Shirtless Pundit Retweeted
Illegal Campaign Contribution Scandal:
On Sep 30, a man was sentenced to prison for giving $80K in foreign contribution to @BarackObama. Money came from @EdiRamaal Socialist PM of Albania, for this photo.
@DNC don't want this reported
**RETWEET**
It gets worse:
A man who engineered an illegal contribution from a foreigner to a joint fundraising committee for President Barack Obama in 2012 was sentenced to four months in prison on September 30.
William Argeros had pleaded guilty in 2016 to making foreign contributions and lying to a grand jury, and had faced up to 24 months in prison under his plea agreement. But U.S. District Judge Madeline Cox Arleo noted the 61-year-old’s lack of a prior criminal record and her belief that the $80,000 contribution wasn’t meant to influence the U.S. election.
What an idiot, right?
Judge Cox didn't believe "the $80,000 contribution was meant to influence the US election"?
What else is an $80,000 contribution to a candidate's campaign as he runs for re-election?
Well I'll bow to the wisdom of Judge Cox. In 2016, I'm sure she had served a decade or two in her position by that time, right?
From WIKIPEDIA:
On June 26, 2014, President Obama nominated Arleo to serve as a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, to the seat vacated by Judge Dennis M. Cavanaugh, who retired on January 31, 2014.[5] On July 29, 2014 a hearing before the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary was held on her nomination.[6] On September 18, 2014 her nomination was reported out of committee by voice vote.[7] On November 18, 2014 Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid filed for cloture on her nomination. On Wednesday November 19, 2014 cloture was invoked by a vote of 56–40.[8] On Thursday, November 20, 2014 the Senate confirmed her nomination by voice vote. She received her judicial commission on November 21, 2014.[9][4]
So a year and a few months after Barack gets her on the District Court, Judge Cox hears this case?
I think she should have recused herself. I think she did what was best for Barack Obama, not what was best for justice.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"
Thursday, October 10, 2019. Cindy Sheehan alerts to a protest on
Friday, Amnesty International notices the abuse of protesters in Iraq,
Joe Biden calls for impeachment to distract from his own issues and much
more.
Starting with this Friday action:
*************************************************
So that's this Frdiay.
Let's move from real actions to outright whores.
Starting with this Friday action:
October 9, 2019
For immediate release:
One Day Until We Rage!
CONTACTS: Cindy Sheehan
CindySheehan@MarchonPentagon.com
Emma Fiala
Emma@MarchonPentagon.com
Where: The White House; 1600 Pensylvania Ave
Date: Friday, October 11th
Time: 11 AM
Who: Activists from all
over the US who are outraged by the
continuing wars and devastation wrought by the
USA and its allies in war crimes.
What: An unpermitted march through the seat of violent
imperial power to Rage against the institutions,
people, and corporate power that make the wars and
other oppressions possible.
CLICK BADASS BILLIE FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT RAGE |
Please read this statement by Black Alliance for Peace about Rage Against the War Machine.
Watch interview of Cindy on Mintpress News
CLICK PHOTO TO WATCH
*************************************************
Listen to this interview of Cindy on Loud and Clear
CLICK TO LISTEN TO THE INTERVIEW
****************************************************
CLICK THE IMAGE FOR INFORMATION ABOUT
THE ANTI-IMPERIALIST REVOLUTION SUMMIT
**************************************************
DONATE TO RAGE!
So that's this Frdiay.
Let's move from real actions to outright whores.
Thank you @joebiden campaign
Neera will never be anything but a whore. An ugly whore, yes, but still a whore. The nonsense above should make everyone remember that though she said publicly Hillary Clinton's e-mails weren't a story she privately said that this was huge and shouldn't have happened and she used hyperbole to describe what she thought should happen to whomever allowed Hillary to use her private e-mail while Secretary of Sate.
What's got her dirty panties all wet today is nothing to applaud unless you are a whore.
I'm real sorry to break it to you, but 'working the refs' isn't really the job of a campaign. And Joe Biden's thuggery is nothing to applaud. Dean Baquet doesn't need 'journalist Joe' telling him how to cover the news.
Joe's in a tizzy because Joe's in the wrong.
It was corruption, plain and simple. And Neera and the other whores can insist it doesn't matter that Joe's family were allowed to use his name and access to him to profit while Joe was Vice President but it does matter.
You've seen the press largely allow Joe's campaign to browbeat it into scared puppy status. Joe's actions are not actions you can defend. They go to graft, they go to corruption.
Some say they were illegal. I have not said that. Based on the little that is know, they were unethical. That doesn't mean that they were not illegal, it means that based upon what is publicly known, I haven't called them that and wouldn't call them that.
The press has a responsibility to investigate. Joe's bullied the press for days now and they've largely fallen in line.
My life does not revolve around Donald Trump. I am not following his Tweets.
But the press feels that is the 'story' because that is how Joe has framed it and tried to control the narrative. "Donald said I did something illegal!!!!" I don't give a damn what Donald said. But Joe's tried to make it about that to deflect from his own actions.
Whatever stupid thing Donald Trump said does not erase what Joe's brother James and what Joe's son Hunter did.
The press needs to do their job. If they're unable to do that, they better expect their already low image to drop even further. They're only interest is supposed to be the pursuit of the truth. The coverage is not supposed to be gamed or slanted.
That Joe Biden is a lousy candidate is a fairly obvious fact.
And maybe the campaign would be a little bit better if they weren't spending all their time trying to 'work the refs.'
Joe's legacy is one of corruption and that's reality.
Corruption:
Joe Biden’s son makes thousands a month from Ukrainian government
Joe Biden’s brother gets $1.5 Billion housing contract in Iraq while Biden was VP
Joe Biden’s niece avoided jail time after stealing $100K in a credit card scam
Where are the investigations?
Show me the falsehood in the above Tweet.
There is none.
And whores like Neera exist to lie to the American people. That's disgusting. She lies for votes. She's a two-bit whore -- she's also a woman who allowed sexual harassment in the workplace and then outed the victim, she's also a thug who physically assaulted someone working under her, she's trash. She's an ugly woman -- physically, she is disgusting. No waist, knobby knees, short legs and look at that face. But she's even uglier on the inside.
That the Democratic Party would allow her to be a representative doesn't say much for us.
Neera is all about lying and distracting.
Look at what she 'covers,' nothing of value. She's not using her time to talk about proposals by the candidates, she's trying to be the bully online that she is in real life.
Sorry, Neera, but the only thing scary about you is your face.
When Joe Biden's story of corruption first started getting attention in the last weeks, an idiot Tweeted a 'here's how we hang this on Trump' Tweet. I almost called him out but then looked at his history and grasped that he's not a player, he's not anyone involved and no one even follows him. He didn't get even one reTweet.
But though we won't name him now, we will talk about what he did.
As citizens, our response to corruption should never be, "Okay, here's how we manage this!"
That doesn't address corruption, that doesn't change anything.
As citizens in a democracy, we need to demand openess and transparency. We don't need to encourage cover-ups or distractions.
What Joe did needs to be rebuked. It is not appropriate, while you are being paid by the taxpayer, for your family to profit on your name and on your influence (perceived influence or actual influence).
What Joe did was wrong.
What's worse is he's supposed to be so wise.
Instead of addressing it, which would have shown wisdom, he's trying to control the narrative and he should not be allowed to.
Weeks ago, he could have come forward and made a real statement.
He could have claimed not to have known what was going on.
And he might have slid on that if he had taken responsibility.
"I did not know what my family was doing but I promise you that, if elected president, this will not happen."
There were concerns about Hillary Clinton being Secretary of State -- about The Clinton Foundation or Bill Clinton profiting off her public service. So a whole system was put in place to ensure that nothing would happen that was unethical.
What Joe and his family did was unethical.
His response has been to snap at reporters, to tell them that Donald Trump is the story (not him) and to try to control the narrative while hiding out nursing his wounds.
He's getting a little desperate because it was explained to him over the weekend that this isn't playing.
People far above Neera are objecting to Joe's refusal to take ownership of his actions. This hiding out is ridiculous and can you imagine him getting the nomination and pulling this crap in the general election? Joe On The Down Low is not a campaign that will be effective. Has Anyone Seen Joe Lately is not a good campaign slogan.
The Neeras have no ethics. We do not need to become a nation of Neeras. ( A) We're far better than that and (B) real democracy is not built on trying to put one over on the people.
We have to reject the Neeras not just because we're better than them but because, for an open society, we have to be better than them.
Joe has made one mistake after another and he's paid for it. (Especially among super delegates who are lodging the loudest objections to how he's running his campaign -- grasp that, super delegates are more critical than the press.) He's no longer seen as a sure thing (even with all the propping up he continues to receive from the press).
Oh man, this story might as well be headlined “Joe Biden Thinks This Is 1992”. Every detail shows how he is simply not nimble or clear-headed enough about GOP sociopathy to deal with what’s coming if he gets the nomination.
I agree with Amanda about Joe not being the right candidate. But let's not miss why he's calling for impeachment -- why he's now calling for it. It turns the story around and maybe then people aren't talking about his drug addict son -- who didn't get rehab -- or the divorce papers that talked about how Hunter spent all of his money on drugs and hookes -- and we're talking a man staring down fifty, not a kid. Forget the corruption, none of that looks good for Joe, Hunter is a mess. And at some point people are going to get tired of it. Where was the SNL skit that had Joe speaking and the dentures slipping out? That was funny when it happened in the debate. I have a friend who desperately wants to look young and she went to a premiere in the UK with her skin taped back underneath her wig -- the way Bette Davis used to do all those years ago. And, in front of the photographers, the tape slipped. I'm sorry but that's funny. That's really funny.
And the whole Joe campaign is built around ignoring reality. Don't talk about Hunter and how sick and disgusting it was that, when Beau died, Hunter moved in on his brother's widow. Don't talk about Hunter's crack use. Don't talk about Joe's denture slippage.
Don't, don't, don't.
America doesn't like being told don't. An that, more anything else, will doom a Biden presidential campaign.
Impeachment? Joe wants to talk impeachment now. Fine. Ask him what Donald Trump has done that is impeachable.
His talks with leaders of Ukraine are not impeachable and I said that long ago. He is the chief officer of the Executive Branch. If he has serious concerns, he can convey them to anyone he wants. In fact, he has a duty to do so. (It's called an oath of office.) Furthermore, he never should have released the transcript of the call. Not because it exposes wrong doing (it doesn't) but because that's executive privilege. Bill Clinton would have fought the release if he were president but he has a legal background, Donald doesn't. Donald also doesn't appear to care a great deal about the office and felt it was more immportant to say, "See, I didn't do anything wrong!"
To try to make this look back, Nancy Pelosi and others in Congress have ascribed motive to what was done. They can't prove their motive argument. But even if they could, it wouldn't make what Donald did illegal or impeachable.
But there argument is that Donald misused his power to try to alter the 2020 election.
Hmm?
What's the term here? Projection?
Because Nancy is using the air quotes of impeachment to try to influence the 2020 election.
You want to impeach Donald Trump, then do so.
But this nonsense that's passing for impeachment is not designed to get anywhere, just to get headlines and coverage. Nancy's abusing her office. She's not doing what the people need or want, she's acting out of partisanship.
If she believes it's time to impeach, call for the vote. And the votes are there, the trial will take place -- and it will take place in the Senate because that's what the Constitution says. Instead, she's doing everything to ruin a sitting president. She doesn't want him impeached, by her actions, she just wants him ruined.
Again: Projection.
I'm opposed to impeachment. We're 13 months or so away from an election. The charges being bandied about are not impeachable charges. If they wanted to get serious, I'd argue there are many issues they could have impeached him over. But they don't want to get serious.
And they don't want to do their jobs.
If you take them at their words, they're are bound by duty to impeach. Okay, then impeach. Stop stalling and impeach.
They won't do it.
It's all nonsense and perception management. I don't know why being manipulative has overtaken being plain spoken as what we root for in our public servants.
A few more notes on impeachment. Jerry Nadler is well respected and that's where any House investigation should be coming from, his Committee, the Judiciary Committee. Adam Schiff has been caught lying far too many times to be believed as the head of an impeachment investigation. The leaker will have to come forward. Trina rightly pointed out that he is not the woman accusing William Kennedy Smith of rape, he does not need a dot over his face so no one can see him. (Or her.) Anita Hill had to testify publicly. This person has made accusations based on what people have told him/her, not on what the person observed. The leaker is a joke. Chelsea Manning, Ed Snowden and others are whistle-blowers. Adam Schiff's office having contact with the leaker before the complaint was filed add further question marks.
Impeachment is a serious action and it's not a whisper campaign.
If they want to impeach, do it. But do it publicly and per custom and rule.
Iraq?
Imran Khan (ALJAZEERA -- link is text and video) reports, "Iraq's prime minister has announced three days of mourning for the demonstrators killed in anti-government protests over corruption and unemployment. At least 110 people were killed and thousands injured in Baghdad and other cities during days of unrest." Arwa Damon, Brice Laine, and Kareem Khadder (CNN) report:
On Saturday night, the Saudi-owned
al-Arabiya TV station said masked men beat up their employees and
smashed equipment. A number of other local stations also said their
offices were targeted.
Activists
have viewed the attacks as part of a broader effort to suppress the
media. Many also claim the government is afraid of what will happen if
countless videos showing atrocities are uploaded once the country is
back online.
The government says it
only shoots when fired on, but those who took part in the
demonstrations dispute that. They claim security forces and
Iranian-backed militias are deliberately shooting into the crowds.
Amnesty International issued the following:
The Iraqi security forces’ escalating use of excessive and deadly force against anti-government protesters must be properly investigated, Amnesty International said after interviewing eight activists who witnessed protesters being killed by sniper fire.
Amnesty International spoke to eight activists, protesters and
journalists from Baghdad, Najaf, and Diwaniya, all of whom described
security forces using excessive force, including live ammunition, to
disperse protesters. The organization further verified and geolocated
audiovisual material depicting a pattern of shootings that are
consistent with sniper fire, and the specific details of these attacks
were corroborated with witness testimony from Baghdad. Meanwhile, the
organization gathered new testimonies describing the Iraqi authorities’
sinister campaign of harassment, intimidation and arrests of peaceful
activists, journalists and protesters.
“The Iraqi authorities’ brazen use of excessive and lethal force
against protesters in Baghdad and elsewhere must not be allowed to be
swept under the rug. The Iraqis have paid too high a price simply to be
able to exercise their right to freedom of peaceful assembly,” said Lynn
Maalouf, Amnesty International’s Middle East Research Director.
“Authorities must immediately and without any delay act on their
promise to set up an investigation. This promise is already ringing
hollow as protesters continue to be harassed and threatened into
silence, in addition to being hunted down and killed in the streets.
They must commit to holding those found to be responsible for these
crimes.”
Shoot to kill
One protester from Baghdad described how a suspected sniper targeted a protester and then fired at others who tried to help him.
“There was a person who was hit by the sniper. Five people ran
towards him to help and they were all shot one after the other. There
were bodies all along the street. They all had shots in the head and
chest,” he said.
Footage verified by Amnesty International was consistent with the
location and witness’ description of the incident. However, the
organization has not been able to verify the identity or affiliation of
the snipers.
On 6 October, the Iraqi authorities blamed “anonymous snipers” for
the killing of protesters, but witnesses said the sniper fire was coming
from behind the line of security forces. And in none of the reported
cases of sniper fire are security forces known to have protected
protesters, nor have police intervened and arrested anyone responsible
for firing at demonstrations. It is the government’s responsibility to
protect those peacefully exercising their right to freedom of assembly.
One protester told Amnesty International: “How can the government say
they do not know who the sniper is? And if the forces did not know,
once they realized that why did they not warn the protesters? The forces
were focused on making sure no one helped the injured.”
In one area of Baghdad, protesters told Amnesty International that
security forces had prevented injured protesters from reaching nearby
hospitals, and arrested those who did make it to the hospital on the
night of Wednesday 2 October.
Witnesses from the capital also described what they believed to be
sniper fire at the protests between Thursday 3 October and Sunday 6
October. They also reported armed men shooting at protesters and driving
towards them in an apparent attempt to run them over. Witnesses in
Baghdad also described security forces surrounding protesters in the
city’s Za’faraniya district and opening continuous live fire on them.
Campaign of intimidation
Journalists and activists who spoke to Amnesty International have
also reported receiving threatening phone calls and indirect warnings
from security forces telling them to “keep silent” and that their names
have been added to “a list” compiled by intelligence services for
“supporting” protesters. Journalists have been accused of reporting
false information regarding the use of excessive force by security
forces.
One protester from Baghdad said: “Anybody who has used his phone to
make a call, take or spread photos of violations during the protests is
in danger.”
Witnesses in Baghdad, Diwaniya and Najaf said security forces carried
out hundreds of arbitrary arrests of protesters, often chasing them
into side streets amid the chaos of people running away from tear gas
and live ammunition.
Meanwhile, access to the internet and social media was blocked on
Tuesday evening after a temporary lift on Sunday night. Access to the
internet was unblocked briefly on Wednesday but has since remained
restricted, while access to social media platforms remained blocked.
Activists told Amnesty International that they were calling for a
change of government because they no longer believe any promises made by
the current government, which they accuse of ignoring years of
protests.
“We have been protesting since 2008 and nothing has changed. Now, we
don’t want political parties to represent or lead us in these protests
because without them we are strong and credible. We have stood by the
government against Daesh [the armed group callilng itself Islamic State]
and when they were liberating areas we supported them. We waited but
what is the excuse now? They promise numbers, jobs, changes and all we
get is the same: corruption and nepotism,” a protester from Bagdad told
Amnesty International.
On 6 October and 9 October, in response to the protests, the Iraqi
government made a number of promises that include building housing
units, social security payments for families in need, and grants to
unemployed citizens, economic support to tackle poverty and well as
compensation for families of those killed during the demonstrations.
“These promises will simply not fly when Iraqis continue to be
threatened into silence, arrested, and killed in the streets. The Iraqi
authorities must respect people’s right to express themselves and to
assemble without fear of repercussions. They must immediately and
unconditionally release all those detained solely for peacefully
exercising their rights to protest and freedom of expression, and commit
to holding to account security forces responsible for intimidation and
excessive use of force, including by bringing to justice those
responsible for unlawful killings and injuries,” said Lynn Maalouf.
Dhiaa Al Shimary was a huge @realmadriden @realmadridarab fan, he loved his country and wanted it to be better so he went to protest peacefully, Dhiaa was gunned down in Nasiriyah by security forces. He is not just a number, he is a story of a human. @SergioRamos @hazardeden10
“Selmia” which means our protest is peaceful, they were met with gun shots from a distance #iraq #iraqi_protests @hrw @amnestyusa @amnesty @RashaAlAqeedi @KRIRQ
Iraqi government has accomplished something on the world level! Great job guys
Aljumhoriya bridge in #baghdad , the security officer shot a live ammunition directly under the feet of a protester who said I am not scared keep shooting! This is not how you deal with unarmed protesters
The following sites updated:
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