Rick Gates got a sweet deal from Mueller. Hard to believe it was just for nailing Manafort, who was already screwed.
The narrative: Trump laundered dirty Russian money for profit in exchange for getting elected to protect Putin from sanctions, then obstructed justice to cover it all up.
We no longer have to prove collusion. Mueller has done that. Up to Trump to disprove it.
I am beginning to enjoy Friday’s in the District. Today is very special. Gates flipped, but only announced a few hours before taking the “I did it”. He had two very tiny charges compared to what was on the plate. That means he gave up the jewels on someone big. And, in his papers was the second part, which was lying – that lie being about Rohrabacher. The russian wannabe.
So much is happening, and the pace is increasing. Could it be there is now something important to be taken down? I think so.
Wow!
Mueller is doing a dump of stuff on Manafort. What it shows is that the man is very dirty and that Mueller is playing the game of “I pour more crap on you everyday until you suffocate, or help me”. Mueller has so much on Manafort he can hold back huge pieces just to pile it on. The sweetness gets better.
Hertz:
“We have notified the NRA that we are ending the NRA’s rental car discount program with Hertz.”
Straggler comment of mine from the prior thread:
SFB Jr. almost colluded – and he tried very hard to do so. His collusion was not with the social media campaign – it was to be more direct. I don’t know how it will wash out in the end, but SFB’s involvement in drafting a false story about the meeting could ultimately be a problem for him. I have one word for Mueller – subpoena.
Parkland kid calling out Fedex for having an NRA discount, too.
A TX Dem took $24,000 from the NRA.
Maybe Manafort is staying mum because the Russians have threatened him if he talks. He does have a wife and a daughter. I wouldn’t want to mess with the FBI… but messing with the KGB has to be deadly.
Just a thought…
Watched nearly all the speakers at CPAC. Like watching the Soviet Union soil itself. Time to take the trash out. Hello Midterms.
Dems took NRA money, but they took less than repugs (17% as opposed to 83% from 1990 to date) and haven’t been blocking every piece of legislation discussed that might put curbs on acquisition of military style rifles and enhanced background checks.
Last one out the gate post the notice on who has lost their clearances
How many more guilty pleas by Trumpsters for “defrauding” our nation with Russians does it take to silence this “no collusion” horse shit?
Poobah, I’m afraid that the answer is all of them. ?
Trump hired Manafort to get Russia’s help (collusion) in the campaign. That’s my guess why Mueller is squeezing him to flip.
“Trump hired Manafort to get Russia’s help (collusion) in the campaign .”
craig, hired? you forgot what ko told us in October….seems more he was gently forced on the twit. manafort volunteered, “He worked for free. Why?”
renee, yep, between a rock and a hard place. what a dilemma: fed to a wrathful bear or bear the wrath of a fed?
cnn:
When Coral Springs police officers arrived at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on February 14 in the midst of the school shooting crisis, many officers were surprised to find not only that Broward County Sheriff’s Deputy Scot Peterson, the armed school resource officer, had not entered the building, but that three other Broward County Sheriff’s deputies were also outside the school and had not entered, Coral Springs sources tell CNN. The deputies had their pistols drawn and were behind their vehicles, the sources said, and not one of them had gone into the school.
With direction from the Broward deputies who were outside, Coral Springs police soon entered the building where the shooter was. New Broward County Sheriff’s deputies arrived on the scene, and two of those deputies and an officer from Sunrise, Florida, joined the Coral Springs police as they went into the building.
Some Coral Springs police were stunned and upset that the four original Broward County Sheriff’s deputies who were first on the scene did not appear to join them as they entered the school, Coral Springs sources tell CNN. It’s unclear whether the shooter was still in the building when they arrived.
[…continues…]
???
sorry about the length but it’s worth it. carl in a more serious mood than usual.
carl Hiaasen:
‘Hey, Marjory Stoneman Douglas kids — Don’t ever let these cowards we elected wriggle off the hook.’
February 22, 2018 05:20 PM
Updated February 23, 2018 05:18 PM
To all those Florida students who walked out, marched, rode the bus to Tallahassee, confronted lawmakers, rattled the governor, sat down with President Donald Trump at the White House or braced Marco Rubio at a town hall on national television:
You’re making an impact. And you’re making them nervous, because you’re not going away.
They outlasted the backlash after the Pulse nightclub slaughter. The Texas church killings seemingly vanished from the headlines within a week. The Las Vegas massacre produced a flurry of angst about bump stocks, and then nothing.
Even the outcry after the Newtown child massacre in 2012 lost steam, sapped by brutal ongoing grief and political futility.
However, there’s a key difference between the Parkland and Newtown tragedies: The classmates of the Sandy Hook Elementary School victims were too young to take their pain public.
To those from Marjory Stoneman Douglas Senior High who sat in the balcony of the state House of Representatives last week: You got a depressing but instructive civics lesson.
Republican legislators warned against the imminent dangers of porn, yet refused to discuss banning assault rifles of the type used to kill 14 students and three educators at your school.
You witnessed first-hand how lawmakers squirm and sweat when real citizens show up in Tallahassee. They’re accustomed to glancing up at that balcony and seeing insiders and lobbyists — not angry, heartbroken kids.
Lobbyists like Marion Hammer of the NRA, watching closely, making sure her obedient minions vote the way she advises them.
To those from Stoneman Douglas High who got to ask House Speaker Richard Corcoran if he’d support a ban on assault weapons, you heard something illuminating:
He said ‘No,’ explaining: “I think that if you look, it’s widely used in multiple different hunting scenarios. I know people who go out, and they’ll do boar hunts and use them.”
In other words, folks who like to shoot wild pigs with high-caliber semiautomatic rifles shouldn’t be denied their sporting fun just because crazed people use the same type of weapons to shoot humans in schools and churches and movie theaters.
One more thing, kids: Corcoran is running for governor this year. You might not yet be old enough to vote against him, but your parents are.
And to those thousands of parents — and students — who showed up Wednesday night at the BB&T Center in Sunrise (not far from the gun shop that legally sold the AR-15 to sick Nikolas Cruz), you accomplished something historic:
You actually got Marco Rubio to take a position on a controversial issue. That never happens.
Yet, in front of you and a large CNN audience, the NRA’s $3 Million Man said he would support the modest reform of raising the minimum age for buying rifles to 21.
Commitment didn’t come easy for our slipperiest senator. He endured boos, jeers and an emotional interrogation by the father of 14-year-old Jaime Guttenberg, who was murdered at Stoneman Douglas High.
While Rubio wouldn’t promise not to take any more NRA money, he agreed that 18-year-olds should be banned from purchasing AR-15s. Whether he follows through is something for you students to watch closely, since he wants to be the next U.S. president.
By the time he runs again, you’ll all be old enough to vote.
To those of all ages in the #NEVERAGAIN movement: Look how you’ve got these guys scrambling. Corcoran and his counterparts in the state Senate are rushing out a package to tighten some laws on assault rifles.
Gov. Rick Scott — an NRA sweetheart who’s running for the U.S. Senate — suddenly is working on his own grand plan.
After past bloodbaths, GOP leaders always bided their time, waiting for the voices of the grieving to fade away. Then they did nothing, and that’s surely what would happen now, if your voices began to fade.
But yours are getting louder and stronger, which is why these politicians are so nervous. It’s also why the alt-right is trying to smear you online, cruelly belittling those who survived the Parkland fusillade and dared to speak out.
They stoop so low because they fear the power of your words and tears. They know the whole nation is watching and listening when you call BS on our nut-friendly gun laws.
They see, too, that you’re not alone, that students and parents from coast to coast are rising, outraged and galvanized.
So, to your awakening generation from a generation that has failed, here’s the message: Don’t ever go away. Don’t ever be quiet. Don’t ever let these cowards wriggle off the hook.
The fight will be long, rough and often discouraging, but the price of silence would be unbearable.
Jamie, and other Heinlein fans, here’s an interesting naval biotreat of the author.
Fear not, vanka and suckabee are at the olympics in south korea. No surprise suckabee was pretty excited to see a squirrel on the snowboarding course. I wonder, if like dog, squirrel meat is a popular in south korea as it is with the huckabee family in Arkansas? Dog meat farms sure taking the spotlight during the games. Kenworthy adopted a dog from such a meat farm.
The Moscow Mueller scoreboard is looking good —
Mueller 22
trumpence junta 0
wall st journal via msn: The Big Loophole That Helped Russia Exploit Facebook: Doctored Photos
[….]
This use of doctored images was a crucial and deceptively simple technique used by Russian propagandists to spread fabricated information during the 2016 election, one that exposes a loophole in tech company defenses. Facebook Inc. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google have traps to detect misinformation, but struggle — then and now — to identify falsehoods posted directly on their platforms, in particular through pictures.
Facebook disclosed last fall that Secured Borders was one of 290 Facebook and Instagram pages created and run by Russia-backed accounts that sought to amplify divisive social issues, including immigration. Last week’s indictment secured by special counsel Robert Mueller cited the Secured Borders page as an example of how Russians invented fake personas in an effort to “sow discord in the U.S. political system.”
The campaigns conducted by some of those accounts, according to a Wall Street Journal review, often relied on images that were doctored or taken out of context.
[…continues..]
We don’t have the meats…DHL unable to deliver the chicken meat to KFC outlets. What the cluck? KFC responds to disaster with PR finesse.
They put out a full-page ad:
Rachel also mentioned manafort working for free during her blow by blow of the new counts
sorry about that link not coming thru. here’s that 2/22 maddow show at her official site.
This one is for pogo — yellow cardinal spotted in Alabama.
Our UK friends could always make their own. Here are the 11 ingredients (found on the back of Col. Sanders’ wife’s will):
2/3 tablespoon salt
1/2 tablespoon thyme
1/2 tablespoon basil
1/3 tablespoon oregano
1 tablespoon celery salt
1 tablespoon black pepper
1 tablespoon dried mustard
4 tablespoons paprika
2 tablespoons garlic salt
1 tablespoon ground ginger
3 tablespoons white pepper
And a pinch of Accent/MSG (not in the original recipe, KFC added this in later years)
For fried chicken mix the above with 2 cups of flour. Soak the raw chicken in a buttermilk-egg bath for an hour or so before frying. Roll pieces in the spice mix for a light coating. Fry in oil until golden brown at no more than 350 degrees (pan or deep fry OK but Sanders used pressure cookers).
Thanks, Craig. The yellow cardinal might be a tasty substitute with the secret ingredients on the colonel’s wife’s will. ‘Bama chicken on a stick!
One more thought…so sick and tired of the fbi dropping the ball. What is the hold-up now on the dem counter memo?
We can add Delta and United to the list of businesses that cut ties with the NRA. When heartless tonedeafness interferes with business relationships it’s time to take a breath and reassess. Nice job Wayne.
Rammer jammer yellow cardinal? Hmmm, that doesn’t sound right. That is one pretty bird. Thanks BW
I have yet to hear a compelling reason why there should be public sales of ar-15. Let me know when General Kelley applies for a teaching job and I personally will speak at the school board meeting in opposition to his hiring.
Poobah, my GM didn’t need to market her fried chicken – her Opelika, AL recipe was dip the cluck in milk and egg, roll in flour, salt & pepper mixture, repeat, fry in a big ass cast iron skillet in lard. (Mom changed to Crisco, and sometimes Wesson oil but it tasted the same). Better’n KFC ever dreamed of being.
I am a big fan of KFC –Korean Fried Chicken
https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/korean-fried-chicken
I don’t eat chicken anymore. Friend of mine ate a chicken bone somehow, and it wound up lodged in an intestine causing a massive infection which like to have kilt him. First they had to find what was cause by MRI……ah, chicken bone in intestine…..then they had to get it out and scrape out all the infection all over the liver abdomen area.
very dire.
yeah, I know…..don’t eat chicken bones.
but here’s the thing: if it’s even possible for a normal grown man to swallow a chicken bone, then I want no part of it. I’m outa heah….
the gospel bird is dead to me.
He has the bone in a jar, and still eats chicken, but a house don’t have to fall on me…..
Alriiiiiight!
For the first time ever… the USA won a gold medal for curling… the men’s team beat the Swedes!
USA! USA!
cbs via msn: Florida GOP congressman says he would support an assault weapons ban
Florida GOP congressman and Army veteran Brian Mast is calling for a ban on assault weapons purchases. In an op-ed published Friday in the New York Times, Mast wrote that he supports “(d)efining what constitutes an assault or tactical firearm and not allowing them for future purchase — just as we already prohibit the purchase of fully automatic firearms.”
“The exact definition of assault weapon will need to be determined,” Mast continued. “But we should all be able to agree that the civilian version of the very deadly weapon that the Army issued to me should certainly qualify.”
Mast went on to say that he would not support a ban that demanded the confiscation of “existing legally owned firearms.”
The former bomb technician, who lost both his legs and a finger to a roadside bomb in Afghanistan, recalled the M4 carbine he used to carry, a weapon that he said “was very similar to the AR-15-style semiautomatic” that was used to carry out the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.
He wrote about his M4, saying it’s “the best for killing our enemies,” but “the best killing tool the Army could put in my hands” won’t make Americans safer in their communities, schools and public places.
The Republican congressman and NRA member argued that tactical rifles make Americans less safe, pointing out that the 9-millimeter he carries for self-defense doesn’t have the firepower for a fair fight with an AR-15.
“(T)he defense my concealed 9-millimeter affords me is largely gone if the attacker is firing from beyond 40 yards, as he could easily do with the AR-15,” Mast says.
Declaring that the Second Amendment is “unimpeachable,” Mast nonetheless says that it “does not guarantee that every civilian can bear any and all arms.”
In the op-ed, he also expresses his support for improvements in the background check system, bans on devices that “circumvent the ban on automatic firearms,” raising the ages at which people can buy different types of guns, ensuring the mentally ill can’t buy firearms, disallowing people on terror lists from being able to buy guns, holding FBI and other agencies accountable for their failure to identify threats to schools, enabling schools to enhance security screening and other measures.
Besides, they can be really cute if you starve them and then put em in a torture chamber where they have to dance for food.
maga it
ny times: Impeachment Talk a Sign of GOP’s Long-Term Worry About Court
HARRISBURG, Pa. — The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision to redraw boundaries of the state’s congressional districts has triggered a volcanic reaction from Republicans, including talk of impeaching justices and a Democratic Party plot to stop President Donald Trump.
The ruling was indeed novel: Constitutional law scholars say they know of no other state court that has ever thrown out congressional district boundaries over a partisan gerrymandering claim.
It has implications for Republican control of Congress. It also has implications for state government: Republicans say they are worried about what the court — with a 5-2 Democratic majority — may do in the future to weaken the power of a Republican-controlled Legislature.
“This is without precedent and could have far-reaching impact, not just for congressional lines, but for the rule of law and separation of powers,” said Pennsylvania’s Republican Party chairman, Val DiGiorgio.
For Republicans, the decision came at a stressful time — this year’s mid-term election is a time when the party of the president traditionally loses seats in Congress. Republicans also have enormous clout invested in the other branches of government. The GOP controls an all-time high of 32 state legislatures, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, and 33 of 50 governor’s offices.
Democrats suggest there’s desperation in the strident Republican rhetoric.
“It all sounds rather unhinged to me,” said Democratic U.S. Rep. Mike Doyle of Pittsburgh.
[….]
Talk of impeaching a justice is rare in Pennsylvania, so rare that it did not arise even as three justices left the bench amid scandals in the past five years.
“Their reaction right now is rather bizarre. It’s not befitting people in those positions to say, ‘when we get a decision we don’t like, let’s impeach the judges,'” Doyle said. “We’re not a nation that operates that way. We’re a nation of laws.”
In any case, impeachment talk may be little more than saber-rattling.
Pennsylvania lawmakers have started an impeachment process a number of times, but successfully impeached a public official just once since 1803, according to the House parliamentarian. That was ex-Supreme Court Justice Rolf Larsen in 1994 — after he was ejected from the bench by a criminal conviction.
Coolio on the curling guys. Whodathunkit?
and sturg, duh.
What’s the legal “justification” for gerrymandering by the GOP ?
and doesn’t the constitution forbid gerrymandering?
Well, I see that gerrymandering became a word in 1812 so does the constitution address political boundary making in some way….?
Gerrymandering……..a sticky wicket.
Progress report. Not the flu (test neg for any strain) and no pneumonia. A very nasty viral infection. Doc said “we need to get you over it”. I agree. I already told my boss not to expect me Monday. This thing is as close to the flu as I have had in many years. Wash your hands and avoid people.
I am waiting for SFB to get free of his handlers and do a tweet storm about Gates (who?) flipping. Should be a Duesenberg of a blast considering what a bunch of his russian friends being indicted did.
U.S. gold in curling. Having grown up watching CKLW Windsor television with curling every week I am surprised the game took so long to get over the Ambassador Bridge.
BB, Be cool–let the pup take care of you for a few days–don’t forget tomorrow’s Jace’s serendipitous day
Just read Buffet’s annual letter. I urge all the rest of us hoping to retire at some point in time to do the same. If one has no idea what he is talking about, then it is time to march down to one’s community college and enroll in their beginner’s course in individual investing. Here is his letter
KC, roger on the Korean chicken. LP’s favorite Korean restaurant in NYC is Barn Joo. Absolutely amazing fried chicken.
pogo, one of your wva friends? judge cramer, not dr. evil.
the Hollywood reporter: John Oliver, HBO Beat Coal Executive’s Defamation Lawsuit
Days after returning from his Last Week Tonight winter hiatus, John Oliver has emerged victorious from a legal fight with the subject of one of his segments.
Robert Murray, Murray Energy and other associated coal companies sued both the network and Oliver in June, arguing the host created a “villainous” portrait of the coal baron.
The original segment criticized the company’s practices regarding the safety and health of its employees, described Murray as a “geriatric Dr. Evil” and featured a man dressed as a squirrel who proclaimed “Eat shit, Bob.” The lawsuit prompted a second segment in which Oliver told viewers about the litigation.
The case was remanded to West Virginia state court where HBO and Partially Important Productions submitted two motions asking the judge to dismiss the matter, one arguing that the challenged statements are protected by the First Amendment and another that the court lacked jurisdiction.
HBO argued Murray failed to state a claim for defamation, claiming the serious portions of the segment were based on judicial opinions and government reports while the humorous jabs at Murray’s age and appearance was satire that can’t be proven false.
Judge Jeffrey Cramer agreed, and on Wednesday sent a brief letter to the attorneys notifying them of his decision to grant dismissal.
“I find the arguments set forth in the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim and Reply well-founded, appropriate in this matter and will grant the same,” writes Cramer. “The Court adopts, with little exception, Defendants’ argument in support of their Motion regarding all issues addressed in the same.”
Cramer then asked attorneys for HBO, Oliver and producers to prepare a proposed order within 20 days for the court’s review.
law school lesson 101: never sue a squirrel… especially a cute one
the guardian: Trump at CPAC: the invasion of the body snatchers is complete
The invasion of the body snatchers is complete. Donald Trump has taken over the conservative movement and bent it to his will.
“Do you remember I started running and people would say, ‘Are you sure he’s a conservative?’” an exultant US president asked the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Friday.
“Do you remember I started running and people would say, ‘Are you sure he’s a conservative?’” an exultant US president asked the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on Friday.
“I think now we’ve proved that I’m a conservative, right?”
Or perhaps more accurately, the conservatives gathered in the cavernous ballroom proved they are all Trumpians now. There were “Make America Great Again” caps, raucous chants of “Lock her up!” and “Build that wall!” and loud boos for the demons of the left. Old-school Republicans were thin on the ground, usurped by a crowd that included young and sometimes rowdy students.
How much has changed in two years of CPAC, the biggest annual gathering of grassroots conservatives, a Woodstock of the right. In 2016, with the presidential election on fire, Trump pulled out to avoid a potentially humiliating walkout. CPAC’s official Twitter account posted: “Very disappointed @realDonaldTrump has decided at the last minute to drop out of #CPAC – his choice sends a clear message to conservatives.”
But the billionaire businessman and reality TV celebrity went on to win the Republican nomination and then the presidency. CPAC 2017 was effectively a coronation, though still with a strong hint of danger and uncertainty in the air. The white supremacist Richard Spencer turned up outside the main auditorium and had to be ejected. Another white supremacist – in some eyes at least – Steve Bannon spoke from the stage.
This week, by contrast, the National Harbor in Maryland was relatively sedate and low key, as if Trumpism is a sweater that was at first ill-fitting but now hugs CPAC quite comfortably.
[…continues…]
2 Weeks After Trump Blocked It, Democrats Release Rebuttal of G.O.P. Memo
PatD- here is another link to the Dems response.
thanks, bb, for that from the horse’s mouth so to speak being it’s the dem side of House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
cnn:
A Parkland school shooting survivor is calling for Melania Trump to fulfill her pledge to combat cyberbullying — starting with her own family.
“Hey @FLOTUS you say that your mission as First Lady is to stop cyber bullying,” 14-year-old Lauren Hogg tweeted Friday. “Well then, don’t you think it would have been smart to have a convo with your step-son @DonaldJTrumpJr before he liked a post about a false conspiracy theory which in turn put a target on my back.”
President Donald Trump’s eldest son liked a tweet promoting a false conspiracy theory that claimed that Lauren Hogg’s older brother, David, had been coached by his father — a former FBI agent — to speak out against President Donald Trump.
“The fact that Donald Trump Jr. liked that post is disgusting to me,” David Hogg said on “Anderson Cooper 360” Wednesday.
In her tweets, Lauren Hogg said that Trump Jr.’s seemingly tacit endorsement of the conspiracy theory had “created a safe space for people all over the world to call me and my family horrific things that constantly re-victimizes us and our community.”
The teenagers’ mother, Rebecca Boldrick, told The Washington Post that her family has received death threats online due to the conspiracy theories.
“Even though I thought it couldn’t get worse it has because of your family,” Lauren Hogg wrote to the first lady.
[….continues…]
Holy KFC…Kentucky long rifle awarded to the newest ‘chuck heston courage under fire recipient’ — pai of the fcc. At crazee-pac on Friday —
Dan Schneider, executive director of the CPAC-producing American Conservative Union, said there had been a change of plans. As Pai chuckled, Schneider ceded the podium to Carolyn Meadows, the second vice president of the National Rifle Association. And Meadows presented Pai with the “Charlton Heston Courage Under Fire Award,” an honor that the NRA occasionally bestows on those who champion conservative causes despite intense criticism. Previous awardees include Vice President Pence and conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh.
Conservative leaders explained they were honoring Pai partly because of his work to roll back federal rules that had subjected Internet providers to tougher regulations. The fight over net neutrality has resulted in Pai receiving death threats, forcing him to cancel recent public speeches.
In this case, the award was a “Kentucky handmade long gun,” said Meadows, who admitted the rifle could not be brought on stage. She said it would be stored for Pai at an NRA museum.
The fcc’s appearance at crazee-pac raised some ethics questions — from the wapo article.
Pai appeared stunned. (His spokesman said that the FCC chairman had no idea he would receive such an award.) He soon joined a panel to discuss telecom policy along with his fellow Republican commissioners, including Michael O’Rielly, who quipped: “Not every day you get a musket.”
O’Rielly, though, later found himself embroiled in his own controversy. His trouble started with a question about what the FCC could do to stop the constant “ping-pong” of issues, like net neutrality, every time the party in power changes in the nation’s capital.
“I think what we can do is make sure as conservatives that we elect good people to both the House, Senate and make sure that President Trump gets reelected,” O’Rielly began.
The GOP commissioner’s plug for the president riled some ethics watchdogs. Under a set of rules known as the Hatch Act, government officials like O’Rielly generally aren’t supposed to use their stations to advocate for election outcomes.
Technically, Trump is already a candidate for the 2020 presidential race; he has filed his paperwork with the Federal Election Commission.
russian spies hack the olympics.
Russian military spies hacked several hundred computers used by authorities at the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in South Korea, according to U.S. intelligence.
They did so while trying to make it appear as though the intrusion was conducted by North Korea, what is known as a “false-flag” operation, said two U.S. officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter.
Officials in PyeongChang acknowledged that the Games were hit by a cyberattack during the Feb. 9 Opening Ceremonies but had refused to confirm whether Russia was responsible. That evening there were disruptions to the Internet, broadcast systems and the Olympics website. Many attendees were unable to print their tickets for the ceremony, resulting in empty seats.
As of early February, the Russian military agency GRU had access to as many as 300 Olympic-related computers, according to an intelligence report this month.
Nanette Fabray has died at 97
Patd, Judge Cramer’s in Marshall County- I don’t know him or Murray. But Murray is one of the biggest energy companies around here. Defamation lawsuits are losers, but getting a dismissal is very unusual. Obviously no there there.
Love the minority response memo. A bunch more detailed and TRUTHFUL than the majority lies by omission work of fiction.
This Twitter chain analyzing the Demo memo is quite a read: