Peace_79
Black Excellence
I hope Bernie isn't the one to come out the Democratic Party
Why?
I hope Bernie isn't the one to come out the Democratic Party
Can't rock with a candidate who looked up to the Soviet Union, Nicaragua with the Sandinistas and Cuba with Castro.Why?
I kinda hope so to i dont mind him but i dunno if i could see him winning, hes already got alot of ppl that dont fuck with him, his only chance would be the anti trumpers like me that is voting for any dem and i doubt thatd be enoughI hope Bernie isn't the one to come out the Democratic Party
Very true but my hate for trump has me just looking at who has the legit best shot at beating him lol all that other stuff we can worry about afterwords, i just wanna see his sorry ass outta there knowing that itll be an improvent and most of this stupid shit we see on a daily basis from trump and the gop will endI agree with you but...
We want to do more than just win.
That administration would surely uphold the status quo And corruption in Washington minus the overt bigotry and foreign policy ineptitude - upgrade over Trump ... but not good enough.
We got millions in economic ruin, a horrible healthcare system, a catastrophic climate threat and dozen other issues.
I think we can beat Trump while still getting things done.
I agree with you but...
We want to do more than just win.
That administration would surely uphold the status quo And corruption in Washington minus the overt bigotry and foreign policy ineptitude - upgrade over Trump ... but not good enough.
We got millions in economic ruin, a horrible healthcare system, a catastrophic climate threat and dozen other issues.
I think we can beat Trump while still getting things done.
Jeanine Pirro’s Apparent Suspension Pulls Fox News In Two Directions
NEW YORK (AP) — The apparent suspension of Jeanine Pirro is squeezing Fox News Channel in two directions.
A prominent Muslim-American civil rights organization is calling for advertisers to boycott Fox News, while another group is petitioning to have the weekend host reinstated.
Pirro wasn’t on the air Saturday, a week after Fox publicly condemned her for comments questioning U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s loyalty because she wears a Muslim head covering. Fox hasn’t explained the former New York-area district attorney’s absence, declining to comment on “internal scheduling matters.”
The network’s schedule for the upcoming weekend lists another program in Pirro’s time slot.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations, the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights organization, this week said that advertisers should boycott Fox News until Pirro and prime-time host Tucker Carlson were fired. Carlson has been fighting back since being criticized last week for comments made on a radio show a decade ago and unearthed last week.
Meanwhile, the lobbying group Act for America urged its members write to Fox News President Suzanne Scott to complain about Pirro’s absence. In its online message, Act for America said that instead of rewarding its anchor for opening a much-needed debate, “Fox News caved to pressure from the radical left.”
“Jeanine Pirro did nothing wrong,” the group’s leader, Brigitte Gabriel, said via tweet. “People should be outraged.”
Act for America has been listed as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center for anti-Muslim rhetoric. Gabriel has tweeted in recent days that she considered SPLC a hate group.
Act for America said more than 20,000 people have responded to its request to email Scott. Fox News had no comment on the campaign Tuesday.
Act for America was echoing tweets by President Donald Trump last weekend. He had also proclaimed his support for Pirro and advocated for her reinstatement.
Pirro has issued one statement through Fox, saying she did not call Omar un-American and that “my intention was to ask a question and start a debate, but of course because one is Muslim does not mean you don’t support the Constitution.”
Gabriel had appeared with Pirro last Friday on the online Fox Nation service, where the advocacy group leader referred to Omar and a colleague, Rep. Rashida Talib, as anti-Semitic, in a transcript provided by the liberal media watchdog Media Matters for America. Of the two representatives, Pirro said, “it’s almost as though they think they’re representing another country.”
Gabriel also criticized Fox in the wake of its hiring Monday of former Democratic National Committee chief Donna Brazile as a political commentator.
Between the suspension of Pirro and hiring of Brazile, “if that doesn’t show you the direction Fox News is headed I don’t know what will,” she tweeted.
O’Rourke Seeks End Of ‘Racist’ Voter ID Laws, Expanding Same-Day Registration
KEENE, N.H. (AP) — Democrat Beto O’Rourke is calling for an end to what he sees as “racist voter ID laws” during his first presidential campaign stop in New Hampshire.
Speaking at Keene State College on Tuesday, the former Texas congressman also called for expanding same-day voter registration, as well as federal oversight of the voting system.
He says, “We have kept too many people out for too long.”
Republicans have pursued voter ID laws aimed at preventing in-person voter fraud, including by people in the country illegally. Many experts say such voter fraud is extremely rare, and critics contend the efforts are meant to suppress turnout from groups who tend to back Democrats, including racial minorities and college students.
O’Rourke plans to campaign in all 10 of New Hampshire’s counties over two days.
Nunes Defends Suit: Public Figures Should Have Same Protections As Private People
Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA) defended his lawsuit against criticism on Tuesday evening, telling Fox News that people in the public eye should be protected against defamation just as private people are.
“So what we’re talking about here is defamation and so if it’s with reckless disregard for the truth and with malice, doesn’t matter if you’re a public figure or not,” he told Fox News’ Martha MacCallum. “What I would say, Martha, is let’s just switch roles here. If multiple people had said you had done a lot of really bad things and it started impacting your contract with Fox––you’re a public figure, I’m a public figure. Essentially what they’re saying is it doesn’t matter, you nor I have any recourse at all. And so I don’t think that’s right. And look, we want to get to the discovery process. There’s no question not only have I been defamed, it’s been multiple times, hundreds and thousands of times.”
Nunes is suing Twitter and several individual users, claiming he’s been defamed and that Twitter has a bias against conservatives.
Shifting hopes as Republicans and Democrats await Mueller
WASHINGTON (AP) — It’s a witch hunt, a vendetta, the worst presidential harassment in history.
That’s what President Donald Trump has shouted for two years about the special counsel’s Russia probe. Now, barring an eleventh-hour surprise, Trump and his allies are starting to see it as something potentially very different: a political opportunity.
With Robert Mueller’s findings expected any day, the president has grown increasingly confident the report will produce what he insisted all along: no clear evidence of a conspiracy between Russia and his 2016 campaign. And Trump and his advisers are considering how to weaponize those possible findings for the 2020 race, according to current and former White House officials and presidential confidants who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private conversations.
A change is underway as well among congressional Democrats, who have long believed the report would offer damning evidence against the president. The Democrats are busy building new avenues for evidence to come out, opening a broad array of investigations of Trump’s White House and businesses that go far beyond Mueller’s focus on Russian interference to help Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton.
It’s a striking role reversal.
No one knows exactly what Mueller will say, but Trump, his allies and members of Congress are trying to map out the post-probe political dynamics.
One scenario would have seemed downright implausible until recently: The president will take the findings and run on them, rather than against them, by painting the special counsel as an example of failed government overreach and Trump himself as the victim who managed to prove his innocence.
The top Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, Georgia Rep. Doug Collins, said on the House floor last week that he had a “news flash” for Democrats who had high hopes that the report would be damaging to Trump.
“What happens when it comes back and says none of this was true, the president did not do anything wrong?” Collins asked. “Then the meltdown will occur.”
Trump’s tweeted version was even more graphic: The Democrats’ House investigative committees were going “stone cold CRAZY.”
That was in reaction to Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler’s document requests to 81 people, businesses and organizations related to Trump. Nadler said his panel must look at “a much broader question” than Mueller has.
Adam Schiff, chairman of the intelligence committee, also said there’s much more to look into. Mueller, he said, “can’t be doing much of a money laundering investigation” if he hasn’t subpoenaed Deutsche Bank, which has loaned millions of dollars to Trump. Schiff’s panel, along with the House Financial Services Committee, is looking into money laundering and Trump’s foreign financial entanglements.
“We have a separate and independent and important responsibility,” Schiff has said. “And that is to tell the country what happened.”
The Russia probe, taken over by Mueller in May 2017, has posed a mortal threat to the presidency since Trump was elected — a possible case for collusion or obstruction of justice that could begin a domino effect ending with impeachment. Those fears still exist, but as the investigation winds down, other feelings have taken hold in the White House, namely a cautious optimism that the worst is over, that no smoking gun has been found.
Even if Mueller’s final report does not implicate the president in criminal conduct, the investigation was far from fruitless. His team brought charges against 34 people, including six Trump associates, and three companies. His prosecutors revealed a sweeping criminal effort by Russians to interfere in the 2016 presidential election and showed that people connected to the Trump campaign were eager to exploit emails stolen from Democrats.
Trump, of course, has railed relentlessly against the probe, deeming it a baseless “witch hunt,” sometimes in all capital letters, and has said it was based on unfounded allegations perpetrated by his “deep state” enemies in the Department of Justice, as well as his foes in the Democratic Party and the media.
If the report proves anticlimactic, says former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, a strong Trump ally, “there would no longer be any justification for what the House Dems want to do. They have their report, they had the guy they wanted writing it, and he had the full power of the federal government behind him and they still didn’t get the president.
“Trump can say: Here is the report. I didn’t fire Mueller, I didn’t interfere with him. If you want to keep investigating me, it just shows that it is purely partisan.”
In fact, Trump has told his inner circle that, if the report is underwhelming, he will use Twitter and interviews to gloat over the findings, complain about the probe’s cost and depict the entire investigation as an attempt to obstruct his agenda, according to advisers and confidants.
The president’s campaign and pro-Trump outside groups will then likely amplify the message, while his advisers expect the conservative media, including Fox News, to act as an echo chamber. A full-throated attack on the investigation, portraying it as a failed coup, could also be the centerpiece of Trump campaign events, including rallies, they say.
While Trump’s base has long been suspicious of Mueller, the president’s team believes independents and moderate Democrats who backed him in the last election but have since soured may return to the fold if convinced he has been unfairly targeted.
In the meantime, the president and his surrogates will labor to link the report with the mounting investigations launched by House Democrats.
One of Trump’s most ardent defenders, North Carolina Rep. Mark Meadows, tweeted last month that Democrats will “keep investigating if Mueller doesn’t find what they want. Amazing.”
Meadows wrote in a separate tweet: “Their message is shifting. The ‘Russian collusion’ narrative is falling apart, and they know it.”
Trump Slams TSA Over Years-Old Video of Pat-Down Circulated by QAnon Fans
President Donald Trump went after the Transportation Security Administration in a late night tweet, calling the agency out over a 2-year-old video that the department addressed a long time ago.
Late at night on Tuesday, Trump retweeted a video from comedian Larry the Cable Guy, which, in turn, was being circulated by actor and right-wing conspiracy theorist James Woods. The video shows a young man being patted down by a TSA official at a security checkpoint.
“Not a good situation!” Trump remarked.
Washington Post has explained how the video recently picked up traction among followers of QAnon, the ever-mutating conspiracy theory about the president’s supposed battle against the “deep state” and globalist pedophiles. As for Trump, he has said nothing about the fact that the pat-down happened back in 2017, nor the fact that the TSA previously released a “mythbuster” blogto address concerns about it when it happened.
The TSA said the boy was patted-down after the laptop he was carrying got picked up on security scanners. The agency explained that the pat-down was standard procedure in this situation, that it went on for only two minutes, and that the whole thing was done under the supervision of the boy’s mother and two police officers that were present to address her concerns.
“We get it. Nobody likes to be patted down. And nobody likes to see their loved ones patted down, especially children,” the blog says. “TSA screens thousands of families every day, and our officers are trained to communicate with parents, explain screening procedures before they begin, and find the best way to get everyone to their plane safely and efficiently.”
The blog goes on with a list of guidelines for the TSA’s pat-down screenings.
Clarence Thomas Speaks Up At SCOTUS Arguments For First Time In 3 Years
WASHINGTON (AP) — Justice Clarence Thomas is asking his first questions at Supreme Court arguments in more than three years.
Arguments were almost over Wednesday in a case about racial discrimination in the South when the court’s only African-American member and lone Southerner piped up.
The case involves a black Mississippi death row inmate who’s been tried six times for murder and a white prosecutor with a history of using jury strikes to exclude African-Americans.
Thomas wanted to know if the lawyer for inmate Curtis Flowers had made the same kind of decisions and if so, the race of struck jurors.
Lawyer Sheri Lynn Johnson said three white jurors were excused by Flowers’ trial attorney.
Thomas dissented when the court ruled for a Georgia inmate in a similar case in 2016.
Kellyanne Sides With Trump: ‘You Think He Should Just Take That Sitting Down?’
White House counselor Kellyanne Conway picked her boss over her husband Wednesday, asking a reporter incredulously if President Donald Trump was expected to “just take that sitting down?”
“He left it alone for months out of respect for me,” Conway told Politico. “But you think he shouldn’t respond when somebody, a non-medical professional accuses him of having a mental disorder? You think he should just take that sitting down?”
“Don’t play psychiatrist any more than George should be,” she continued. “You’re not a psychiatrist and he’s not, respectfully.”
The tension has ratcheted up this week, with Trump and George Conway repeatedly exchanging barbs. Trump called George a “whack job” who is doing a “tremendous disservice” to Kellyanne Wednesday afternoon.