involving the newspaper’s editorial pages. In January, The Post-Gazette and its sister paper, The Toledo Blade, published an editorial titled “Reason as Racism” that defended President Trump’s stance on immigration despite his profane description of countries like Haiti or those in Africa when discussing the issue. Mr. Burris, then the editorial page editor of The Blade, was the author of the editorial, which drew condemnation from the Post-Gazette newsroom, some members of the Block family and from outside critics.

In March, the papers’ owner, Block Communications, merged the editorial pages of the two publications, appointing Mr. Burris as editor, vice president and editorial director. He has since written several editorials praising the president, part of a rightward shift by the once-liberal editorial page.

Mr. Burris said Friday that while he may be more to the right than Mr. Rogers, his goal is to make sure The Post-Gazette is “independent and thoughtful” in its approach, without any ideological intent.

“I’m certainly not in Trump’s base and I don’t think our publisher is, we just don’t think he’s Satan,” Mr. Burris said. “We never said ‘don’t do Trump cartoons.’ A Trump cartoon every day is not interesting, and a Trump cartoon every day that’s not funny and is just enraged is not particularly effective.”

Mr. Burris added that his role in some of the changes to the editorial page has been overstated. “This sort of portrayal of me as a right-wing yahoo riding in on a steed from Ohio with a red cap on is just silly and it’s belied by — well, just read my stuff.”

But on the Post-Gazette’s Friday editorial page, a statement attributed to the editorial board professed “gratitude and affection” for Mr. Rogers. “There has never been any intention to silence or suppress Mr. Rogers. Nor would we ever ask him to violate the dictates of his conscience. Rather, we have sought to engage in the necessary journalistic practices of editing, gatekeeping and collaboration.”

Mr. Rogers, whose cartoons are unabashedly liberal, said he was uneasy about his future at the paper from the time Mr. Burris was brought on board. “They clearly had a mission to change the editorial page and I wasn’t getting in line so they decided it was time to change the cartoon as well,” he said.

Mr. Burris said he did not enter into his working relationship with Mr. Rogers with any expectations.

“I don’t think it was doomed from the start,” Mr. Burris said. “But it’s like when a marriage is in trouble and you go to mediation or a counselor, you both have to really buy into it. Sometimes one party just can’t help it; they’re just too angry to buy into it.”

A 1999 Pulitzer Prize finalist, Mr. Rogers has won numerous awards for his work, which is syndicated by Universal Press Syndicate.

“The firing of Rogers and the absence of his cartoons from the editorial pages is a blow to free expression and to the existence of a free and open marketplace of ideas,” Pat Bagley, president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, said in a statement.

Mr. Rogers said his work would continue to appear in syndication and on social media. He also has plans for other projects.

“I can’t imagine during the next few years of the Trump presidency that I won’t be at my drawing table most days,” he said.
 
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