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  1. latecomer91364

    latecomer91364 Easily Distracte

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    Hahahaha! Oh, the irony and complete lack of self awareness! Except for giving any kind of coherent 'answer', who else do we know around here who copies and pastes reams upon reams of meaningless conjectures, unfounded rumors, Leftard interpretations of supposed facts, and outright lies? Who posts this volume of blather, one after another, producing thread pages that take two minutes to scroll through to get to the bottom? And all of it completely devoid of valid points?

    That's pretty rich, Dumbfuckler. You really got me to laugh out loud today.

    PS: Good luck with the impeachment... and the 2020 election...
    zzzzzzzzzzzztenor.gif
     
    • Like Like x 2
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    1. deleted user 555 768
      Some are 18 turns on the mouse wheel :banghead:
       
      deleted user 555 768, Jan 28, 2020
  2. Dearelliot

    Dearelliot Porn Star

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    I think of the impeachment process not as a way of getting Trump out of office, but designed more to present the facts to the people who otherwise only watch Fox News, in hopes of avoiding reality. It will be much more difficult in November to vote for the man as he is, rather than the man they want to think he is.
     
    • Agree Agree x 2
  3. Dearelliot

    Dearelliot Porn Star

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    As a democrat I liked Clinton, and didn't really care who he screwed except the day I heard the news he had screwed an intern, and that shook me.
    Not the sex, but that he supposedly used his position and took advantage of a innocent young woman. I was shocked and couldn't see how to continue to support the guy. As time went on and the facts came out, it seems the young woman What? like all young girls, immediately after sex take their dress to a safe deposit box?? Back in my day they washed the damn thing. So for me it moderated the incident bit I always thought WTF Clinton, you cant pick up the phone and order out!
    But my point is I am damn thankful Trump isn't a Democrat because I couldn't possibly rationalize the giant cesspool this guy has built.
     
  4. deleted user 555 768

    deleted user 555 768 Porn Star Banned!

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    I'm guilty of copy/paste news stories, selectively, to make a point, I take efforts to highlight the pertaining and consolidate the lesser and delete links trying for a single screen post, I eliminate "tweats" as non relevant opinion.
    I try not to wallpaper the usual 10 or so threads.
     
  5. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Bill Barr is already a proven liar. But now he's well on his way to being a proven criminal.

    And how do we know this story is true? By the reaction of Trump and his sycophants constantly screaming Adam Schiff is a traitor because he dared to investigate Trump's crimes. Up to and including the insane idea Schiff should be impeached and removed from Congress when that's actually impossible. Only panicked people get that irrational.

    Adam Schiff terrifies Donald Trump and his Republican lackeys

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/01/adam-schiff-terrifies-donald-trump-and-his-republican-lackeys/
     
  6. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Trump’s Former Chief of Staff John Kelly: ‘I Believe John Bolton’

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/trump...ohn-kelly-says-i-believe-john-bolton?ref=home
     
    • Like Like x 1
  7. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    BUSTED: These 10 GOP senators said Ukraine quid pro quo was a red line before Bolton bombshell

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/01/bu...o-quo-was-a-red-line-before-bolton-bombshell/
     
  8. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    The numbers keep adding up against McConnell's cover-up trial: 75% of voters want witnesses

    https://www.dailykos.com/stories/20...-s-cover-up-trial-75-of-voters-want-witnesses
     
  9. thinskin

    thinskin Porn Star Banned!

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  10. CS natureboy

    CS natureboy Porn Star

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    Impeachment Trial: Former Law Clerk for Clarence Thomas Destroys the Democrats on Due Process
    Posted at 3:30 pm on January 28, 2020 by Stu Cvrk

    Patrick Philbin is Deputy Counsel to the President and Deputy Assistant to the President in the Office of White House Counsel and is one of the lawyers on the White House legal team that is presenting the President’s defense. I particularly like that he clerked for my favorite US Supreme Court Justice, Clarence Thomas.

    On Saturday, he provided an overview of how the House Democrats denied due process rights to the President during their “impeachment inquiry.” Among other things, his summary — which was a glimpse of what was to come this week – included a discussion of how Democrats did not use proper due process in their selective subpoenaing of witnesses and documents from the Executive Branch. He also pointed out that the President followed counsel from DoJ’s Office of Legal Counsel at every step of the way during the Houses’ impeachment inquiry.


    Philbin’s presentation at the Senate trial on Monday destroyed the Democrat’s impeachment article on “obstruction of Congress” based on long-standing bipartisan agreements on due process and privilege arguments.

    Philbin: The other day as we opened our presentation, I touched on two areas: some of the due process violations that characterized the proceedings in the House and some of the fundamental mischaracterizations and errors that underpin the House Democrats’ charge of obstruction. Today I will complete the presentation on those points to round out some of the fundamentally unfair procedure that was used in the House and its implications for this proceeding before you now. And also address in detail the purported charges of obstruction in the second article of impeachment.

    On due process, there are three fundamental errors that infected the proceedings in the House. The first is the impeachment inquiry was unauthorized and unconstitutional from the beginning. No committee of the House has the power to launch an inquiry under the House’s impeachment power unless the House itself has taken a vote to give that authority to a committee. I noted in the case of United States vs. Watkins, the Supreme Court has set out these principles – general principles derived from the Constitution, which assigns authority to each chamber of the Legislative Branch. To the House and to the Senate, but not to individual members or to subcommittees. For an authority of the House to be transferred to a committee, the House has to vote on it. The DC Circuit has distilled the principles from the cases this way: “To issue a valid subpoena, … a committee or subcommittee must conform strictly to the resolution establishing its investigatory powers….”

    That is the problem here; there was no such resolution. There was no vote from the House authorizing the issuance of subpoenas under the impeachment power. This inquiry began with nearly two dozen invalid subpoenas. The Speaker had proceeded on nothing more than a press conference in which she purported to authorize committees to begin an impeachment power. Under the Constitution, she lacked that authority. As the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee Peter Rodino pointed out during the Nixon impeachment proceedings, “Such as resolution has always been passed by the House…. It is a necessary step if we are to meet our obligations.” So we began this process with unauthorized subpoenas that imposed no compulsion on the Executive Branch to respond with documents or witnesses. That is a threshold, foundational point that I will be coming back to when we get to the obstruction charge.

    The second fundamental due process error is that the House Democrats denied the President basic due process required by the Constitution and by fundamental principles of fairness in the procedures that they used for the hearings. … As we heard from Judge Starr, the House Democrats essentially abandoned the principles that had governed impeachment inquiries in the House for over 150 years.

    The first point is that, in denying due process rights, the House proceedings were a huge reversal from the positions House Democrats themselves had taken in the recent past, particularly in the Clinton impeachment proceeding. [In 1998,] Manager Nadler was explaining that due process requires at a minimum notice of the charges against you, the right to be represented by counsel, the right to cross-examine witnesses against you, and the right to present evidence – all of those rights were denied for the President.

    Now, one of the responses that the managers have made to the defect that we pointed out in the secret proceedings were Manager Schiff began these hearings in the basement bunker is that really that was just best investigative practice – that they operating like a grand jury. Don’t be fooled by that. Those hearings operated nothing like a grand jury. A grand jury has secrecy, primarily for two reasons: to protect the direction of the investigation so others won’t know what witnesses are being called in and what they’re saying to keep that secret for the prosecutors to keep developing the evidence, and to protect the accused because the accused might not ever be indicted. In this case, all that information was made public every day. The House Democrats destroyed any legitimate analogy with a grand jury because that was all public. They made no secret that the President was the target, they issue bile bout him every day, and they didn’t keep and they didn’t keep the direction of their investigation secret. They published their witness list daily. The direction of the investigation was open, and the testimony was selectively leaked to a compliant media to establish a false narrative about the President. If that sort of conduct had occurred in a real grand jury, that would have been a criminal violation. …

    And the grand jury proceedings provide no rationale for the second round of hearings. The same witnesses that were already deposed (in secret) were put on a public hearing where the President was still excluded. … In every prior impeachment where there had been public hearings, the President had been represented by counsel and could cross-examine witnesses. Why did there have to be public hearings where the President was excluded? That was nothing more than a show trial.

    Now, I also addressed the other day the House manager’s contention that they had offered the President due process … that when things reached the third round of hearings in front of the House Judiciary Committee … that Manager Nadler offered the President due process. And I explained why that was illusory. There was no genuine due process offer there because before any hearings began – other than the law professors seminar on December 4th – the Speaker had already determined the outcome, already said that there were going to be articles of impeachment, and the Judiciary Committee had informed the White House Counsel’s office that they had no plans to call any fact witnesses or have any fact witnesses or have any factual hearings whatsoever. It was all done, it was locked in, it was baked. And there was something else hanging over that when they had offered purportedly to allow the President some due process rights, and that was a special provision in the rules for the House Judiciary Committee proceedings – also unprecedented – that allowed the House Judiciary Committee to deny the President any due process rights at all if he continued to refuse to turn over documents or to allow witnesses to testify. So that if the President didn’t give up his privileges and immunities that he had been asserting over Executive Branch confidentiality … if he didn’t comply with what the House Democrats wanted … then it was up to Chairman Nadler to say no rights at all. And there’s a term for that in the law – it’s called an unconstitutional condition. You can’t condition someone’s exercise of some rights on their surrendering other constitutional rights. You can’t say, we’ll let you have due process this way if you waive your constitutional privileges on another issue.

    The last point I’ll make about due process is this. It’s important to remember that due process is enshrined in the Bill of Rights for a reason. It’s not the process is just an end itself. Instead, it’s a deep-seated belief in our legal tradition that fair process is essential for accurate decision-making. Cross-examination of witnesses in particular is one of the most important procedural protections for any American. The Supreme Court has explained that, for over 250 years, our legal tradition has recognized cross-examination as the greatest legal engine ever invented for the discovery of truth. So, why did House Democrats jettison every precedent and every principle of due process in the way they devised their hearing procedures? Why did they devise a process that kept the President locked out of any hearings for 71 of the 78 days of the so-called investigation? I submit, because the process was never about finding truth. The process was about achieving a pre-determined outcome on a timetable and having it done by Christmas. And that is what they achieved.

    Now, the third fundamental due process error is that the whole foundation of these proceedings was also tainted beyond repair because an interested fact witness supervised and limited the course of the factual discovery during the course of the hearings. And I explained the other day that Manager Schiff had a reason, potentially, because of his office’s contact with the so-called whistleblower and what was discussed and how [the complaint] was framed – which all remained secret – to limit inquiry into that, which was relevant. The whistleblower began this whole process. His biases, his motive, why he was doing it, what his sources were … that’s relevant to understand what generated this who process. But, there was no inquiry into that.

    So, what conclusion does this all lead to – all of these due process errors that affected the proceedings up to now? It’s important to recognize the right conclusion is not that this body … this chamber … should try to redo everything – to start bringing in new evidence, new witnesses – because the President wasn’t allowed witnesses below – and redoing the whole process. And that’s for a couple of reasons. First, as my colleagues have demonstrated, despite the one-sided and unfair process in the House, that the record that the House Democrats collected through that process already shows that the President did nothing wrong … that is already exonerates the President. But the second and more important reason is because of the institutional implications it would have for this chamber. Whatever precedent is set, whatever this body accepts now, as a permissible way to bring an impeachment proceeding and to bring it to this chamber because it’s the new normal. And if the new normal is going to be that there can be an impeachment proceeding in the House that violates dues process … that doesn’t provide the President or another official being impeached with due process rights … that fails to conduct a thorough investigation … that doesn’t come here with the facts established … that then this body should become the investigator body and start redoing what the House didn’t do … and finding new witnesses and doing things over and getting new evidence … then that’s going to be the new normal. And that will be the way that this chamber has to function, and there will be a lot more impeachments coming because it’s a lot easier to do an impeachment if you don’t have to follow due process, and then come here and expect the Senate to do the work that the House didn’t do. I submit that is not the constitutional function of this chamber sitting as a court of impeachment, and this chamber should not put its imprimatur on a process in the House that would force this chamber to take on that role.

    End of Patrick Philbin’s testimony on due process.
     
  11. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    I try to never count votes until the vote is actually taken. But the Wall Street Journal. Washington Post, and New York Times are all reporting Moscow Mitch has just admitted at least right now he does not have enough votes to block witnesses. So things could be getting very interesting. Watch this space.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    1. shootersa
      Oh, shooter thinks witnesses are a foregone conclusion at this point.

      And once again, despicables have forgotten the adage, be careful what you wish for ..............

      Wonder if the Bidens will be called before or after Bolton??
       
      shootersa, Jan 29, 2020
    2. thinskin
      Whatever the Bidens may or may not have it bears no relevance to Trump's wrongdoing...not that I expect you to have the wit to understand that.

      Time to out the dull bigot back on ignore!

      ts
       
      thinskin, Jan 29, 2020
      submissively speaking likes this.
    3. shootersa
      Uh, shooter thought thinskin already had Shooter on ignore and was only going to make note of Shooter on a monthly basis ......

      That said, the Bidens testimony is at least as important and relevant as Boltons.
       
      shootersa, Jan 29, 2020
  12. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    GOP choice could be a fair Senate trial now — or a criminal trial in New York this summer: law professor

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/01/go...-trial-in-new-york-this-summer-law-professor/
     
  13. deleted user 555 768

    deleted user 555 768 Porn Star Banned!

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    Whatever happends in the senate, democrats wont stop until everything Trump is buried, there hatred (since 2016) is tearing this country asunder and there deranged ego is blinding them to reality,
    vengeance in in there heart, not the constitution, not the rule of law,... just pure political hatred and personal destruction will be the democrats legacy
     
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  14. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Lev Parnas will march to the Capitol on Wednesday to ‘watch the trial and speak out for witnesses’: attorney

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/01/le...e-trial-and-speak-out-for-witnesses-attorney/
     
  15. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    As I can readily admit, that I'm not too sure that the Qid-pro-quo 'tactic' is an actual offense towards the people of the U.S..

    Finally we have a POTUS that is very concerned about how the federal fucking government spends our money and is very concerned about our fellow nations not paying their ''fair share'' towards peace.



    Overall, we rate the New York Times Left-Center biased based on word and story selection that moderately favors the left
    https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/new-york-times/



     
    1. OlDogger
      Tho' I incidentally promoted the NYTimes' piece, it was more for its advent than any substantive bona fides to the import (I caught myself about to write "efficacious":D) it might give to an ultimate enlightenment.
      I am going to pursue the idea of 'could a judge swear in a Lev Parnas on a TV show, like Rachel Maddow, and his testimony be valid as a criminal deposition'.
       
      OlDogger, Jan 30, 2020
    2. ace's n 8's
      Now that is an idea.

      Lets go one further, why didn't the House request an interview with the lovely Parnas?...by no means is Parnas under any official title in the Executive and is immune to Executive Privilege.
       
      ace's n 8's, Jan 31, 2020
    3. OlDogger
      MF-Dems are too conventionally and decorum-minded to take the chance.. If Parnas was up for arranging 'a hit' on the US Ambassador to Ukraine and wanted to flip, I'd have him up there for the political provocativeness of his revelatory testimony.. Damn the cross-examination..

      I WAS wondering if a judge could swear Parnas in on cable and have him give a deposition?
       
      OlDogger, Jan 31, 2020
  16. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    The most absolutely glaring truth that is just inescapable proof that Trump is a fucking criminal is he surrounds himself with criminals. And lots of them are one step above a street criminal and more like mafia soldiers in the Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight.

    I do not know if this amounts to anything but there is still a wild card out on it. The Ukrainians are also investigating to see if Ambassador Yomanovitch was under surveillance in Ukraine. And if she was that is a great big really bad fucking international problem.

    Trump fan who claimed Yovanovitch surveillance introduced himself as DEA agent: report

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/01/tr...lance-introduced-himself-as-dea-agent-report/
     
  17. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    The story is not up yet but Rep Eliot Engel has confirmed that in conversations with John Bolton on September 24th (I think they said) Bolton told him his committee needed to investigate the firing of Ambassador Yovanovitch. And what ever day that was the next day Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the House was opening an impeachment investigation.
     
  18. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    See what I like about RAWSTORT? I wrote that about 10 minutes ago as the story was just breaking on MSNBC. And it took them about 10 minutes to get the story out.

    REVEALED: Bolton urged House Dems to investigate Ukraine ambassador’s firing two days before impeachment launched

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/01/re...-firing-two-days-before-impeachment-launched/
     
  19. CS natureboy

    CS natureboy Porn Star

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    Dems’ Worst Nightmare: At Least Three Dems May Be Considering Acquitting Trump
    Posted at 11:30 am on January 29, 2020 by Nick Arama

    [​IMG]

    Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks to reporters as he walks towards the Senate as Congress moves closer to the funding deadline to avoid a government shutdown on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Jan. 18, 2018. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)



    Democrats face an uphill climb in their effort to remove President Donald Trump from office.

    In order to have a removal after an impeachment, you’d have to have a 2/3 supermajority, or 67 votes. Republicans have 53 votes and Democrats, with independents who caucus with them would be 47.


    So Democrats would need a boatload of Republicans to flip which is why most people think that it’s pretty much not going to happen.

    But what Democratic leaders may not have counted on is Democrats flipping on them and voting for acquittal now that they’ve seen how weak the case is.

    Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), the ranking member on the Senate Judiciary Committee, caused a furor on Tuesday when the LA Times reported that she might be considering acquitting Trump. After their story ran, however, she issued a statement appearing to back off that claim.

    But wherever Feinstein may stand, there are at least three others who reportedly are legitimately considering it and who have previously demonstrated they wouldn’t necessarily vote party line.


    “Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Doug Jones of Alabama are undecided on whether to vote to remove the president from office and agonizing over where to land,” Politico reported. “It’s a decision that could have major ramifications for each senator’s legacy and political prospects — as well shape the broader political dynamic surrounding impeachment heading into the 2020 election.”

    The move would give the president a bipartisan acquittal to the Democrats’ partisan charges, something that Trump is eagerly seeking.

    “All three senators remain undecided after hearing arguments from the impeachment managers and Trump’s defense team. But they could end up with a creative solution,” Politico added. “One or more senators may end up splitting their votes, borrowing a move from Rep. Jared Golden (D-Maine), who voted for the abuse of power charge but against the one on obstruction of Congress.”

    Splitting is silly as a political option because then no one is happy with you. It only makes sense if you truly believed there was evidence for one and not the other. In this case, there isn’t evidence to support either one, but the obstruction charge is just ridiculous.

    Manchin voted for Kavanaugh, Jones against and Sinema was not yet in office.

    That would give Democrats another hit if the anti-removal was bipartisan, just like the anti-impeachment was in the House. They would not only lose, but lose with the help of their own.

    Ultimately that would be the best because it could then help to make people take impeachment seriously again, to not be a political effort as this was, but return to being a bipartisan thing for serious “high crimes and misdemeanors.” That would be real moral courage to protect the Constitution by Democrats
     
  20. thinskin

    thinskin Porn Star Banned!

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    Apparently Moscow Mitch has leaked that he does not have the votes to prevent witnesses a full two days before any vote is scheduled!

    Presumably he is trying to induce a charm offensive from Fox et al to help him with the votes!

    It is difficult to believe anything Mitch is saying at the moment!

    Thinskin
     
    • Like Like x 1
    1. View previous comments...
    2. thinskin
      Surely not shootersa keeps parroting 53-47 ad nauseum!

      ts
       
      thinskin, Jan 29, 2020
    3. stumbler
      I hope you got as good a laugh as I did yesterday when it looked like Moscow Mitch didn't have the votes to block witnesses and all of a sudden shootersa reversed himself and after days of gloating 47-53 he said calling witnesses was a forgone conclusion like no one would notice he's suddenly preaching the opposite. I did get a good laugh out of that.
       
      stumbler, Jan 29, 2020
      submissively speaking likes this.