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@Rubato
@IP360
and the rest of yall.

so will meullers report be looked at as fuckery now that a pedo was a witness?

and once trump leaves can we still go for jail time?
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/tenants-trump-tower-campaign-money

As Tenants Hightail It From Trump Tower, Campaign Money Used To Fill The Gap


Trump Tower, the President’s Manhattan property, has been hemorrhaging tenants and money since its namesake took office — so now the President is cutting checks from his campaign coffers to bridge the gap.

According to HuffPost, President Donald Trump has been spending $37,500 a month on office space there, though only a handful of people idle around the massive area.

Erin Chlopak, a former FEC attorney, told HuffPost that the transactions would only be illegal if it could be proven that the Trump Tower space was serving no actual purpose for the campaign.

The Republican National Committee shares a much larger office with the campaign in Arlington.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-cnn-att-boycott-threat-white-house-censorship

‘Particularly Sinister’: Trump Call To Boycott AT&T Sets Off New Ethics Alarm Bells

President Donald Trump went another step further Monday in his war against negative press coverage of his administration, calling for a boycott of CNN’s parent company, AT&T. Trump’s aggressive use of his bully pulpit is hardly new, but targeting a private corporation because of that press coverage raises distinct legal and ethical questions, experts told TPM.

“I believe that if people stoped [sic] using or subscribing to @ ATT, they would be forced to make big changes at @ CNN,” Trump tweeted, saying the network broadcast “such bad, Fake News!”

“Why doesn’t owner @ ATT do something” about CNN, he said in another tweet. Neither AT&T nor CNN responded to TPM’s request for comment.

“The idea that the President would be calling out a private company and effectively threatening them is, I think, somewhat impressive,” said Larry Noble, a CNN contributor himself and former general counsel for the Campaign Legal Center and the Federal Election Commission. “I can’t remember a situation like this.”

“The President’s call to boycott AT&T to hurt CNN is unprecedented and certainly a move to force changes at the network,” Scott Amey, general counsel at the Project on Government Oversight, told TPM.

Virginia Canter, chief ethics counsel at the watchdog group Citizens for Ethics and Responsibility in Washington (CREW), concurred, calling Trump’s comments “an abuse of his official position.”

“It’s particularly sinister because it has to do with not liking the reporting,” she added.

It appears Trump was still mad for CNN’s reporting that he’d called British royal Meghan Markle “nasty” in an interview — which he did, as audio of the exchange documented. Trump and his campaign raged against CNN reporting as much all weekend.

It’s hardly the first time Trump has called for a boycott — previously: Apple, Megyn Kelly, Italy — nor even his first as President. He called for a boycott of Harley Davidson “if manufacturing moves overseas” in August last year, and tweeted “we should boycott Fake News CNN” in November 2017, in response to the network saying it would skip the White House Christmas Party.

But most of Trump’s targets are public figures or broadcasters accustomed to fielding insults. Going after a private conglomerate with major government contracts rings different ethics alarm bells, experts said.

Trump has a history of targeting AT&T, unsuccessfully speaking out against the company’s acquisition of CNN’s parent company, Time Warner.

Trump famously said during the 2016 presidential campaign that he would oppose AT&T’s acquisition of Time Warner; AT&T’s lawyers attempted to use those statements against the Justice Department when the Trump administration sued to block the merger on anti-trust grounds in late 2017.

A judge ultimately approved the historic merger last June, but notably rejectedAT&T’s effort to obtain records of the White House’s communications with the DOJ concerning similar mergers — an effort to prove “selective enforcement” against AT&T.

The New Yorker reported in March that Trump ordered his top economic adviser, then Gary Cohn, to pressure the Justice Department to block the merger before it did so; he also reportedly pressured then-White House chief of staff John Kelly on the same matter. Cohn and Kelly, reportedly, did not apply pressure to the DOJ.

Kathleen Clark, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis, compared Monday’s tweets to Trump’s attacks against Amazon owner Jeff Bezos. Bezos also owns the Washington Post, and Trump has accused the paper of unregistered lobbying on its owners’ behalf. The President even reportedlyurged the postmaster general to raise postage rates for Amazon.

“Amazon is relevant here not just because it is a big company, but because it is currently a significant government contractor and it is being considered for the award of an enormous defense contract,” she said.

Amazon and Microsoft are finalists for a multi-billion-dollar cloud computing contact with the Defense Department. AT&T is similarly tied to the government: it was revealed last year that the telecomms giant was awarded a $3.3 billion National Security Agency contract.

These corporations, Clark noted, are tied to “the security operation of the United States government.”

Canter, the chief ethics counsel at CREW, brought up what’s known as the White House “contacts policy,” which sets rules for how White House employees communicate with executive branch agencies.

Normally, she said, the White House would refrain “from commenting on any issue that could raise a regulatory and enforcement issue, unless it had been clearly vetted, and normally that process would be left to the regulator.

“Any time you make this kind of statement, it would show that any normal process has been usurped by the President’s bias,” she said, adding: “I would be very concerned, from a White House perspective, that it could undermine any appearance of impartiality by any agency.”

Noble also raised concerns about the chilling effect Trump’s attack could have on smaller publications.

“AT&T’s a big company, CNN’s a big company, they can handle themselves,” he said. “What happens now to smaller media outlets who wonder: if they’re going to criticize the President, is he going to come after them?”

“At some point,” he added, “it’s government interference in the First Amendment rights of an organization. It is coming close to the government trying to shut down media.”

He wondered aloud: “The question is: Is he going to stop, and where does he go after this?”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-gop-tariff-mexico-uk

Trump Shows No Sign Of Cowing To GOP Tariff Vote Threat: ‘That Would Be Foolish’

Tensions between congressional Republicans and President Donald Trump have been heightened in the past few days over Trump’s threat to levy tariffs on Mexico. Now, congressional Republicans are mulling holding a vote to block the tariffs, which could also prevent funds from going to Trump’s border wall.

At a press conference Tuesday in the UK, Trump showed no signs of backing off his tariff strong-arming.

“I don’t think they will do that; if they do it’s foolish,” he said of the threatened Republican vote. “There’s nothing more important than borders. I’ve had tremendous Republican support.”

The vast majority of Republicans don’t often break with this President, but many of his usual allies have voiced displeasure at his tariff threat.

The vote they are considering would nullify Trump’s national emergency declaration. Congress took such a vote in March, but Trump vetoed it. This time, more widespread anger about Trump’s behavior may garner enough support to create a veto-proof vote.
 


https://www.mediaite.com/tv/watch-t...s-herself-based-amy-stabs-baby-trump-balloon/

Trump Supporter Who Calls Herself ‘Based Amy’ Stabs Baby Trump Balloon

And now for the latest demonstration developments from London’s Trafalgar Square (or parts nearby)…

It appears that the massive “Trump Baby” balloon that anti-Trump protestors have pulled about various London neighborhoods visited by President Donald Trumphas been “popped” by a Trump Supporter who self-identifies as “Based Amy.” Or a more accurate description would be that the balloon was stabbed, and rendered useless, at least temporarily, as a protest device.

SMH...
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/epa-andrew-wheeler-blame-media-climate-change-alarm

EPA Chief: It’s The Media’s Fault People Are So Worried About Climate Change!

Environmental Protection Agency administrator Andrew Wheeler on Monday blamed the media for the public’s growing concern over climate change.


While Wheeler was giving a speech at the National Press Club, he argued the press needs to help “fix” Americans’ “perception” that the environment is getting worse.

“The media does a disservice to the public by not informing the public of the progress this nation has made,” the EPA chief said as he rattled off some statistics indicating that the U.S. has decreased its pollution levels over the past several decades.

It’s true that air pollution in the U.S. has decreased, according to NASA scientists.

However, the earth’s carbon dioxide levels are at a record high, ocean levels are rising due to melting ice glaciers, and millions of people worldwide have been affected by extreme weather patterns caused by global warming.

And to top it all off, a new report by the Breakthrough National Center for Climate Restoration predicts that human civilization could collapse by 2050 if climate change isn’t stopped in time.



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