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Has U.S. Democracy Been Trumped? Bernie Sanders wants to know who owns America?

#6801 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2017-July-13, 14:16

View PostRedSpawn, on 2017-July-13, 14:07, said:

Nice example, but I don't discuss hypothetical false comparisons, I discuss FEDERAL LAW and FEDERAL CODES.

I said Trump Jr. might be guilty of solicitation since an intermediary he knows offered for him to meet a Russian lawyer who promised damaging information on Hillary Clinton. Trump Jr. accepted the offer from his intermediary and then coordinated to meet the Russian lawyer through his intermediary. The Russian lawyer and Trump Jr. met and nothing of value was exchanged.

Solicitation of political contribution -- indirectly, yes.

Acceptance of political contribution -- Ummm, no. You can't accept a thing of value the Russian lawyer doesn't have.

Receipt of political contribution --- Ummm, no. You can't receive a thing of value the Russian lawyer didn't give.

https://transition.f...s/foreign.shtml


I will let you handle the federal crime and codes...got it as I mentioned before don't know if it is a crime ...something might not be a federal crime and still be stupid...or dumb or bad really really bad

----

from what I have read or seen on tv at least to me...no crime...no jail time..no fine...but really bad...still bad...
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#6802 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-July-13, 15:51

View Postmike777, on 2017-July-13, 14:16, said:

I will let you handle the federal crime and codes...got it as I mentioned before don't know if it is a crime ...something might not be a federal crime and still be stupid...or dumb or bad really really bad

----

from what I have read or seen on tv at least to me...no crime...no jail time..no fine...but really bad...still bad...

Agreed. It is bad and poor, hasty decision-making. I am surprised that this request was not run through their legal counsel which should have nipped this in the bud early on. They had to wait a few days to meet so there was time to dot the I's and cross the T's.
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#6803 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2017-July-13, 16:10

I think this is all just a well-timed distraction from the fact that Chris Froome lost 20 seconds in 300 meters!
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke
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#6804 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-July-13, 21:16

Is Game of Thrones attractive to liberals because they have secret monarchical longings?

From Ross Douthat's blog post today:

Quote

As I said above, fantasy from Tolkien to the present (in both its fictional forms and role-playing varietals) partakes by its nature of romantic and reactionary themes, often scratching the same anti-modern itch as certain forms of far-right and New Age lefty politics — and perhaps the same monarchical itch as certain forms of Macron-esque centrism as well. There are fantasy writers who completely deconstruct that tendency, but for all his beheadings and betrayals Martin — unless he has serious surprises in store in the last two books — is not one of them. Westeros is not as naturally appealing to liberal audiences as Hogwarts, yes (I have some thoughts on that as well), but still it is not a dystopia in the style of Gilead or an antechamber to hell in the style of Tony Soprano’s gangland; instead it’s a world in which the fabric of a feudal society gets rent and you root for a very particular set of noble families to regain their rightful place and help weave it back together while also saving the world from some ice demons according to a prophecy. As such its doorway into illiberalism is different in kind from the doorway offered by the Soprano crime family: In the end, whatever their politics in this world, both the show’s bad fans and its good fans are rooting for a queen or a king.

If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#6805 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-July-13, 22:45

View Postmike777, on 2017-July-13, 14:04, said:

My local crack dealer told me he had a really hot ten year old girl who wants to give me free sex and crack if I show up at his hotel room. I told him I LOVE IT
I show up and the rotten dealer had no girl...no drugs he just wanted me to do him a favor in regards to my famous Dad. rats////

for the record my brother in law showed up but left after 7 minutes...and my manager just played with his phone the whole meeting.

I want to make clear for the record this meeting was a complete waste of all of our precious time.

What if it had been your local FBI agent who said he had explosives to sell and you said "I love it" but when you showed up there were no explosives? Do you think the FBI would let you go because they didn't provide what they had promised?

A big part of criminal law is intent. There is no doubt about Trump Jr.'s intent.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#6806 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2017-July-14, 03:20

View Posty66, on 2017-July-13, 21:16, said:

In the end, whatever their politics in this world, both the show’s bad fans and its good fans are rooting for a queen or a king.

I said back in series 1 that we would end up with both in the form of Jon Snow and Daenerys and have seen little during the intervening years to doubt this conclusion. My feeling is that this was GRRM's intention from the start simply because starting your main characters at opposite ends of the world and heading away from each other is such a classic form for an epic series. Given the incredible success he has achieved in the meantime, particularly from "surprises", I could envisage him changing that to an epic battle, but my belief is still that we will end up with the main two in power at the end (with Tyrion as Hand, Arya as Mistress of Whispers and perhaps Sam as Grand Maester (though that would require a little plot-forcing as it is not a royal appointment). It all seems so convenient that it is almost necessary for GRRM to throw us a curveball - but this would, to me, be the natural progression of the plot as it was laid out at from the opening pages.
(-: Zel :-)
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#6807 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-July-14, 06:56

From Liu Xiaobo's Unflappable Optimism by Xiaorong Li:

Quote

I last spoke to Liu Xiaobo from my home in Maryland the day before the police detained him in Beijing in December 2008. He wanted to discuss the use of a few words in the final draft of Charter 08, a constitutional reform manifesto. He was proud of how he had collected one more signature from a reformer who had been kicked out of the government by showing up at 5 a.m. in a Beijing park, where the old man practiced tai chi.

I worried about the risks to him and his friends and suggested delaying the release of the document. “What’s the worry? The worst for me is going back to jail. But it’s worth it: It’s nearly 20 years since Tiananmen, but there’s been no justice. I’ll do anything,” he said calmly.

The charter called for respect of “basic universal values,” including freedom, human rights, equality, democracy and constitutional rule. More than 300 Chinese activists, lawyers and intellectuals had added their signatures, some of which Xiaobo tirelessly collected by email, by Skype or at dinner parties. The main organizers planned to release the charter as several important anniversaries approached: the 20th of the Tiananmen massacre and the 60th of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Around 2 a.m. Beijing time, on Dec. 9, 2008, I realized something had gone wrong. Xiaobo could always be counted on for a lively chat in the early morning hours and mesmerizing his friends with his self-deprecating jokes, told in his strong northern accent with a slight, distinctive stutter. Yet on this day the colors indicating his availability kept switching back and forth on my screen. “You all right? Your Skype is behaving oddly,” I wrote. It turned off abruptly. I later learned that the police were searching his computer at that moment.

The Beijing police detained Xiaobo and his friend, Zhang Zuhua, a former official turned dissident, who was a co-organizer of the charter. Within two days, the document was released. Soon after, the police detained and interrogated hundreds of signatories, searched their residences and confiscated personal belongings.

Xiaobo was sentenced to 11 years in prison in December 2009 for “inciting subversion of state power.” He had been imprisoned several times since 1989, when he was jailed for his role supporting the Tiananmen protests. In May of this year, he learned he had terminal liver cancer and was hospitalized. In hindsight, his conviction was nothing short of a death sentence.

China’s tyrants may believe Xiaobo’s death on Thursday in captivity shows their strength and victory. But their efforts to erase Xiaobo’s ideas from the Chinese public haven’t totally worked. Many Chinese people may not have heard of Liu Xiaobo because of the government’s stranglehold on the media, but according to reports, more than 34,000 people — most of them in China — recently signed an open letter demanding his freedom and his right to choose his own medical care.

And while China has become more repressive in recent years under President Xi Jinping, Xiaobo’s vision of “transcending fear” with love and of fighting for freedom peacefully “with optimism” continues to inspire new generations of democracy and human rights activists.

Many more Chinese today than in 1989 or 2008 are carrying out small but significant peaceful acts of protest to further human rights protections. I have met many college graduates working in nonprofit groups advocating for the rights of the disabled, those who are L.G.B.T.Q. and victims of sexual violence. One group I worked with trained laypeople to use the law to bring officials to court, to protect their land or to seek compensation for illnesses and injuries incurred at work.

One woman, assisted by a lawyer who had training in the United Nations convention on women’s rights, sued her village officials and won a case involving gender discrimination. Another lawyer filed an appeal to the United Nations alleging arbitrary detention of his client, who was locked up at a labor camp without a trial. Officials told the lawyer that a United Nations inquiry about the case had led to the client’s release.

Brave Chinese people like these are helping to build the foundation for democracy. A schoolteacher, who was among the first group of signatories of Charter 08, has organized village election monitoring and become an expert on local election laws. His group has trained hundreds of people online about free and fair local elections.

Liu Xiaobo never harbored the illusion that nonviolent action would not be returned by violence. Chinese lawyers who used the courts to challenge the state-controlled judiciary, attempting to hold the police accountable for using torture to extract confessions or keeping detainees in secret locations, have been detained or tortured themselves.

But Xiaobo didn’t let the repression cloud his unflappable optimism. His firm belief that freedom is “the source of humanity and the mother of truth” should continue to guide all of us.

If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#6808 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2017-July-14, 09:47

Another bomb drops. From NBC by way of Vox:

Quote

The now-infamous Donald Trump Jr. meeting with a Russian lawyer during the presidential campaign had a previously undisclosed attendee. And that person is allegedly — I kid you not — a former Russian spook.

This latest news comes courtesy of a report published by NBC News on Friday morning. The man in question, according to NBC, is a “Russian-American lobbyist” and “a former Soviet counter intelligence officer who is suspected by some U.S. officials of having ongoing ties to Russian intelligence.”

NBC chose not to publish his name, but the Associated Press has identified him as Rinat Akhmetshin — a longtime Washington lobbyist who was accused in court filings of being a former Soviet military intelligence officer who "developed a special expertise in running negative public-relations campaigns” (a charge he denies).

Trump Jr. somehow failed to disclose Akhmetshin’s presence at the meeting, making this the fifth time he chose to either lie about the meeting or omit some vital piece of information about it. To make matters worse, his own lawyer, Alan Futerfas, partially confirmed the story in a statement to NBC — admitting that there was at least one previously undisclosed attendee, possibly even two, at the fateful meeting.


The Daily Beast runs with that story to find this:

Quote

KEVIN POULSEN
NICO HINES
KATIE ZAVADSKI
07.14.17 10:49 AM ET
The alleged former Soviet intelligence officer who attended the now-infamous meeting with Donald Trump Jr. and other top campaign officials last June was previously accused in federal and state courts of orchestrating an international hacking conspiracy.


Surely just another coincidence....
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#6809 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-July-14, 12:51

View PostWinstonm, on 2017-July-14, 09:47, said:

Another bomb drops. From NBC by way of Vox:

The now-infamous Donald Trump Jr. meeting with a Russian lawyer during the presidential campaign had a previously undisclosed attendee. And that person is allegedly — I kid you not — a former Russian spook.

This latest news comes courtesy of a report published by NBC News on Friday morning. The man in question, according to NBC, is a “Russian-American lobbyist” and “a former Soviet counter intelligence officer who is suspected by some U.S. officials of having ongoing ties to Russian intelligence.”

NBC chose not to publish his name, but the Associated Press has identified him as Rinat Akhmetshin — a longtime Washington lobbyist who was accused in court filings of being a former Soviet military intelligence officer who "developed a special expertise in running negative public-relations campaigns” (a charge he denies).

Trump Jr. somehow failed to disclose Akhmetshin’s presence at the meeting, making this the fifth time he chose to either lie about the meeting or omit some vital piece of information about it. To make matters worse, his own lawyer, Alan Futerfas, partially confirmed the story in a statement to NBC — admitting that there was at least one previously undisclosed attendee, possibly even two, at the fateful meeting.

The Daily Beast runs with that story to find this:

Surely just another coincidence

What does Russian-American lobbyist mean?

I am interested in the hacking accusation. Can the news expound on the nature of the hacking accusation which did not result in a conviction? This drawing out of pieces of the story is insulting to the general public. I didn't realize the whole story required carefully crafted piecemeal distribution.

And on the flip side, who was the wise person who decided that a former Soviet counter intelligence officer should be granted American citizenship? This smells very fishy on both sides; he appears to be an equally dangerous agent as a Washington lobbyist.

Posted Image
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#6810 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2017-July-14, 14:12

All this circus with smoke, mirrors, slight of hand and tongue, does it not come back to the same place we started many months ago?

Tax returns, business records showing the financial relationship with and obligations to Russian interests, not only of Drumpf but everyone connected with his business empire and campaign.

Follow the money!

That used to be the prime directive and I suspect that Meuller and others are still on it and this whole "thing" won't be solved 1 way or the other without it.
When a deaf person goes to court is it still called a hearing?
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#6811 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2017-July-14, 16:45

View Postggwhiz, on 2017-July-14, 14:12, said:

All this circus with smoke, mirrors, slight of hand and tongue, does it not come back to the same place we started many months ago?

Tax returns, business records showing the financial relationship with and obligations to Russian interests, not only of Drumpf but everyone connected with his business empire and campaign.

Follow the money!

That used to be the prime directive and I suspect that Meuller and others are still on it and this whole "thing" won't be solved 1 way or the other without it.

Well, it never works for other types of conspiracy theories but....
The Grand Design, reflected in the face of Chaos...it's a fluke!
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#6812 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-July-15, 09:20

Special Counsel Mueller Lets His Actions Do The Talking: 15 Hires, More to Come.
If you lose all hope, you can always find it again -- Richard Ford in The Sportswriter
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#6813 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-July-15, 11:06

View PostWinstonm, on 2016-December-23, 10:16, said:

Within a year of assuming the presidency of Russia, Vladimir Putin had placed all three national television networks under state control, effectively creating a national information bubble.

What I find odd is that we in the U.S. seem to have accomplished the same ends via a different technique - a consolidation of information into small, interconnected orbs either colored blue or red. Without a neutral press, it has become extremely difficult to ferret out unbiased information. This has made our country susceptible to enemies both without and within.


This is not a hijack but a continuation of an earlier thought you had about consolidation and its influence on how we see the world through the red and blue sunglasses:

Posted Image

This screen caps says volumes and just makes me say wow!

MOVIE STUDIOS now control the NEWS companies.
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#6814 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-July-15, 21:44

Not on that list is Sinclair Broadcast Group. John Oliver did a scathing exposé on them on last week's "Last Week Tonight". They're one of the largest owner of local TV stations, and they're acquiring Tribune Media Co, which would doule their size. They inject lots of right-wing commentary into the local news programs of the stations they own.

#6815 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-July-16, 00:23

View Postbarmar, on 2017-July-15, 21:44, said:

Not on that list is Sinclair Broadcast Group. John Oliver did a scathing exposé on them on last week's "Last Week Tonight". They're one of the largest owner of local TV stations, and they're acquiring Tribune Media Co, which would doule their size. They inject lots of right-wing commentary into the local news programs of the stations they own.

http://www.snopes.co...oup-propaganda/

Wow! And the FCC is complicit in the consolidation. . .
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#6816 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-July-16, 13:39

View Postawm, on 2017-March-04, 11:30, said:

Seems to me that Trump talks a lot about other countries doing more and the US having less military involvement abroad. He also talks a lot about how we need to make better deals and how he can (or did) save the US money on some of these expensive planes and other military hardware.

So... Why does he want a 50 billion dollar INCREASE in the military budget?

http://www.politico....icy-bill-240561
http://www.foxnews.c...ide-margin.html ==> 2017 amount was $611 billion

The House approved a defense spending bill for $700 billion on Friday July 14 which was more than Trump's budgetary appropriation?

We can't solve the health care bill but we can approve the 2018 military budget for more than Trump requested....hmmmm

Any bill as large as the 2008 TARP bailout should get a little heavier press coverage.
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#6817 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2017-July-16, 15:42

View PostRedSpawn, on 2017-July-16, 00:23, said:


The last quote in the Snopes article, with the response from Sinclair to John Oliver's piece, sounds like the kind of BS response Kellyanne Conway gives when defending Trump.

Quote

Wow! And the FCC is complicit in the consolidation. . .

There used to be a law limiting the number of TV stations and/or newspapers a single company could own, but I think it may have gone away or been relaxed during a period of deregulation.

The FCC probably can't do anything about the content of the broadcasts, that's Sinclair's First Amendment right.

#6818 User is offline   RedSpawn 

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Posted 2017-July-16, 16:36

Close the military bases we don't need!

How does Congress include language in military spending bills that prevents the Pentagon from closing bases it no longer needs? Just shady.

http://time.com/4261...t/?iid=sr-link3
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#6819 User is offline   y66 

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Posted 2017-July-16, 20:59

From Please Prove You're Not A Robot:

Quote

Philip Howard, who runs the Computational Propaganda Research Project at Oxford, studied the deployment of propaganda bots during voting on Brexit, and the recent American and French presidential elections. Twitter is particularly distorted by its millions of robot accounts; during the French election, it was principally Twitter robots who were trying to make #MacronLeaks into a scandal. Facebook has admitted it was essentially hacked during the American election in November. In Michigan, Mr. Howard notes, “junk news was shared just as widely as professional news in the days leading up to the election.”

Robots are also being used to attack the democratic features of the administrative state. This spring, the Federal Communications Commission put its proposed revocation of net neutrality up for public comment. In previous years such proceedings attracted millions of (human) commentators. This time, someone with an agenda but no actual public support unleashed robots who impersonated (via stolen identities) hundreds of thousands of people, flooding the system with fake comments against federal net neutrality rules.

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#6820 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2017-July-16, 22:02

View Posty66, on 2017-July-16, 20:59, said:




Robots are also being used to attack the democratic features of the administrative state.



It seems normal for robots to attack, accept your new overlord.
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