Author Topic: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason  (Read 210728 times)

ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #400 on: October 01, 2018, 01:45:18 PM »
Rush was talking about these go fund me pages today.
Like Deborah Katz is being funded by it and in a way that can be a  form of money laundering for political purposes.
though he does admit it happens on both sides.

ccp

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For years I keep asking why ALWAYS Goldman Saches?
« Reply #401 on: October 13, 2018, 08:52:13 AM »
I feel like Achilles played by Brad Pitt in Troy who after slaying the enemy giant Bosgrius played by Nathan Jones

who yelled to the enemy army "IS THERE NO ONE ELSE"?


https://nypost.com/2018/10/11/whistleblowers-new-book-shares-secret-tapes-of-new-goldman-ceo/

wow this is a shock.  :roll:
surely this HAS to be only the tip of a titanic sized iceberg of sleaze and corruption

ccp

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Government employee actually arrested
« Reply #402 on: October 17, 2018, 12:25:07 PM »
for leaks to the press - this is as far as I know a first.

She is from US Treasury but she is not with the sympathies I would have expected . Something is missing.  Did she leak or was she hacked .  Is there money involved. 

She is not a fan of Hillary or of the process of the Kavanaugh persecution .  So what gives:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/u-official-charged-leaking-connection-russia-probe-162319262.html

already some of her politics are online:

https://heavy.com/news/2018/10/natalie-mayflower-sours-edwards/

Crafty_Dog

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POTH: Trump is in the Swamp
« Reply #403 on: October 29, 2018, 09:19:13 AM »


President Trump, his family and many of the people he has hired are profiting from his presidency.CreditCreditSarah Silbiger/The New York Times
They don’t even try very hard to hide it.

President Trump, his family and more than a few of his appointees are using his presidency to enrich themselves. They are spending taxpayer dollars for their own benefit. They are accepting sweetheart deals from foreigners. And they are harnessing the power of the federal government on behalf of their businesses.

There’s a word for this: corruption.

Given how widespread Trumpian corruption has become, we thought it was time to make a list. It’s meant to be a definitive list of self-dealing by the president, his family, his staff or his friends — since he began running for president. To qualify, an incident needs to seem highly credible, even if it remains unresolved, and needs to involve making money.

Compiling the list made us understand why some historians believe Trump’s administration is the most corrupt since at least Warren Harding’s, of 1920s Teapot Dome fame. Trump administration officials and people close to them are brashly using power to amass perks and cash. They are betting that they can get away with it. So far, Congress has let them.


Here’s the list, sorted into thematic categories:
Trump and Family
Foreigners are paying the Trumps.

A few days after the 2016 election, the government of Kuwait canceleda planned event at the Four Seasons Hotel. It instead held the event — a celebration of Kuwait’s National Day — at the Trump International Hotel in Washington.

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International and American businesses curry favor with President Trump by spending money at his properties.CreditAlex Wroblewski for The New York Times
That celebration fits a pattern. Officials from foreign governments have realized they can curry favor with Trump by spending money at his properties. The list of governments includes Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Bahrain, Azerbaijan, Turkey, China, India, Afghanistan and Qatar. Some may have done so even if he were not the president, but others are well aware of what they are doing.

The Constitution forbids federal officials from accepting gifts, known as emoluments, from foreign powers, unless they have received congressional approval. Congressional Democrats have sued Trump for violating this clause, and the case is now in federal court.

Americans are paying the Trumps.

American officials and business leaders have also spent money at Trump properties, sometimes in an apparent effort to please the president. Gov. Paul LePage of Maine last year stayed at the Trump International Hotel in Washington. Other Republicans have held campaign fund-raisers and party events at the properties. So have corporate lobbyists.


“National Railroad Construction and Maintenance Association Dinner at the Trump Hotel where I am drinking Trump coffee,” Senator Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, posted on Instagram last year.

Trump Inc. is expanding overseas.

During Trump’s presidency, his companies have pushed to expand overseas, with help from foreign governments. One example: In May, an Indonesian real-estate project that involves the Trump Organization reportedly received a $500 million loan from a company owned by the Chinese government. Two days later, Trump tweeted that he was working to lift sanctions on a Chinese telecommunications firm with close ties to the government — over the objections of both Republicans and Democrats in Congress. He ultimately did lift the sanctions.

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Donald Trump Jr., taking the stage during the Global Business Summit in New Delhi, India.CreditMoney Sharma/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
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Security officials outside a Trump Tower construction site in India.CreditDibyangshu Sarkar/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Trump’s businesses have also moved to expand in India, the Dominican Republic and Indonesia, using deals directly with foreign governments.

Kushner Inc. is wooing foreign investment.

Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and a top aide, has also reportedly been using his position to help his family business — Kushner Companies, also a real-estate company. Kushner’s sister, Nicole Meyer, has bragged about the company’s high-level ties when trying to attract Chinese investment in a New Jersey apartment complex. The Kushners have wooed Chinese investors despite warnings from American counterintelligence officials that China is using the investments to sway Trump administration policy.

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Jared Kushner has reportedly been using his position to help his family business.CreditDoug Mills/The New York Times

The Kushner company also successfully lobbied the Qatari government to invest in 666 Fifth Avenue, a financially troubled luxury building. The company’s dealings with Middle Eastern countries are especially problematic because Jared Kushner is one of the administration’s top policymakers for the region and has played a central role in policy toward Qatar.

The presidency has become a branding opportunity.

The president has played golf at his properties dozens of times since taking office. He refers to his Florida resort, Mar-a-Lago, as the winter White House. Shortly after his election, he celebrated New Year’s along with 800 guests there, with tickets costing more than $500. And Kellyanne Conway, a top Trump adviser, once encouraged people to buy clothes from Ivanka Trump’s line — while Conway was giving a television interview from the White House.

These moves are intended, at least partly, to bring attention and ultimately customers to Trump’s businesses. Of course, some of Trump’s critics have responded in kind, refusing to stay at or live in a Trump-branded property since he won the election. But in other ways, the presidency has clearly helped his bottom line. One example: The Mar-a-Lago club has doubled its membership rates.

Taxpayers are subsidizing the Trumps.

Trump has visited or stayed at one of his properties almost one out of every three days that he has been president, according to both The Wall Street Journal and NBC News. Like previous presidents, Trump travels with a large group of staff and security personnel, and American taxpayers typically foot at least part of the bill for the trips. Unlike previous presidents, Trump is directing money to his own business on his trips.

In one three-month period last year, the Secret Service spent about $63,000 at Mar-a-Lago and more than $137,000 on golf carts at Trump’s Florida and New Jersey clubs.



President Trump heading to board Air Force One under the watchful eyes of his security staff.CreditTom Brenner for The New York Times

Trump Inc. gets special protection.

The president personally intervened in a plan to relocate the F.B.I.’s Washington headquarters, apparently to protect Trump International Hotel, which is about a block away. If the F.B.I. had moved, its current site would most likely have been turned into a commercial development, and the long construction process — as well as potential for a new hotel on the site — could have hurt the Trump hotel.

Trump stopped this plan, and the White House has instead decided to build a new F.B.I. headquarters on the current site. A report by the inspector general found that officials gave misleading answers to Congress about Trump’s role and the project’s cost.

Trump’s Cabinet, Aides and Allies

Friendly businesses also get special treatment.

The Education Department during the Obama administration aggressively regulated for-profit colleges — many of which have miserable records, often taking money from students without providing a useful education. Trump chose Betsy DeVos, a longtime advocate of these colleges and an investor in them, as his education secretary. She, not surprisingly, has gone easy on for-profit colleges. Among other moves, she has reassigned the members of an department team investigating potentially fraudulent activities at for-profit colleges.

DeVos is the most blatant example of administration officials protecting companies where they once worked, but there are many others. More than 164 former lobbyists work in the administration, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, including several who regulate the industries that once paid their salaries. Geoff Burr, who pushed for more lax workplace safety laws when he was the chief lobbyist for a construction group, now works at the Department of Labor. Andrew Wheeler, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, was previously a lobbyist whose firm was paid millions of dollars by companies whose industries he now regulates.

Family, friends and donors get perks.

The president and his aides have repeatedly shown they are willing to use the government’s prestige and power to help their friends and relatives make money.
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Scott Pruitt's numerous scandals led him to resign his position as head of the E.P.A.CreditEric Thayer for The New York Times
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Betsy DeVos testifying before the Senate Appropriations Committee.CreditTom Brenner/The New York Times

Among the examples:

Trump suggested to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan during a meeting at Mar-a-Lago in February 2017 that Abe grant a coveted operating license to a casino company owned by Sheldon Adelson, who donated at least $20 million to Trump’s presidential campaign.

Ben Carson, the housing and urban development secretary, let his sonhelp organize an official department event and invite people with whom the son had potential business dealings.

Scott Pruitt, the former E.P.A. head, asked his staff members to contact Republicans donors with the goal of helping his wife find a job. Pruitt also rented a condo on Capitol Hill for $50 a night, well below market value, from the wife of an energy lobbyist whose project the E.P.A. approved last March. Pruitt’s many scandals led to his resignation in July.

Elaine Chao, the transportation secretary, used interviews with Chinese and Chinese-American media to raise her father’s profile. He is a shipping magnate whose business transports goods between the United States and Asia, and he sat next to her during the interviews.

And although it doesn’t quite rise to the same level of the other examples here: White House staffers receive a discount of up to 70 percent on Trump-branded merchandise at the president’s Bedminster, N.J., golf club, reportedly at the president’s recommendation.

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White House staff members using Trump-branded umbrellas at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.CreditTom Brenner for The New York Times
Cabinet officials make unethical stock trades.

Several Trump officials — current and former — have traded stocks while serving in top government positions. In some cases, they appear to have made policy decisions benefiting the companies in which they owned a stake.

Tom Price, Trump’s first secretary of health and human services, epitomized this form of corruption. Trump chose him despite his history of using his seat in Congress to make money. Price had a long record of putting the interests of drug companies above those of taxpayers and patients — and then investing in those drug companies on the side.

Brenda Fitzgerald, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, committed a more mild version of this sin. She purchased shares in food, drug and tobacco companies after taking charge of an agency that regulates them — and that aims to reduce smoking. After her purchases became public, she resigned.

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Finally, Wilbur Ross, Trump’s commerce secretary, has mixed government business and his own business in multiple ways. He held on to investments — and then appears to have lied to government ethics officials about those investments. He shorted the stock of a company about which he appeared to have advance notice of bad news. He also met with the chief executive of Chevron, even though his wife owned a substantial investment — which, according to Forbes, “put himself at risk of violating a criminal conflict-of-interest law.”

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Tom Price during his nomination hearing.CreditAl Drago/The New York Times
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Michael Cohen, Trump's former lawyer and fixer, after a court appearance in August.CreditAndres Kudacki for The New York Times
Trump’s orbit receives cash.

Michael Cohen — Trump’s former lawyer and fixer, who has since turned on him — received at least $1 million from AT&T, Novartis and Korea Aerospace Industries shortly after the 2016 election. They were supposedly paying for his insight into the Trump administration.

Corey Lewandowski, the former manager of Trump’s campaign, is paid for work that looks very much like lobbying — such as participating in a lobbying firm’s phone calls with clients and doing work on behalf of T-Mobile, the telecommunications company firm. But Lewandowski has not registered as a lobbyist and says he does not need to do so.
Paul Manafort, Trump’s former campaign chairman, reportedly used his position to offer private briefings to a Russian oligarch to whom he owed millions of dollars. Manafort saw the briefings as a way to “get whole.”

Cabinet officials take junkets.

Trump officials have made a habit of billing American taxpayers for their personal travel. Ryan Zinke, Trump’s secretary of the interior, chartered a $12,000 flight to fly out of Las Vegas, where he had given a 12-minute speech to a hockey team owned by a businessman who donated to his congressional campaign.

David Shulkin, the secretary of veterans affairs, charged taxpayers for a trip to Europe that included stopovers at Wimbledon and Westminster Abbey, plus a river cruise for him and his wife. The resulting outcry appears to have played a role in his departure.


Pruitt, the former head of the E.P.A., chartered flights for questionable travel, among many other things. He also pushed to fly Delta rather than the government’s contract carrier, to accrue frequent flier miles. He flew first class and stayed in hotels that were more expensive than those allowed by government standards. And he let lobbyists help arrange foreign trips for him.

Brock Long, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, spent $151,000 on government vehicles without authorization, including to travel to his North Carolina home. He was ordered to repay the government.

Steven Mnuchin, the Treasury secretary, looked into whether he could use a military plane to fly him to Europe for his honeymoon. Later, he used military planes for several trips. The Treasury Department’s inspector general concluded that Mnuchin broke no laws by doing so, but criticized Mnuchin’s insufficient explanation for why he needed to spend $800,000 on the trips.


And Price, the former health secretary, spent hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars on private planes. His history of unethical stock trading didn’t keep Trump from naming Price to the cabinet. But the private-plane scandal received enough attention that the White House eventually forced Price to resign.

Trump’s team enjoys interior decorating.

The pettiest kind of Trumpian corruption takes the form of interior decorating.

Zinke, the interior secretary, spent $139,000 in taxpayer money on new doors for his office. Carson, the secretary of health and human services, picked out a dining set for his office that cost $31,000 — and then gave Congress contradictory explanations for the purchase and blamed it on his wife. Pruitt ordered a $43,000 soundproof phone booth installed in his office and appears to have violated federal law by failing to inform Congress about it.

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Where is Congress?

It has shirked its constitutional duty.

The biggest scandal of all, however, is not even the corruption of the Trump administration. It’s the inaction of Congress.
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President Trump's motorcade driving to dinner last month at the Trump International Hotel in Washington.CreditAl Drago for The New York Times
The founders were well aware that the government they were creating could end up with corrupt or unethical leaders, all the way up to the president. That’s why the Constitution gives Congress tremendous power to investigate and even remove officials in the executive branch.

Yet the current congressional leaders — the Republican leaders — have refused to do so. They have shirked their duty to act as a check on the president and his appointees. They have instead defended Trump and made excuses on his behalf. They have enabled the most corrupt administration of our lifetimes.
What’s missing from this list? If you think there are other examples that should appear on this list, email us at leonhardt@nytimes.com.


DougMacG

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Re: POTH: Trump is in the Swamp
« Reply #404 on: October 29, 2018, 09:48:35 AM »
All of that and not a word about the expanding economy benefiting everyone.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #405 on: October 29, 2018, 02:44:50 PM »
Which is a completely separate point, yes?

I've yet to give the piece a proper read, and given that it is Pravda on the Hudson it is likely to be full of smears, but in our Search for Truth we need to be aware of these things.

DougMacG

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #406 on: October 29, 2018, 08:12:18 PM »
Which is a completely separate point, yes?

I've yet to give the piece a proper read, and given that it is Pravda on the Hudson it is likely to be full of smears, but in our Search for Truth we need to be aware of these things.

Fair question.  I also haven't given it a proper read, but browsed through it and didn't see anything, new, unusual or illegal.  I didn't see anything there that would have earned an NYT headline if a Dem did it.

They lost me on the last smear, the Fred Trump estate where line 9999 admits no laws were broken.

My understanding is that Trump industries is making less now than before he was a candidate or President.  True?  If true, that is a very important rebuttal to nearly all of this.

On their first point, an event was moved to a Trump property.  Aren't events moved even when players aren't involved in politics?  Before they move on with the old logic string, 'and another thing', shouldn't they demonstrate the first point involved corruption, not just bad optics?

Devos isn't tough enough on for-profits?  Trust me, that isn't why they hate her.  Pruitt already left; his transgressions were minor, he rented a room in a house.  Tom Price acted like he worked for Obama, took private flights.  He also got booted.
 Did he spend more than Michelle Obama did with he entourage to Spain, or Bernie Sanders to Rome?  Obama did not purge the perps of his scandals, Holder on Fast and Furious, Treasury Sec of IRS commissioner on targeting and this newspaper never called him out on that nor give Trump credit when he did for far less transgression.

The point with the flawed and biased source is that, well ... they are flawed and biased.  Less reliable than Breitbart in my experience.  When Sparta Report turns on Trump and his ethics, then maybe I'll sit up and take notice.

G M

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #407 on: October 29, 2018, 08:46:55 PM »
So bored with the “Trump left the toilet seat up”! journalism.

 :roll:

DougMacG

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #408 on: October 30, 2018, 06:13:10 AM »
So bored with the “Trump left the toilet seat up”! journalism.

 :roll:


Funniest post in a long time.

Meanwhile they missed the last 289 accomplishments.

Strange that the fewer the years one has in Leftist indoctrination classes and also the longer it has been since they had you as a captive audience member, the easier it is to discern their drivel.


ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #410 on: November 02, 2018, 08:46:55 AM »
https://bigleaguepolitics.com/shock-video-beto-orourke-campaign-schemes-to-assist-illegal-caravan-with-campaign-from/

wait, I thought all the liars at CNN told us this caravan (as well as others was NOT receiving funds or other help ("free" legal) by American crats?)  hint the lawyers I bet are getting paid afterall
from donations etc.

Lemon Mario's kid Wolfman , White hair , women who smirk and make faces about anything Trump or Conservative and the rest of the crew including fake news Zucker .


Crafty_Dog

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JW: Mad Maxine
« Reply #411 on: November 21, 2018, 10:46:06 AM »
Judicial Watch   

Maxine Waters Unfit to Chair House Financial Services Committee

 

Considering her record and documented history of poor ethical and moral fitness, it’s outrageous that Maxine Waters is up for chair of the ultra-powerful House Financial Services Committee, which has jurisdiction over the country’s banking system, economy, housing, and insurance.

With Democrats taking control of the House of Representatives, come January the 14-term California congresswoman is expected to head the committee, which also has jurisdiction over monetary policy, international finance, and efforts to combat terrorist financing.

Throughout her storied political career, Waters has been embroiled in numerous controversies, including abusing her power to enrich family members, getting a communist dictator to harbor a cop-murdering Black Panther fugitive still wanted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and accusing the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of selling crack cocaine in black neighborhoods.

A few months ago, the 80-year-old Democrat from Los Angeles encouraged violence against Trump administration cabinet members. “If you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd and you push back on them and you tell them they are not welcome anymore, anywhere,” Waters said at a summer rally in Los Angeles. Judicial Watch filed a House ethics complaint against Waters for encouraging violence against Trump Cabinet members.

Among her most corrupt acts as a federal legislator is steering millions of federal bailout dollars to her husband’s failing bank, OneUnited. Waters allocated $12 million to the Massachusetts bank in which she and her board member husband held shares. OneUnited subsequently got shut down by the government and American taxpayers got stiffed for the millions.

Judicial Watch investigated the scandal and obtained documents from the U.S. Treasury related to the controversial bailout. The famously remiss House Ethics Committee, which is charged with investigating and punishing corrupt lawmakers like Waters, found that she committed no wrongdoing. The panel bought Waters’ absurd story that she allocated the money as part of her longtime work to promote opportunity for minority-owned businesses and lending in underserved communities even though her husband’s bank was located thousands of miles away from the south Los Angeles neighborhoods she represents in Congress.

The reality is that without intervention by Waters OneUnited was an extremely unlikely candidate for a government bailout through the disastrous Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The Treasury Department warned that it would only provide bailout funds to healthy banks to jump-start lending and OneUnited clearly didn’t meet that criteria.

Documents uncovered by Judicial Watch detail the deplorable financial condition of OneUnited at the time of the government cash infusion. The records also show that, prior to the bailout, the bank received a “less than satisfactory rating.” Incredibly, after that scandal Waters was chosen by her colleagues to hold a ranking position on the House Financial Services Committee she will soon chair. The only consequence for blowing $12 million on her husband’s failing bank was a slap on the hand to Waters’ chief of staff (her grandson) for violating House standards of conduct to help OneUnited.

Waters, who represents some of Los Angeles’ poorest inner-city neighborhoods, has also helped family members make more than $1 million through business ventures with companies and causes that she has helped, according to her hometown newspaper. While she and her relatives get richer (she lives in a $4.5 million Los Angeles mansion), her constituents get poorer.

The congresswoman was also embroiled in a fundraising scandal for skirting federal election rules with a shady gimmick that allows unlimited donations from certain contributors. Instead of raising most of her campaign funds from individuals or political action committees, Waters sells her endorsement to other politicians and political causes for as much as $45,000 a pop.

It wouldn’t be right to part without also noting some of Waters’ international accolades. She has made worldwide headlines for her frequent trips to communist Cuba to visit her convicted cop-assassin friend, Joanne Chesimard, who appears on the FBI’s most wanted list and is also known by her Black Panther name of Assata Shakur.

Chesimard was sentenced to life in prison after being convicted by a jury of the 1979 murder of a New Jersey State Trooper. With the help of fellow cult members, she escaped from jail and fled to Cuba. Outraged U.S. lawmakers insisted she be extradited but Waters always stood by her side, likening the cop-assassin to civil rights leader Martin Luther King.

In fact, Waters wrote Cuban Dictator Fidel Castro a letter to assure him that she was not part of the group of U.S. legislators who voted for a resolution to extradite the cop murderer. Waters told Castro that she opposed extradition because Chesimard was “politically persecuted” in the U.S. and simply seeking political asylum in Havana, where she still lives.

In the 1980s Waters accused the CIA of selling crack cocaine to blacks in her south-central Los Angeles district to raise millions of dollars to support clandestine operations in Latin America, including a guerrilla army. During the infamous 1992 Los Angeles riots the congresswoman repeatedly excused the violent behavior that ironically destroyed the areas she represents in the House. She dismissed the severe beating of a white truck driver by saying the anger in her district was righteous. She also excused looters who stole from stores by saying they were simply mothers capitalizing on an opportunity to take some milk, bread, and shoes.

Should this ethically and morally challenged individual, who has repeatedly displayed behavior unbecoming of a federal lawmaker, be at the helm of an influential congressional committee that oversees the financial sector?





ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #412 on: November 21, 2018, 03:47:05 PM »
"Maxine Waters Unfit to Chair House Financial Services Committee "

There are Black Panthers in high up places now.

ccp

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more cholera and typhoid
« Reply #413 on: December 08, 2018, 06:39:57 AM »
in DC now than there was 150 yrs ago when Zach Taylor succumbed to the sewage:

https://www.conservativereview.com/news/how-raising-congressional-staff-pay-could-help-drain-the-swamp/


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #415 on: January 17, 2019, 08:15:30 AM »
Outstanding!

ccp

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Just another sell out
« Reply #416 on: January 17, 2019, 02:52:30 PM »
I guess I should not be surprised but just that he has enough material to even turn this into a book.

And who would listen to him?  He has no credibility .

The Left who hated him might throw him a job at CNN now though:

https://www.yahoo.com/huffpost/chris-christie-tears-donald-trump-093605345.html

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #417 on: January 25, 2019, 12:23:30 PM »
Frankly, I suspect he is right-- most certainly including the part about Princeling Jared having a hard on for him because he put his daddy in jail.

Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #421 on: February 25, 2019, 01:39:27 PM »
https://www.judicialwatch.org/press-room/weekly-updates/judicial-watchs-weekly-update-another-clinton-cover-up/?utm_source=deployer&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=tipsheet&utm_term=members&utm_content=20190225212511

 

Hillary Clinton has Russia Collusion Problem

All of the huffing and puffing about President Trump and Russia these past two years effectively took the spotlight off Hillary Clinton and her foundation’s activities. That, I suspect, is the purpose of the Mueller/Comey/Rosenstein/McCabe farce. Our chief investigative reporter, Micah Morrison, updates us in his latest Investigative Bulletin.

Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into possible collusion with Russia by the Trump presidential campaign dominates the news, but behind the scenes another bombshell story is coming together piece by piece. Was the Clinton network knee-deep in Russians, and did the FBI shut down an investigation that would have provided answers about Clinton collusion?

Judicial Watch is one of the few organizations in pursuit of the story. We filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Justice Department after it failed to respond to our request for “all communications” related to “the closure or possible closure of an investigation into the Clinton Foundation” in 2016. Last week, in a separate lawsuit, we uncovered evidence pointing to undisclosed documents related to controversial FBI official Andrew McCabe and potential charges against Mrs. Clinton.

We sued for records of a meeting between a top FBI official and an attorney for a Clinton-connected law firm related to then-candidate Trump and Russia, a story first reported by Fox News. And we’ve taken a skeptical look at the appointment by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions of U.S. Attorney John Huber to “evaluate certain issues” rising from the 2016 election.

One of those issues is the Uranium One controversy. Russia’s Rosatom atomic energy corporation in 2010 received U.S. permission, including a sign-off from Hillary Clinton’s State Department, to buy Uranium One, a Canadian company that owned significant American uranium assets. Was the Russian purchase of Uranium One connected to payments to the Clinton network and improper actions by Secretary of State Clinton?

Judicial Watch is lonely on the story but not alone. The Hill’s indefatigable John Solomon a year ago broke the news that the Clinton Foundation was under FBI investigation. “The Justice Department has launched a new inquiry into whether the Clinton Foundation engaged in any pay-to-play politics or other illegal activities while Hillary Clinton served as secretary of state,” Solomon reported.

Earlier this month, Solomon was at it again. Revisiting an episode that has “escaped significant attention,” Solomon reports that there is “clear evidence now that shows Hillary Clinton’s family and charity profited from Moscow and simultaneously facilitated official government actions benefitting Russia.”

The episode centers around the Skolkovo Innovation Center, a high-tech business center launched in Moscow in 2009. Five years later, as Skolkovo entities expanded in the U.S., the FBI issued an extraordinary public warning, saying that the Skolkovo connection “may be a means for the Russian government to access our nation’s sensitive or classified research development facilities and dual-use technologies.”

Solomon notes that Secretary of State Clinton’s “handprint was everywhere” on the Skolkovo project, part of an attempt by the U.S. to reboot Russia relations. Leading the Russian side of the project was oligarch Viktor Vekselberg, a Putin-connected billionaire and Clinton Foundation donor. Firms connected to the oligarch donated at least $75,000 to the foundation. As the Skolkovo collaboration got underway, Solomon reminds us, Bill Clinton made his way to Moscow and was paid a jaw-dropping $500,000 for a speech to a Russian investment bank, Renaissance Capital.

Solomon reports that Bill Clinton sought permission from the State Department to meet with Vekselberg and “Arkady Dvorkovich, a senior official of Rosatom,” during the Moscow trip. This was at the time Rostom was “seeking State’s permission to buy Uranium One.” The Washington Examiner notes that the Clintons’ “relationship to Vekselberg continued throughout Hillary Clinton’s time at the State Department.”

Solomon adds additional details on possible Clinton collusion with the Russians—read his full report here. And Viktor Vekselberg certainly is a busy man, making a cameo in the Mueller probe and turning up in various other sketchy endeavors. Not everything in the Russia story comes up as collusion, cover-up or crime, but Solomon correctly notes that evidence related to Skolkovo, Rosatom and Uranium One “shows that the Clintons financially benefitted from Russia—personally and inside their charity—at the same time they were involved in U.S. government actions that rewarded Moscow and increased U.S. security risks.”

 

ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #422 on: February 25, 2019, 02:31:23 PM »
From above JW article:

"That, I suspect, is the purpose of the Mueller/Comey/Rosenstein/McCabe farce."

I love these guys !   :-D



ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #425 on: March 27, 2019, 06:11:29 AM »
When a county prosecutor's office is corrupt
who investigates ?

The state I would think but of course  good luck with expecting that in Democrat controlled Illinois
I wonder if the DOJ can look into this . Of course they have their hands full.

I don't know if JW could look into this with FOA or if it would even matter.
The deal is sealed which is apparently legal .

Again it is Obama's people behind the scenes exerting their influence most likely from the phony one or first lady phony one using their connections

This whole smacks of racism

From the initial phony allegations to the coverup and everyone involved.
And I read that Smollet's volunteer work (not described as "community service")
is at a Jesse Jackson library for a weekend
signing autographs for his racist fans I presume (not stuffing envelopes)




Crafty_Dog

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #429 on: April 19, 2019, 08:01:02 PM »
Tucker Carlson has been making this point with great consistency and eloquence for quite some time now.



ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #432 on: April 24, 2019, 06:01:08 AM »
Can't find that mother nancy referred government contracts to the son's company - yet

like she does with her husband.


Crafty_Dog

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Peter Schweizer: Joe Biden is the most corrupt VP of our lifetime
« Reply #434 on: May 11, 2019, 09:00:08 AM »
https://www.glennbeck.com/radio/peter-schweizer-joe-biden-is-the-most-corrupt-vice-president-of-our-lifetime?utm_content=buffer8aaf8&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=glennbeck&fbclid=IwAR2SjG7RFYcurRgVVNG0qgeG-4Iv2tUCi4E4s_1cGCoVGFLeBYIMMT2GIsU


BTW note that the Heinz family investment firm is the Heinz of ketchup fame-- with the heiress being the second of gigolo John Kerry's nine digit ($100M+) scores and that Kerry son was also a beneficiary in these schemes.

ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #435 on: May 11, 2019, 10:47:30 AM »
another politician scam

claim you are not rich.  just get all the cash bribes to family members instead.

like pelosi and her husband

like Podesta and his family

on and on.  so many we have no clue


G M

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Lost Trust
« Reply #437 on: May 29, 2019, 07:41:22 PM »
https://captaincapitalism.blogspot.com/2019/05/guest-post-from-glorious-karl.html

Lost Trust, by Karl Ushanka

I’d like to think I have a good poker face. It has worked for me the few times I’ve sat across from Cappy. But if you pick up a copy of the second edition of my book, Trade the Ratio, you’ll see right through me. In Chapter Two I list, in 56 pages, the many old and several new reasons for considering an investment in precious metals. Thirty-nine of those pages are on the subject of lost trust. Want to guess what motivates my financial planning, including my silver and gold purchases?
I have lost trust in institutions that should never have lost my trust. From corporations, to all levels of government to quasi-government entities, these organizations have accelerated their race to the bottom in recent years. I have been reduced to only trusting friends and family, and to trusting the one-ounce silver American Eagle coin I’ve been carrying in my pocket for the past six years still weighs one ounce.
One could chalk this attitude of mine up to age-induced cynicism. No doubt that is a factor. But the degree with which these institutions have fallen is only lost on those within, and those blissfully ignorant. Unfortunately for us, they make up the majority of voters and they will win once they nominate a viable presidential candidate. Is there a bottom? If so, what will it look like when we reach it? Specifically, what can we do now to protect our assets when the looters take over?
I’m not the first to explore this concept. Aaron was out in front with this topic six years ago with Enjoy the Decline. He presented the topic of Non-traditional Retirement Plans in Chapter Five:
“While they may not provide benefits like matching, tax deductions, and an absence of capital gains, non-traditional investments may still prove to be the wiser investment. They are harder to confiscate, they will keep their value during an economic melt-down, they will have higher rates of return than any kind of “Solyndra,” and even if an economic doomsday scenario doesn’t play out, they at least serve the function of insurance.”
The Captain started his list of nine non-traditional retirement investment options with gold and silver. In Trade the Ratio I show how one can both hold these preferred assets and achieve a modest ROI by trading the silver-to-gold ratio. Loss of trust is the constant in these books, as is the realization that our world is not what it once was.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07MVP2B8D

Instead of rehashing the examples from my book, here are two trust-losing events that have happened in the four months since I published my second edition: Mueller and the NRA.
We now know that the Mueller investigation lasted two years and was led by one of the most trusted investigators in DC. We know it cost the tax-payers over $25 million. We know that not a single FBI agent, of the 40 FBI agents who participated in the investigation, resigned in protest. The investigation risked the legitimacy of an elected president. We know it factored in the level of cooperation from the other side of every domestic and foreign policy debate and negotiation – all at a cost to us. And, as of last week, we now know that every person involved knew in October 2016 that the investigation was based on a politically motivated lie – a dossier paid for by the opposing political party.
We now know the FISA judge accepted the phony dossier without asking for independent verification, and authorized the FBI to run surveillance on an incoming president and his team. Every FISA warrant with any political nuance is now questionable. The integrity of every FISA judge is forever in question. To regain its standing, the FISA Court must be reorganized, starting with a full purge of existing personnel.
We now know the media had access to the dossier and knowledge of the investigation from the start. We now know the media would leak details of this classified information in order to then run stories on these leaks on their networks 24/7. Not that we would ever assume journalistic integrity exists, but now those on the other side have even lost trust in the media.
There is no one in the FBI that can restore trust in that organization. It is full of posers and quota-hires who put politics and pension above oath and duty. It must be dissolved. To save the FBI, to save us, we must burn it and scatter its ashes.
Because no congressional investigation will right this wrong, we suffer the realization that our representatives do not represent us. Because no attorney general’s investigation will right this wrong, we now realize the rule of law is optional. Jail time, if any is ever ordered, will not right this wrong because the participants all chose the risks and are proud of their efforts. Nor will it deter their fans from trying it themselves. To them it was a noble calling.
No FBI agent will ever command the same respect a Bureau agent received during the Cold War. Every FISA court decision, no matter how important it is to our national security, will be in question. And now even leftists will join us in suspecting the media is a tool of the elites rather than a so-called fourth pillar of democracy. In fact, the only positive from this investigation is the undeniable fact that President Trump is, by far, the purest man to ever hold the office.
Trust these clowns? Nah. I’ll just keep clinging to my Bible, my guns and my bullion.
The NRA is rotten to its core. A few weeks ago, then-NRA President Col. Oliver North announced he was leaving the organization. This week we find out why - the organization is in financial trouble and has a serious leadership problem.
At least part of the NRA’s financial problems have been caused by the CEO and long-time face of the NRA, Wayne LaPierre. He racked-up $542k in stupid expenses. These include $39k in a single trip to a clothing store, and more than $200k in one month of air travel. We wouldn’t know this if an NRA insider hadn’t leaked the expense reports.
But it is not just LaPierre. NRA President, Carolyn Meadows, says the “entire board is fully aware of these issues. We have full confidence in Wayne LaPierre.” But Meadows doesn’t stop embarrassing herself there. Like the untrustworthy fraud that she is, she is upset “some people would resort to leaking information to advance their agendas.” Fuck her.
Previously a member, I always bragged that that NRA was the only lobbying group in the United States whose members didn’t view themselves as victims. It has had the largest membership of lobbying firms, now at five million. It has its shortcomings, the primary one being their priority of hunting and marksmanship over other forms of shooting sports and activism. But now their behavior has attracted the attention of the NY Attorney General’s office, which is looking into the NRA’s tax-exempt status. Thanks Wayne. Thanks Carolyn.
What bothers me is the NRA’s mission. It is the most noble: To protect the Second Amendment. It is no secret that the Second Amendment protects, and makes possible, all the other parts of the Constitution. Which makes LaPierre’s actions, and the rest of the management team’s callousness, unforgivable. They were trusted and supported by American patriots, and they discarded that trust. Their mismanagement might not qualify as a crime, but their actions have betrayed many, and perhaps given the gun-grabbers the edge in the next gun-control debate.
Betrayal is as old as man, but the pace and severity seems to be accelerating. It hasn’t touched you or me yet, but someday soon we will be told to “be patient, as we restore your account balance,” or “the FBI will not allow this to happen again,” or “we’ve made some mistakes in the past but we (the same people) will do better going forward.” Ya, thanks. But as part of enjoying the decline I’ve decided to sit here with my cigar and my poker face, and remove part of my life from a system that looks more fragile and more corrupt than ever before.

ccp

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Mueller and the sucker punch
« Reply #438 on: May 30, 2019, 05:37:15 AM »
Lost trust

What Mueller did was akin to a sucker punch

He lost a close battle in the ring for 15 rounds and like a disgruntled loser (couldn't GET Trump) . he on the way out of the ring runs up to Trump, whose back is turned  and slugs and then  before anyone can do anything he steps out of ring puts on his robe and goes into locker room to retire.

Hopefully Barr will not let him and the rest get away with this.  Not holding my breath though.

DEms taking daily polls and as soon if the public goes over 50% in favor  for impeachment they will do so.
As far as I am concerned just get it over with and do now.
They are such "f"in cowards screaming the " RULE OF LAW" while at the same time afraid to impeach because of political hit back
they refuse to even do anything about THEIR phony rule of law.


ccp

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Re: Corruption, Sleaze, Skullduggery, the Swamp, and Treason
« Reply #440 on: June 02, 2019, 06:53:10 PM »
odd how the family members of the DC politicians are frequently involved in money making deals that are not legal
or smell of quid pro quo

G M

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ccp

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Epstein
« Reply #443 on: July 08, 2019, 05:45:00 AM »
Why do I get the sense that this investigation is somehow part of the get Trump swamp.
I am not for getting Epstein but somehow this occurs and we see prominently a video of Trump speaking about Epstein and women .

Then on top of it we have SDNY and Comey's kid now leading the charge? 
Just smells very fishy :

https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/guess-whose-daughter-is-reportedly-a-prosecutor-in-jeffrey-epstein-case/

I wonder if this should be under the Russian collusion etc  thread

ccp

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What about Barry Krischer ?
« Reply #444 on: July 11, 2019, 05:50:52 AM »
http://www.anncoulter.com/columns/2019-07-10.html#read_more

he is a Democrat as is Epstein

and Clinton was a Dem favorite .

and of course the MSM cover for all good democrats so we hear nothing from them about this except for Acosta......

 :x

From the Daily Beast 2010 :

"So when State Attorney Barry Krischer, who also ran Florida’s Crimes Against Children Unit, proved reluctant to mount a vigorous prosecution of Epstein, saying the local victims were not credible witnesses, Chief Reiter wrote the attorney a letter complaining of the state’s “highly unusual” conduct and asking him to remove himself from the case. He did not, and the evidence his office presented to a state grand jury produced only a single count of soliciting prostitution. (Krischer has since retired and would not comment for this article.)"

 https://www.thedailybeast.com/jeffrey-epstein-billionaire-pedophile-goes-free

Barry the Democrat's  statement:
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3763117/posts"

While he may be right about Acosta it certainly sounds like Kircher is also re writing history about himself.

« Last Edit: July 11, 2019, 07:47:29 AM by ccp »

ccp

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The Biden name alone is good enough for the banks
« Reply #446 on: August 02, 2019, 05:28:27 PM »

to keep loaning brother Jim loan after loan for a losing night club venture
despite his claiming he had no more than 10 G to his name.

should have had older brother come to the nightclub and give a speech which would have filled the seats with people looking for good night of humor and comedy:

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/08/02/joe-bidens-brother-scored-generous-loans-during-banking-committee-tenure/

nothing here folks . wink nod wink nod.

sleepy Joe could be changed to sleazy Joe

Crafty_Dog

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Iman Mohahamad Tawhidi
« Reply #447 on: August 08, 2019, 10:08:12 PM »
Someone I know with security clearance and someone whom I respect greatly tells me we should be keeping an eye on this:

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1154426961646649345.html

G M

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Re: Iman Mohahamad Tawhidi
« Reply #448 on: August 08, 2019, 10:11:15 PM »
Someone I know with security clearance and someone whom I respect greatly tells me we should be keeping an eye on this:

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1154426961646649345.html

Interesting.

ccp

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how many heads are going to roll
« Reply #449 on: August 09, 2019, 07:59:43 AM »