Author Topic: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State, and Coups?  (Read 400516 times)



ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19256
    • View Profile
by trying to embarrass Trump prosecution kills their own case
« Reply #1902 on: May 07, 2024, 02:28:32 PM »
assuming any of the porn stars allegations are true this would be exactly the reason he would pay her off and have her sign a NDA; to do just that - avoid embarrassment for him and family.

so it is obvious to me this whole thing is to humiliate Trump and hope the jury is dishonest enough along with the judge to rule a crime is committed, (falsely!!!) and before any appeal which according to any honest lawyer I have heard said would result in a conviction being overturned.


what a joke

amazing how lawyers themselves are not embarrassed by this whole circus.


Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
« Last Edit: May 15, 2024, 02:55:59 PM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
Brennan and Clapper are back!
« Reply #1904 on: May 21, 2024, 11:09:00 AM »
"James Clapper and John Brennan"?!?  The Axis of the Deep State and the Controligarchs burrows in deeper yet:
=========================
Forward Observer

(2) DHS RESTARTS INTEL ADVISORY BOARD AFTER COURT LOSS: The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced it will establish the Homeland Intelligence Advisory Board, which will mirror the Homeland Intelligence Experts Group.

DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas disbanded the Homeland Intelligence Experts Group earlier this month to resolve a lawsuit brought by America First Legal, which argued that DHS did not follow the law when it established the group.

Why It Matters: This is an additional data point supporting the likely increase in coordination between federal agencies and online platforms to censor political speech in the fight against “misinformation” and “election interference.” James Clapper and John Brennan, as part of the new advisory board and members of the disbanded experts group, signed a letter ahead of the 2020 election claiming media coverage of Hunter Biden’s laptop “had the hallmarks of Russian disinformation operations.” This is likely to result in more censorship of online political speech and media coverage of stories that could negatively impact Biden’s reelection. – R.C.

Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
Looming “Censorship Industrial Complex” Info Coming?
« Reply #1905 on: May 21, 2024, 06:54:36 PM »
Given Tabbi’s work breaking the Twitter Files I suspect this bodes some very interesting revelations:

Note to Readers: That Eerie Silence
Getcha popcorn ready.
MATT TAIBBI
MAY 21, 2024

“THE AI ELECTION”: Forget Russians, domestic terrorists, or “Coordinated Inauthentic Behavior.” This year’s censorship hobby horse is AI

Subscribe
Racket readers may have noticed it’s been a bit quiet in here of late. That’s because I’ve been spending the last few weeks on an investigative series in cooperation with another site. What seemed like a cut-and-dried report turned into a bit of a rabbit hole on us; hence the delay.

When I first started publishing the Twitter Files in 2022-2023 along with Michael Shellenberger, Bari Weiss, Lee Fang, David Zweig, Paul Thacker, and others, there was an emphasis on speed. Once we saw phrases like “flagged by DHS,” I knew the project was temporary, and guessed we’d probably need to stay ahead of the news cycle in order to avoid seeing material drown in blowback. So, we set aside some explosive bigger-picture storylines to focus on things that could be confirmed and published quickly. There were also topics we didn’t fully understand at the time.

Some of those broader stories will begin coming out now, hopefully starting this week. There’s a reason for working back through this material now. Sources tell me at least two different active groups are working on political content moderation programs for the November election that tactically would go a step or two beyond what we observed with groups like Stanford’s Election Integrity Partnership, proposing not just deamplification or removals, but fakery, use of bots, and other “offensive” forms of manipulation.

If the recent rush of news stories about the horror of foreign-inspired AI deepfakes (“No one can stop them,” gasps the Washington Post) creating intolerable risk to the coming “AI election” sounds a bit off to you, you’re not alone. This is one of many potential threats pro-censorship groups are playing up in hopes of deploying more aggressive “counter-messaging” tools. Some early proposals along those lines are in the unpublished Twitter Files documents we’ve been working on. Again, more on this topic soon.

Also: beginning around the time we published the “Report on the Censorship-Industrial Complex,” Racket in partnership with UndeadFOIA began issuing Freedom of Information requests in bulk. The goal was to identify inexcusably secret contractors of content-policing agencies like the State Department’s Global Engagement Center. The FOIA system is designed to exhaust citizens, but our idea was to match the irritating resolve of FOIA officers by pre-committing resources for inevitable court disputes, fights over production costs, etc. Thanks to UndeadFOIA’s great work, we now have a sizable library of documents about publicly-funded censorship programs (and a few private ones scooped up in official correspondence).

We’ll be releasing those, too, focusing on a few emails per batch, and publishing the rest in bulk. There’s so much material that a quick global summary here would be difficult, but suffice to say that the anti-disinformation/content control world is much bigger than I thought, enjoying cancer-like growth on campuses in particular, in the same way military research became primary sources of grants and took over universities in the fifties and sixties. Some of these FOIA documents are damning, some entertaining, some just interesting, but all of them belong to the public. We’re going to start the process of turning them over, hopefully today.

In any case, thanks to Racket readers for their patience. I’m very appreciative of the commitment every subscriber makes, especially in this narrowing media environment, which is why I want to make sure readers understand what’s usually going on when things go dark around here. My idea of a vacation is one or two days. If you don’t hear from me for six, I’m working on something. Back soon, and thanks again.

https://www.racket.news/p/note-to-readers-that-eerie-silence


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19256
    • View Profile
Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1907 on: June 04, 2024, 06:01:20 AM »
Oh, AI is the reason

makes perfect sense now time to move along  :roll: :wink:

looks like it took them days to dream up this BS excuse.

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18977
    • View Profile
Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1908 on: June 04, 2024, 07:40:35 AM »
Oh, AI is the reason

makes perfect sense now time to move along  :roll: :wink:

looks like it took them days to dream up this BS excuse.

Yes, world champion BS excuse.  Read the transcript, you don't need AI to turn this into a mockery.  It's much more powerful to know it's real, that's what he said and he gets away with it.

He honestly doesn't know when he was Vice President, and now he is 'leader of the free world'.

The people who thought Reagan was too dumb and too old to be President are giving billions to get this guy, actually the puppet masters behind this guy, reelected.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
FO: Iranian penetration
« Reply #1909 on: June 05, 2024, 02:47:17 PM »


(3) FIRM TELLS COURT DOJ COVERED UP U.S. BANK IRAN SANCTION VIOLATIONS: Brutus Trading LLC told the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York that the Department of Justice (DOJ) “perpetrated a colossal fraud” by falsely denying Brutus turned over “damning evidence” to the DOJ that Standard Chartered Bank violated Iran sanctions by facilitating financial transactions.
Standard Chartered Bank and the DOJ entered into deferred prosecution agreements in 2012 and 2019 over allegations of violating sanctions against Iran.

Why It Matters: The timeline of deferred prosecution agreements line up roughly with the Obama administration and incoming Biden administration, which focused on the Iran nuclear deal as a major foreign policy victory. The Obama, and now Biden, focus on maintaining the Iran nuclear deal is a likely explanation for little public action on what appears to be an infiltration of the government by the Iran Experts Group and Iran envoy Robert Malley. This is also a possible explanation for the DOJ’s deferred prosecution agreements with Standard Chartered Bank over sanctions violations that facilitated billions of dollars in transactions. – R.C.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 19256
    • View Profile
Bannon
« Reply #1910 on: June 07, 2024, 07:55:34 AM »

DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18977
    • View Profile
Re: Bannon
« Reply #1911 on: June 07, 2024, 08:23:20 AM »
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/donald-trump-wants-five-lawmakers-indicted/ar-BB1nMIHB?ocid=msedgntp&pc=DCTS&cvid=ee14967459e5441f93bc51ff0783058b&ei=10

I don't know.
Wasn't Bannon caught stealing money or something?

I don't want to defend him.

It's Alvin Bragg making the charges so we better take a wait and see approach.

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/former-trump-adviser-steve-bannon-turns-new-york-state-charges-rcna46662

"duped thousands of donors by maintaining that all the money raised would go to build a wall along the southern border and not to the people running the effort."

Might as well indict United Way as well.  How much of their money doesn't get to helping the needy?

I'm sure Alvin Bragg is really concerned about individual build-the-wall contributors and not just out to get Trump officials and friends.

Why does it take private money to build a national wall?

If he did bilk investors, he can pay the price.

But that's not what he was sentenced for.

Contempt of Congress: Bannon was charged with two counts of contempt of Congress for refusing to appear for a deposition and refusing to produce documents in response to a subpoena from the House Select Committee investigating the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol.

Thus is where Trump has a point.  Who else do we know who has been in contempt lately?  Joe Biden with the audio tape is one. 30k emails of HRC.  Comey and Brennan and everyone else in that criminal ring.  Mayorkas.  And the 5 he mentioned.

Two standards of justice and prosecution has to end.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1912 on: June 07, 2024, 08:57:27 AM »

Bannon may have a point on the contempt charge, but even if not, there are several others on the Dem side who have done the same or worse to no consequence.

As for the grifting on the money raised for the wall, it smells to me like he is guilty.

My initial take on what Trump says here is that he is on the mark. 

In the big picture he faces a genuinely tough decision here.  Does he advocate that the law breakers who waged lawfare against him and others pay the price?  Though the right thing to do, my sense of things is that it will cost him many votes. 

Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
Insulated from Accountability
« Reply #1913 on: June 20, 2024, 04:32:09 AM »
The “Progressive” left’s efforts to insulate its Deep State organs from consequences, accountability, and control should Trump win”

https://pjmedia.com/benshapiro/2024/06/20/the-democratic-subversion-of-democracy-n4930010 :-D

Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
The Deep State Diaries
« Reply #1914 on: June 21, 2024, 07:27:45 PM »
A now defunct due to exposure committee of “Homeland Security” (in scare quotes as its mission all too often provides anything but) discussed identifying radical Americans due to their religious, military, among other mainstream affiliations. Enraging stuff:

https://aflegal.org/exclusive-new-docs-reveal-the-brennan-clapper-led-dhs-committee-proposed-americans-report-neighbors-to-the-feds/

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
WT: Inherent Contempt
« Reply #1915 on: June 28, 2024, 05:02:12 AM »


HOUSE

Rogue faction wants to arrest Garland

House Republicans seek audiotapes of Hur’s interview with Biden

BY ALEX MILLER THE WASHINGTON TIMES

A group of House Republicans is trying to have Attorney General Merrick Garland arrested for not handing over the audiotapes of President Biden’s interviews with special counsel Robert Hur, but their mission is meeting resistance within the party.

Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, Florida Republican, is leading the charge to hold Mr. Garland in inherent contempt, a special charge that, if passed, would allow Congress to take the attorney general into custody and force him to testify about withholding the audiotapes.

She vowed this week that if Mr. Garland did not adhere to the House’s subpoena for the tapes, she would force a vote on arresting him as soon as Friday.

“What we’re trying to do right now is, again, Garland, if he wants to avoid this, let Congress hear the tapes,” Ms. Luna said. “You cannot ignore this. People are in jail for way less. So let us hear the tapes, we’ll go to the Department of Justice. We will listen to them, but let us do our jobs. And we won’t have to do this.”

Ms. Luna’s new push comes after nearly every House Republican voted to hold Mr. Garland in contempt of Congress earlier this month for refusing to comply with a subpoena to turn over the tapes of Mr. Hur’s October interview with Mr. Biden.

Mr. Hur’s report of the interviews was focused on whether he mishandled classifi ed documents, but called into question the president’s cognitive ability. Mr. Hur declined to press charges against Mr. Biden because, he said, a jury would be sympathetic to the president, whom he described as a well-meaning, forgetful, old man.

Republicans’ previous attempt at accountability for Mr. Garland, unsurprisingly, went nowhere when the Justice Department declined to charge the head of the agency, arguing that he was acting on an executive order from Mr. Biden to withhold the audio.

If the inherent contempt play is successful, Mr. Garland would be put into custody by the House Sergeant-at-Arms under House Speaker Mike Johnson’s direction, and then forced to testify before lawmakers.

But detractors within the Republican Party believe relying on that power, last used in 1934, is more theatrical than substantive.

Rep. John Duarte, California Republican, was unsure where Mr. Garland would even be held in custody — he said that the rumor was the attorney general might be held in a hotel room.

He argued that Republicans did not need to escalate their war with Mr. Garland to the level of inherent contempt, which he described as an extreme tactic meant to gain lawmakers “notoriety.”

“I know there’s probably enough people, enough Republicans in the camp with me that this isn’t going to pass,” Mr. Duarte told The Washington Times.

Even some who support the move acknowledge that it probably won’t go anywhere.

Rep. Max Miller, Ohio Republican, told The Washington Times that though he believed that the inherent contempt gambit would ultimately fail, he still supported it because of his own personal experience receiving a subpoena to appear in front of the Jan. 6 special committee.

“I can tell you what would’ve happened to me. They would come arrest me and they would probably throw me in the clink and sentence me to a little bit of time and hold me accountable,” said Mr. Miller, who accordingly complied with the subpoena.

“Well, the attorney general should be held to the same standard and Congress does have that oversight ability,” he said.

And Mr. Johnson, Louisiana Republican, has not fully endorsed the move.

He announced Wednesday that the Judiciary Committee would be suing the Justice Department to gain access to the tapes as part of its impeachment inquiry, but did not completely shut down Ms. Luna’s attempt.

“We’re looking at all avenues. I’ve talked to Anna Paulina Luna and our colleagues about various ideas,” said Mr. Johnson. “But … we’re gonna be as aggressive as we can and use every tool in our arsenal to make sure that happens because we have an obligation in the Constitution.”

While the inherent contempt power hasn’t been used in 90 years, the current GOP isn’t the party looking to resurrect an arcane procedure to handle a dispute with the executive branch over access to materials.

In 2019, Democrats threatened to hold then-Attorney General William Barr in inherent contempt for refusing to comply with a subpoena to hand over the fully unredacted version of the report by special counsel Robert Mueller on President Trump’s ties to Russia.

While Mr. Barr was held in contempt, which also went unprosecuted, nothing came of the calls from some Democrats to find him in inherent contempt.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
WSJ: Strassel: 51 Intel Know-Nothings
« Reply #1916 on: June 28, 2024, 12:32:46 PM »


The 51 Intel Know-Nothings
New revelations on the 2020 attempt to suppress the Hunter Biden laptop story.
Kimberley A. Strassel
June 27, 2024 5:10 pm ET

ential debate at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 22, 2020. PHOTO: MORRY GASH/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES
As Joe Biden headed into his Thursday night brawl with Donald Trump, he was missing a key ally from his 2020 debates. He doesn’t have the backing of an intelligence community that Democrats once promised would kneecap Mr. Trump “six ways from Sunday.”

We learned more this week about those 51 former intelligence officials who in 2020 pulled their own version of the 2016 Hillary Clinton-James Comey Russia-collusion hoax. In October 2020 the 51 released a public statement declaring that emails “purportedly” belonging to Hunter Biden’s laptop exhibited “all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.” Joe Biden used this to deflect a debate question about the laptop as “a bunch of garbage”; social-media companies used it to justify censoring the New York Post’s laptop stories; and American voters were kept in the dark about the Biden family business in the runup to November’s razor-thin election result.

House investigators revealed last year the partisan truth: It was the Biden campaign that ginned up the letter. Campaign adviser Antony Blinken (now secretary of state) called former Obama Deputy Central Intelligence Agency Director Mike Morell three days after the Post published the Hunter emails (and just before the second Trump-Biden debate), a chat investigators wrote “led to the issuance of the public statement.” Mr. Morell testified the goal was, among other things, to “help Vice President Biden” “win the election.”

But the House Intelligence and Judiciary committees this week released a second report that exposes the lengths to which this cabal went to craft their own disinformation campaign. Recall the slippery cleverness of the original statement. The signers went out of their way to include their prior official titles and experience—to boost the legitimacy of their declaration—alongside analysis suggesting special abilities that enabled them to credibly brand the emails Russian “disinformation.” Yet they included a careful caveat: They explained they didn’t have any direct “evidence” of Russian involvement—i.e., no access to classified information.

It turns out this know-nothingness was deliberate—making the letter even more scandalous. The new House report says that at least two signatories were CIA contractors at the time of the statement, while others retained access to classified material. All it would have taken was one call or briefing to ascertain that the laptop wasn’t part of a Russian campaign. The federal government certainly knew it. The Federal Bureau of Investigation had been in possession of the Hunter laptop since 2019, while Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe, on the same day as the statement, said that the laptop was “not part of some Russian disinformation campaign.”


Instead, these “professionals” with access to the truth purposely kept themselves in the dark—so as to retain their ability to engage in wild (and false) speculation in aid of a political campaign. In an interview with House investigators, former Obama Director of National Intelligence James Clapper—whose name appeared at the top of the statement—was asked why he didn’t first request a briefing on such a specific topic, given that he “had the clearance.” Mr. Clapper said he “didn’t think it was appropriate” because “I didn’t want to be tainted by . . . access to classified information.” Asked how the truth would possibly count as “tainted,” he dug himself a bigger hole: “Bad choice of words. . . . I wanted only to go on what I had seen publicly.” He didn’t want any truth to get in the way of the story.

Mr. Morell similarly told House investigators that he hadn’t engaged in any conversations with the FBI, received a classified briefing, or availed himself of any investigative material, prior to organizing a bombshell claim that a foreign government was interfering in a U.S. election. The House reports that Mr. Morell was an active CIA contractor at the time of the statement. (In an email to the Post on Tuesday, Mr. Morell denied it.) Never forget: Those at the top of the intel game are there because they know the art of cons, double-cons, and plausible deniability.

The House report divulges other disturbing info, including that the CIA’s internal review board (which scours proposed publications for classified information) may have rushed its process at the request of the vaunted 51. Also, that while the highest echelons of the CIA were alerted to the statement prior to publication, nobody took any action to set the signers straight. Then there are the ethical problems of CIA contractors brazenly engaging in partisan politics and elections.

This year’s Biden campaign hasn’t (yet) been dumb enough to try to sell the voting public on another Russia-election plot. But it’s a long way to November, and this week’s report serves as a sharp reminder of the outsize and repugnant political roles the FBI and intelligence community played in the past two presidential elections. With a track record like this, voters should treat any wild claim with the distrust it deserves—and remember just which political party has proven itself more adept at spewing disinformation.

Write to kim@wsj.com.

Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
As the Real Politic Worm Turns
« Reply #1917 on: July 01, 2024, 05:56:58 PM »
This piece is pretty close to a unified field theory of how politics work, though had I written it I’d have dwelt far more on how anyone that works themselves up any sort of national political ladder has to sell their souls several times over to powerbrokers and gatekeepers and party hacks, not because they have much use for a sullied soul, but because the act of selling what you claim to hold dear is their fucking union card, the thing that proves they are a fully vested member of the large organization.

Then along comes some upstart like Trump elbowing aside a long line of soul sellers without kissing ass or dropping trou and of course all those that made that soul sale and all those that rely on the leaks, confidential sourcing, and marching orders posing as press releases have to pile on the usurper, too.

But hey, like we learned in grade school, everyone has to take their turn:

Who’s Running the Country?

Biden’s decline exposes a much bigger national crisis.

July 1, 2024 by Daniel Greenfield 61 Comments

[Order Daniel Greenfield’s new book, Domestic Enemies: HERE.]

The 2016 presidential election was going to come down to two candidates, Jeb Bush and Hillary Clinton, whose ‘turns’ had come. And then Donald J Trump rode down an escalator, took their ‘turn’ and the establishment has never been the same since. Because it was their ‘turn’.

In 2020, it was the ‘turn’ of Joe Biden, a man whose only political credential was that he had stuck around long enough to stick to things, like the Senate and the Vice Presidency.

Now in 2024, it’s Joe Biden’s ‘turn’ again. No one in his party was under the impression that he was the best candidate, the best campaigner or the best president, but damn it, it was his ‘turn’.

And now the Democrats are panicking because the candidate taking his ‘turn’ is imploding.

Biden’s debate meltdown has frightened Democrats, but they still have no answer for how to stop the car accident that everyone else could see coming from miles away. And no good strategy beyond getting the party leaders to confront their candidate and ask him to step down. But how do you take away Biden’s ‘turn’ when turns are the most sacred thing in politics.

It’s not an exclusively Democrat problem. The GOP put up Bob Dole against Bill Clinton and John McCain against Barack Obama because it was their ‘turns’. They let Mitt Romney go up against Obama a second time because it was his ‘turn’. And after Republicans lost two straight presidential elections because they ran establishment candidates taking their ‘turn’, voters were so sick of it that they did what they would have never done before and picked Trump.

Because it wasn’t his ‘turn’.

‘Turn’ politics mostly still rules. Candidates past their prime go up to bat because they have the biggest networks of fellow politicians, donors and party activists. It’s as if Major League Baseball favored players on the basis of seniority and how well they networked, not based on how well they can pitch or hit.

But unlike sports, politics isn’t a meritocracy, it isn’t even a democracy, it’s an oligarchy.

Voters self-importantly think of elections as the big political competition, but that’s like judging companies based on the keynote addresses of their CEOs. Elections are the least important part of politics. All the really important parts of politics happen behind closed doors. What politicians do isn’t run for office, they network, they cut deals and they plan their careers.

That network, which we occasionally call by wholly inadequate names like the “establishment” or “D.C. insiders” is the reason Biden is up again in 2024. And why he can’t be gotten rid of.

People who naively think that Obama is secretly running the Biden administration don’t understand the network or how it works. Obama took on Hillary when it was her ‘turn’ in 2008. He won and brokered a deal that moved the Democrat network further leftward. And he did the same thing again in 2020, bringing in Bernie’s people and Elizabeth Warren’s people (and his own people) so that the Biden administration is even more radical and extreme than his was.

But where did Obama come from? He came out of that network of radical activists, donors and government personnel now running the country. Obama is not a brilliant genius or one man dynamo, he was a lazy and unoriginal activist lawyer, one of tens of thousands of Ivy Leaguers who join the political side of the network, who wanted to live out his egotistical ambitions.

And the leftist networks gave him the opportunity to do it in exchange for seeding it deeper across the Democrat Party, the government and the country. Then his time came.

Obama did not want Biden to succeed him. He pushed Biden out in favor of Hillary and then tried to bring in a surprise candidate to run against him in 2020. But some things are sacred and not even Obama, especially once out of the White House, could take away Biden’s ‘turn’ twice.

It’s not really Biden’s ‘turn’ though. It’s the turn of the strategists, lobbyists, staffers, donors,  allies and more nebulous figures known as ‘friends’ whom he accrued over the years. They’re invested in his success and they’re profiting from it. And they won’t easily give it up.

Trying to replace Biden with Newsom (aside from the legal and logistical issues) would be a clash of two networks that would require either careful negotiations or outright civil war. It’s done all the time with primary rivals who become vice presidents or cabinet members, but displacing a sitting president who also won the nomination and has raised and spent a massive fortune would require a level of delicate negotiations akin to bringing peace to an African civil war.

Especially if that president is unstable, prone to fits of anger, and is insulated by the same political allies whose wealth and power depend on Biden winning a second term in office.

It’s not just about Jill and Hunter, Joe Biden has tens of thousands of political mouths to feed. Money has been collected, favors promised, people have bought homes in D.C. bedroom communities, lobbyists have secured fat contracts and donors have opened up their wallets.

Replacing Biden with another candidate would upend much of D.C., put tens of billions of dollars in flux and create massive instability in this corrupt local economy. Much of D.C. would rather ride it out (especially since the campaign people will make just as much money if Biden loses) and preserve the integrity of the networks and the illicit pinkie swears that allow special interests to buy influence without having to worry if their man will suddenly be swapped out.

That is what “it’s his turn” really means.

It’s not impossible for the Democrats to replace Biden but despite all the ‘Orange Man Bad’ alarmism that is their only campaign slogan, none of them view him as enough of an existential threat to disrupt a political way of life which allowed a mediocre grifter like Biden to get this far.

People who don’t understand that were baffled that Biden would run and that he would get the nomination. After his disastrous debate showing, much of the party panicked and outsiders assumed that they would dump Biden. The truth is that the Democrats wish they could.

‘Turn’ corruption once again threatens the survival of the party and yet they can’t break away from it because parties are vehicles for careerism and cash. The networks around powerful politicians build careers and move money. And those networks are running the country.

When people ask “who’s been running the country” after Biden’s debate performance, the answer is that it’s the same people who run most of the government. And have all along.

Politicians in a state of obvious mental decline like Biden or Sen. Dianne Feinstein who go on introducing bills, signing legislation, tweeting and expressing strong opinions on issues in their press releases are not aberrations, they’re symptoms of a much bigger problem.

Not just Biden, but many, if not most, elected officials are figureheads who exist to broker favorable arrangements between their personal networks of donors and staffers, and those of other elected officials, and the ones in the bureaucracy that actually make policy. The revolving door between staffers, personnel, appointees and lobbyists who move between administrations, offices, boards, corporations, think tanks and firms is the actual force that runs the country more than most elections. Politicians play their part, meeting, greeting and signing off on what they’re told will be good for their careers within the networks they’re part of.

And if they build up enough cachet, one day it will also be their ‘turn’ to be at the top..

That’s why Democrats can’t solve their Biden problem. The issue isn’t one man’s decline but a systemic crisis. Biden embodies what the Democrats (and the two-party system and politics really is) and while getting him out may fix the immediate problem, it won’t fix the system.

Biden is a test of how much the system is willing to risk and how high a public implosion it’s willing to tolerate to protect the sacred right of the ‘turn’. Will Democrats let their party go down to protect the system? Will they go on lying to their voters and their donors? Will the media, which briefly broke away from the lies after the debate, resume going along with the scam?

Other ‘Bidens’, some elderly, confused and inept like Joe, others middle aged, confused and inept, like Kamala, and some even young, confused and inept like AOC, fill the system because they are how the system works. It’s not a meritocracy that elevates the best, a democracy chosen by the people, but an oligarchy that runs the system and is also the system.

https://www.frontpagemag.com/whos-running-the-country/

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
Immunity decision protects Biden
« Reply #1918 on: July 02, 2024, 11:26:13 AM »
ATTORNEY: THIS DECISION ACTUALLY PROTECTS *BIDEN*… Former Trump Attorney Tells CNN Immunity Ruling ‘Really Protects President Biden’ (VIDEO)

“You know, what‘s interesting about this decision now is it really protects President Biden. President Biden, when he is no longer the president, whatever that is, won’t really be able to be prosecuted for anything that he‘s doing in office that’s an official act. And so it gives him a level of protection in this decision today, that I don’t think folks are really contemplating yet,” van der Veen said.

“Because there was a big fear that if Trump were to win and President Biden was out of office, that there would be prosecutions of him and people with him. And the protections afforded are also afforded to President Biden. Interesting,” he continued.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
WSJ: Mukasey: Jack Smith is invalid
« Reply #1919 on: July 08, 2024, 05:16:47 AM »
Jack Smith Isn’t a Special Counsel ‘by Law’
Federal prosecutors must be duly appointed and confirmed by the Senate. He fails both tests.
By Michael B. Mukasey
July 7, 2024 4:33 pm ET


There’s good news and bad news for special counsel Jack Smith. The good news is that he may not have to confront the thorny issues stemming from the Supreme Court’s presidential immunity decision. The bad news is that the good news may put him out of a job. That result would follow from a finding either that there is no legal authority for the creation of the office of special counsel, that he wasn’t appointed in compliance with the Constitution, or some combination of the two.

OPINION: POTOMAC WATCH
WSJ Opinion Potomac Watch
Democrats Denounce the 'MAGA Supreme Court'


The Constitution’s Appointments Clause limits how executive offices can be created and how they may be filled. Before the Revolution, the king could both create and fill offices. The Constitution eliminated that power by giving Congress the authority to create offices or to authorize their creation in specific instances, and requiring the advice and consent of the Senate before the president could fill certain offices. It empowers the president to nominate and appoint “officers of the United States” not specifically provided for in the Constitution only with the advice and consent of the Senate, and only to offices “which shall be established by Law.” The Appointments Clause does allow for the appointment of officers by the president, a court or the head of a department—such as the attorney general—but, again, only when such appointment is permitted “by Law.”

Authority for appointment of the current special counsel doesn’t exist “by Law,” but rather through a set of regulations put in place unilaterally by U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno in 1999. They don’t have the force of a law passed by Congress and signed by the president, and can be changed at any time by any attorney general.

While concurring in the majority opinion on the issue of presidential immunity, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote separately to raise the question of whether any law has created the office of special counsel. He noted that Mr. Smith was appointed by the attorney general, and that Mr. Smith relies not on one but on four statutes as authorizing the office of special counsel. Justice Thomas notes that none of them refers specifically to creating such an office; that two are “generic provisions concerning the functions of the Attorney General”; that a third refers to the duties of an “attorney specially appointed by the Attorney General under law,” which suggests an attorney already appointed under some other law; and a fourth that refers to appointment of “officials . . . to detect and prosecute crimes” and appears in a chapter that creates the FBI, not one that creates prosecutors’ offices.

Justice Thomas reasons that if “Congress has not reached a consensus that a particular office should exist, the Executive”—in the person of the attorney general—“lacks the power to create and fill an office of his own accord,” and urges that “the lower courts should . . . answer these essential questions concerning the Special Counsel’s appointment before proceeding.” U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon of Florida, where the prosecution of Trump for unlawful handling of classified documents is pending, has already heard arguments relating to both the creation of the special counsel’s office and Mr. Smith’s appointment.

If Congress had wished to allow the attorney general to create an office of special prosecutor, it would have done so with a statute as simple and direct as those that give the power to create offices to other cabinet secretaries—including the secretaries of transportation, agriculture, health and human services and education. It wouldn’t have relied on gossamer emanations from four statutes.

Proponents of the special counsel’s powers cite court cases to support their position. Among the most frequently cited is the Supreme Court’s opinion in U.S. v. Nixon (1974), which described special counsel Leon Jaworski—who, like Mr. Smith, was appointed by an attorney general—as having acted “pursuant to” a statute relied on by Jack Smith here. However, the issue of whether Jaworski was authorized to act wasn’t before the court in the Nixon case, which concerned only whether a dispute within the executive branch between the Justice Department and the president over a subpoena for tape recordings presented a justiciable issue.

Other cases holding that the appointment of special counsel Robert Mueller was valid are from outside the circuit where Judge Cannon sits. She may regard them as persuasive, if she chooses, but they aren’t binding on her. Of course, neither are they binding on the appeals court within her circuit, or on the Supreme Court.

But isn’t this merely the sort of crabbed legalism that nonlawyers find infuriating and that should not be part of a discussion of momentous matters like the prosecution of Mr. Trump? No, for reasons best articulated by Robert Jackson, who was attorney general before FDR appointed him to the Supreme Court in 1941. In a 1940 address to a conference of U.S. attorneys, he described the immense and unchecked power that federal prosecutors have to investigate people, to interview their friends and relatives, to authorize their arrest and secure their prosecution.

He noted that the appointment of U.S. attorneys “from the very beginning has been safeguarded by presidential appointment, requiring confirmation of the Senate. . . . You are thus required to win an expression of confidence in your character by both the legislative and the executive branches of the government before assuming the responsibilities of a federal prosecutor.”

Jack Smith hasn’t passed that test, and with his record of having lost cases both at trial and on appeal because of his overreaching approach to criminal law, likely wouldn’t. At a minimum, these prosecutions should be handled by a duly appointed and confirmed U.S. attorney who has.

Mr. Mukasey served as U.S. attorney general, 2007-09, and as a U.S. district judge, 1988-2006. He joined a friend-of-the-court brief challenging both the creation of Mr. Smith’s office and his appointment in the Florida case.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State, and Coups?
« Reply #1921 on: July 30, 2024, 11:46:11 AM »
I just added to the name of this thread to include our exploration of the possibility of Deep State Coups.

https://naomiwolf.substack.com/p/the-double-coup

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
WSJ: Vance vs. Rule of Law
« Reply #1922 on: July 30, 2024, 01:26:17 PM »
J.D. Vance’s Disregard for the Rule of Law
The senator appears willing to ignore court rulings, undermining the balance of powers.
By William A. Galston
July 30, 2024 12:44 pm ET

J.D. Vance is unfit to be vice president of the United States for many reasons, chiefly because he has shown a disregard for the constitutional balance of powers and the rule of law.

In a 2021 interview with podcast host Jack Murphy, Mr. Vance said that if Donald Trump is re-elected, he should sack federal agency workers en masse. Mr. Vance said that if he could give Mr. Trump one piece of advice, it would be this: “Fire every single midlevel bureaucrat, every civil servant in the administrative state. Replace them with our people. And when the courts—’cause you will get taken to court—and when the courts stop you, stand before the country, like Andrew Jackson did, and say, ‘The chief justice has made his ruling. Now let him enforce it.’ ” Historians dispute whether Jackson actually said that. The quote’s provenance aside, by citing it Mr. Vance reveals an apparent contempt for the authority of the judicial branch of government.

Mr. Vance’s idea of overhauling the administrative state is in line with an executive order Mr. Trump issued near the end of his first term, which created a new category of federal worker (Schedule F) without traditional civil-service job protections, allowing for easier firing and hiring by the president. President Biden rescinded the executive order shortly after taking office, so it’s unclear to what extent it would have been challenged in court. What’s troubling is Mr. Vance’s assertion that if courts did block the president from firing federal employees, the president should refuse to obey their ruling.

Without the executive branch’s enforcement, the judicial branch is toothless. As Alexander Hamilton argued in Federalist No. 78, the Supreme Court “must ultimately depend upon the aid of the executive arm even for the efficacy of its judgments.” The president is required to provide this aid. Every president takes an oath to “preserve, protect and defend” the U.S. Constitution. Article II, Section 3 provides that the president “shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed”—all the laws, not only those with which he agrees.

Abraham Lincoln was our greatest president, in part because he understood the meaning of this oath and its role in preserving the rule of law, without which our constitutional system cannot endure. Although he despised slavery and thought that the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision was “erroneous,” he said that he would offer “no resistance to it” and instead would do what he could to have the court overrule it. While he offered a sophisticated legal argument denying that the decision was “settled” and had force as binding precedent, he never encouraged his supporters to disregard it.

Lincoln emphasized the importance of respecting the rule of law from the start of his career. In one of his earliest public speeches, the Lyceum Address, he deplored the spread of mob rule. The collapse of the rule of law, he warned, endangered our system of constitutional government. He urged that “reverence for the laws” become the “political religion of the nation,” which was “taught in schools, in seminaries, and in colleges” and “proclaimed in legislative halls, and enforced in courts of justice.”

Lincoln understood, as the Framers did, that the alternative to the rule of law was government by the will of the powerful, and that the alternative to government by the consent of the people was tyranny. As U.S. citizens, we’re obligated to respect the institutions and processes by which law is made, even when we disagree with a particular law. Legislatures and courts make grave mistakes. Yet even their errors must be respected as law. As Justice Robert Jackson once remarked, he and his colleagues “are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final.”

To say that the court is final isn’t to say that its judgment about the meaning of the law or the Constitution ends the argument. Lincoln pledged to continue debating the civic status of African-Americans until the disastrous Dred Scott was reversed by legal means. In our own time, it’s consistent with the rule of law to criticize Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization and to enact legislation that would restore abortion policy to what it was when Roe v. Wade was the law of the land or, conversely, that would create a national abortion ban. It isn’t consistent with the rule of law for anyone—a private citizen or a president—to take the law into his own hands.

Mr. Vance’s rhetoric about ignoring court rulings is indefensible. Mr. Trump unfortunately appears to share his running mate’s disregard for the Constitution. The former president once argued that “massive fraud” in the 2020 election allowed for “the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution.”

The preservation of the constitutional order is at stake in the 2024 presidential election, even if the people choose to cast their votes for other reasons

Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
Student Loan “Forgiveness:” Where it Stands
« Reply #1923 on: August 02, 2024, 12:14:38 PM »
Hopefully someone will get around to asking Kamala her position of this wealth transfer from working stiffs to entitled brats:

The State of Student Loan Forgiveness: August 2024
Cato @ Liberty / by Andrew Gillen / Aug 1, 2024 at 11:48 AM

Andrew Gillen

Note, this post updates last month’s post. The biggest changes from last month include:

the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals halting the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan;
added insights from Jason Delisle’s recent analysis of the legislative history regarding the SAVE plan; and
the Biden administration making Higher Education Act (HEA) plan preparations.
Mass student loan forgiveness is terrible policy (see “The Problems with Student Loan Forgiveness” for a comprehensive list of reasons), but that hasn’t stopped the Biden administration from trying to forge ahead. While the Supreme Court overturned the Biden administration’s student loan forgiveness plan, every few weeks the Biden administration announces another batch of loans that have been forgiven. In fact, the administration recently celebrated that since taking office, it has succeeded in forgiving $ $169 billion of student loans for 4.76 million borrowers by transferring the financial burden from the students that took out the loans to taxpayers who did not. And they aren’t going to stop—the administration’s spokeswoman declared that “President Biden has vowed to use every tool available to cancel student debt for as many borrowers as possible, as quickly as possible.” And President Biden himself stated, “I will never stop working to cancel student debt—no matter how many times Republican elected officials try to stop us.”

But if student loan forgiveness lost in the Supreme Court, how are so many student loans still being forgiven? The answer is that there isn’t a student loan forgiveness plan, there are many plans, some of which are already up and running. Previous laws had already left a plethora of methods to forgive student loans, and many of those laws may give the secretary of education the ability to expand those programs. The administration is also claiming existing law gives it the authority to create new ways to forgive student loans. So the student loans the Biden administration already has or wants to forgive are a combination of existing programs, existing programs the Biden administration has expanded, and new programs the administration is seeking to implement.

Here’s a rundown of the administration’s student loan forgiveness plans and actions, which I’ll update monthly.

Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students (HEROES) Act (new plan—overturned in court)

This was the big plan that got a lot of attention in 2022 and 2023. The plan was to forgive $10,000 for borrowers making less than $125,000 and $20,000 for borrowers who received a Pell grant, at a total cost of $469 billion to $519 billion. The alleged authority for the plan was the 2003 HEROES Act. While designed to alleviate loan-related hardships for soldiers and reservists serving in Iraq and Afghanistan, the law also covered national emergencies, and the Biden administration argued the COVID-19 emergency gave it the authority to forgive virtually everyone’s loans. Most observers were skeptical of this supposed authority, but it was not clear who had standing to sue (standing is the requirement that those filing the suit have a concrete injury from the policy). The companies that service student loans would be the most obvious injured party, but there was a perception that the Biden administration would punish any servicer that challenged the policy in court, a perception that now appears accurate.

Fortunately, the Supreme Court ruled that Missouri had standing to sue (due to a quasi-public student loan servicer that would lose revenue under the plan) and that the plan violated the major questions doctrine (which holds that there needs to be clear congressional authorization for programs of substantial economic or political significance), preventing the policy from being implemented.

Higher Education Act (new plan—forthcoming)

Immediately after losing on HEROES, the Biden administration announced a new effort that would use authority under the HEA. The administration announced new plans, which would:

waive unpaid interest;
forgive debt for those who have repaid for 20 years (25 years if there is debt for graduate school);
forgive debt for those who attended a low-financial value program (e.g., programs or colleges that fail the Cohort Default Rate or Gainful Employment); and
forgive debt for those undergoing financial hardship.
There are a several problems with this plan, which the Penn Wharton Budget Model estimates will cost $84 billion. The public comment window on the proposed regulations recently concluded, and the administration is now considering those comments and will issue final regulations, with a goal to start forgiving debt this fall. Once finalized, this plan will likely be overturned by the courts for two main reasons. First, it is likely to run afoul of the major questions doctrine, just as the HEROES plan did. Second, the Supreme Court recently overturned Chevron deference, which held that courts should defer to executive agencies when a statute was ambiguous. With major questions and no Chevron deference, it is very hard to imagine the courts allowing the administration to stretch vague clauses in old laws into vast new powers authorizing billions of dollars in forgiveness.

However, much of this forgiveness is easy to implement, so a key question is whether a court injunction will come fast enough to prevent the administration from forgiving billions of debt before the courts can determine whether the regulations are legal. The Biden administration is already preparing to move quickly to present the plan as a fait accompli the moment the final plan is released by immediately forgiving billions in loans, so state attorney generals need to be ready to file lawsuits the moment the final regulations are published.

SAVE (new plan—paused by the courts)

Before diving into this one, it is important to understand the concept of income-driven repayment (IDR). Under traditional (mortgage) style loan repayment, the amount and length of repayment are fixed (e.g., $200 a month for 10 years). For the past few decades, the federal government has been introducing IDR plans, in which the amount repaid each month varies based on the borrower’s current income, and the length of repayment varies based on how fast they repay their loan. The key features of an IDR plan are:

the share of income owed each month (e.g., 20 percent);
the income exemption that is protected from any repayment obligation (e.g., the poverty line); and
the cap on length of repayment (e.g., 25 years).
IDR is a great idea, providing borrowers with better consumption smoothing across their lifetime and flexible repayment that helps avoid defaults due to short-term liquidity constraints.

But we’ve also botched the implementation. To begin with, a cap on the length of repayment is completely inappropriate. IDR ensures that payments are always affordable, and borrowers who make so little they do not repay will receive de facto forgiveness even without the cap, so there is no justification for a cap on the length of repayment.

The other problem with how we’ve implemented IDR is political—the plans are tailor-made to allow politicians to give constituents big benefits today while sticking future taxpayers with the bill. It is therefore no surprise that these plans have gotten more generous over time. The first IDR plan, introduced in 1994, had an income exemption equal to the poverty line, a share of income owed of 20 percent, and a cap on length of 25 years. Very few borrowers would receive forgiveness under these terms, and of those who did, they really wouldn’t have been able to repay regardless of whether they received forgiveness or not. The Obama administration introduced plans with an income exemption of 150 percent of the poverty line, a share of income owed of 10 percent, and a cap on length of payment of 20 years.

The Biden administration’s SAVE plan took an existing plan (the Revised Pay as You Earn, or REPAYE, plan) and made it much more generous. It changes the share of income owed from 10 percent to 5 percent, increases the income exemption from 150 percent of the poverty line to 225 percent, and caps the length of repayment at as little as 10 years for some borrowers. By cranking every possible lever to the most generous settings in history, this plan would impose massive costs on taxpayers, estimated at $475 billion for just the next 10 years.

The legal questions facing this plan are the reverse of the HEROES plan. For the HEROES plan, the main obstacle was standing; once that hurdle was cleared, it was fairly obvious that the plan was well beyond what Congress had authorized. But for the SAVE lawsuits, this is reversed. Standing is easily established (for Missouri at least), but the plan does have a much stronger argument of being within the parameters of the law. Mark Kantrowitz thinks SAVE will be upheld, while Michael Brickman did yeoman’s work digging up details on page 18,909 of the 1993 congressional record that may lead to SAVE being scrapped. Jason Delisle also recently released a fascinating report on the legal foundation so SAVE. He argues that “the Biden administration has claimed legal authority far outside what Congress intended when it enacted the law.” In particular, he argues that:

“Lawmakers assumed that the IDR plan the secretary would create would entail minimal or no budget costs” whereas SAVE may cost up to half a trillion dollars over 10 years.
“Lawmakers assumed that the secretary would set loan forgiveness at 20 or 25 years, but not earlier as SAVE does. Moreover, loan forgiveness was clearly an afterthought in the original debates” whereas it is the central feature of SAVE.
“Lawmakers believed that appropriate monthly payments in an IDR plan should be much higher than those in the SAVE plan.”
The Supreme Court’s overturning of Chevron deference is also likely to affect these cases in a major way. Now that courts are no longer required to defer to executive agencies when statutory language is ambiguous, it will be much harder to convince courts that the president spending close to half a trillion dollars over the next 10 years on this plan is consistent with congressional intent.

Parts of the SAVE plan have already been implemented, and full implementation was scheduled for July 2024. The plan has already forgiven “$5.5 billion for 414,000 borrowers.” However, there are two lawsuits that seek to overturn the plan, one by Kansas and 10 other states (though a court ruled that only 3 of the states had standing to sue), and another by Missouri and 6 other states. An injunction from the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals (in the Missouri case) has paused implementation of the entire SAVE plan pending resolution of the case.

In sum, the chances of SAVE surviving the court challenges have declined dramatically over the past year. When it was first introduced, many analysts thought it had the best chance of being upheld in court, but the recent injunction, the overturned Chevron deference, and the work by Brickman and Delisle on congressional intent leave SAVE much more vulnerable legally than most thought would be the case a year ago.

Student Loan Payment Pause (existing and extended plan—now expired)

When COVID-19 hit in March 2020, student loan payments were paused. The pause was supposed to last two months but ended up lasting three and a half years after Trump extended it once and Biden extended it six times. A pause would not normally result in massive student loan forgiveness as it would delay, but not waive, repayment. There would still be a cost to taxpayers (driven by the government’s cost of borrowing), but it wouldn’t be huge. But recall that IDR plans (unnecessarily) cap the length of repayment, and the pause counted toward that cap. In other words, for any student that does not fully repay before they hit the length of repayment cap, payments weren’t paused; they were waived. We won’t know for many years how many students had their payments forgiven rather than postponed, but the current estimates range from $210 billion to $240 billion.

New research from Sylvain Catherine, Mark Pérez Clanton, and Constantine Yannelis finds that the substantial inflation and counting the pause toward the cap on repayment reduced the present value of future student repayments by around 25 percent.

There is virtually no chance for this burden on the taxpayer to be reversed. The only good news is that the payment pause ended, with most borrowers restarting payments in October 2023.

Public Service Loan Forgiveness (existing and extended plan—still active)

The Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program was established during the George W. Bush administration and allowed for public and nonprofit workers to receive forgiveness after 10 years of repayment when they used an IDR plan. While I object to PSLF in principle (as a distorting and nontransparent subsidy for the government and nonprofit sectors) and due to the windfalls these borrowers receive (an average of over $70,000 per beneficiary), since PSLF legally exists, it should operate as seamlessly as possible. The Biden administration granted many waivers and other changes to increase the number of borrowers who could benefit under PSLF. For example, the administration introduced a waiver that allowed for payments made under non-IDR plans to count toward the payment limit (previously, only payments made while enrolled in an IDR plan counted). Some of these changes were good in the sense that they more faithfully implemented the law, but the administration crossed some lines too. In particular, it started counting some types of deferment as payments (borrowers can get deferment when they cannot afford to make payments, which generally allows the borrower to temporarily postpone payments though interest continues to accrue). The whole point of deferment is to temporarily avoid making payments, so for the Biden administration to give borrowers credit for making payments when they were in deferment is logically, morally, and potentially legally wrong (Cato was part of a lawsuit seeking to end this abuse, but the case was thrown out when a court ruled the policy didn’t directly affect Cato enough to satisfy standing requirements). The administration also waived income requirements, making more people eligible for the program.

The Biden administration has forgiven $69.2 billion for 946,000 borrowers under these programs, which works out to around $73,000 per borrower. By comparison, a formerly homeless student who receives the maximum Pell grant for four years would get less than $30,000 in Pell grants. Some of this would have been forgiven even if the administration hadn’t made any changes to the program, but not all of it. In the future, these burdens on the taxpayer can be reduced by rolling back some of the administrative changes, but eliminating the program entirely would require legislation.

Borrower Defense to Repayment (existing and extended plan—still active, though recent changes are paused during a court case)

When a college engages in fraud or severely misleads students, borrowers can have their debt forgiven under Borrower Defense to Repayment. This is reasonable, as victims of fraud should have some recourse. It is also extremely rare, since a college would not just need to dupe a student but would also need to fool a state, an accreditor, and the US Department of Education, as all three are required to sign off on the legitimacy of a college before its students can take out student loans. As the House Committee on Education and the Workforce noted, “for the first 20 years of the rule, there were 59 claims.”

However, the federal government can claw back debt forgiven from the responsible college. This makes borrower defense to repayment an incredibly powerful tool for progressives in their war on for-profit colleges. If a for-profit college can be declared to have substantially misled students, they can be ruined financially by the clawbacks. Indeed, new regulations from the Biden administration would make it much easier to conclude a college engaged in misconduct. As the White House gloated, “Less than $600 million in debt relief had been approved through borrower defense, closed school discharges, and related court settlements from all prior administrations combined, compared to the $22.5 billion approved under the Biden-Harris Administration alone.” Some of this was done outside the law. For example, $5.8 billion of debt for Corinthian Colleges students was forgiven even if students didn’t submit a borrower defense claim. The administration has promised to forgo clawbacks on much of it (likely in part to avoid giving affected colleges standing to oppose the changes in court).

The good news is that any further forgiveness under the new regulation is on hold due to an injunction from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals (this injunction applies to the closed school discharge plan as well).

Closed School Discharge (existing and extended plan—still active, though recent changes are paused during a court case)

Borrowers whose school closes while they are still enrolled or shortly after they have withdrawn can have their student loans forgiven. The Biden administration imposed new regulations that loosened the requirements and has used this as an excuse to forgive other loans as well. For example, Biden forgave $1.5 billion in debt for students from ITT Technical Institute, even if they didn’t qualify for a discharge. Further forgiveness under the new regulations has been paused by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals until courts determine whether the new regulations are legal. However, the administration can still forgive loans under the previous iteration of these regulations.

Total and Permanent Disability Discharge (existing and extended plan—active)

Borrowers who are unable to work due to a permanent disability can have their loans forgiven. Historically this was very rare. And to protect against fraud, the income of borrowers who had their debt forgiven was monitored to ensure that they really couldn’t work. The Biden administration both expanded eligibility and dropped fraud-detection efforts. In particular, in 2021, regulations were introduced that “provided automatic forgiveness for borrowers who were identified as eligible for a total and permanent disability discharge through a data match with the Social Security Administration. The Department had been using such a match for years to identify eligible borrowers but required them to opt in to receive relief.” Switching to the opt-out model dramatically increased the number of borrowers receiving forgiveness. As a result of these changes, forgiveness under total and permanent disability discharge to spike from negligible amounts to $14.1 billion for 548,000 borrowers.

Waiving Interest

Another method the Biden administration is using to forgive loans is to waive interest. This plan is somewhat unique in that it is usually a component of another forgiveness plan, but the goal and methods are unique enough to warrant its own category.

Waiving interest has been implemented primarily through three mechanisms. The first was the student loan payment pause, which as previously noted waived interest for three and a half years. The second were regulations that took effect in July 2023 that “ceased capitalizing interest in all situations where it is not required by statute (87 FR 65904). This includes when a borrower enters repayment, exits a forbearance, leaves any IDR plan besides Income-Based Repayment (IBR), and enters default.” And the third is the SAVE repayment plan, which waives any unpaid interest.

Conclusion

In sum, Biden’s has been the most aggressive presidential administration in history regarding student loan forgiveness. Despite many setbacks, the administration has canceled a massive amount of debt ($169 billion and counting), with most of the burden on taxpayers still to come from future repayments that will no longer be made. And while many of its attempts to forgive student loans have been stymied, there are still many active plans in play, with more on the horizon.

https://www.cato.org/blog/state-student-loan-forgiveness-august-2024


Body-by-Guinness

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2790
    • View Profile
A Tale of the Toll so Far
« Reply #1925 on: August 09, 2024, 08:28:47 AM »
Having these likely coordinated, immoral, and illegal to impugn and eliminate Trump laid out end to end is not only infuriating, but also full well demonstrates the depths to which the Deep State will stoop in pursing its reprehensible ends:

Watergate(s) on Steroids
A 50th anniversary shows Democrats now get away with anything
AUG 09, 2024

50 years and one day ago, Richard Nixon resigned as president less than two years after being the first man to sweep 49 of the 50 states in his landslide to re-election. Washington forced out of office a man who had received more than 60% of the votes.

He left to the cries of no man is above the law, and the coverup is worse than the crime. Both are untrue in the World of DC where a government too big and too powerful has been a magnet for crooks and traitors.

The crime in Watergate was the press, the deep state and Judge Sirica conspired to make a third-rate burglary a presidential scandal. I wrote about it on Monday, but the truth seldom makes it to the mainstream.

50 years after Nixon’s resignation, Democrats have learned what they can get away with Watergate on Steroids over and over again. Under Obama, they spun their powers of the deep state into overdrive. As Chuck Schumer bragged days before Trump took office, “Let me tell you, you take on the intelligence community, they have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.”

The deep state and Democrats already were getting back at him.

Spying. NYT greeted Trump’s inauguration in 2017 with a front-page story headlined, “Wiretapped data used in inquiry of Trump aides.” That was false. His phone was not tapped. His entire penthouse was as the FBI listened in on every conversation he had, not just his phones. Bernstein defended this.

The FBI used the FISA law, designed to spy on terrorists, to gain permission to stake Trump out. Incredibly, the court turned the request down — making it only the 12th request out of nearly 34,000 requests to be denied.

Days later, Russian pop star, Emin Agalarov, who just happens to be a son of Aras Agalarov, a Russian oligarch, just happened to arrange a meeting with Trump officials at Trump Tower, which led to new FISA requests that were approved.

It was a setup, plain and simple.

Fake scandal. To rationalize the spying and election interference by intelligence agencies, Democrats hired Fusion GPS to concoct the Russian Hoax. This was illegal and six years after the election, the bureaucracy finally fined Hillary. She was not charged in New York state, where she lives, with 34 felony counts.

Five years after breaking the story, CNN admitted in its story on the fine, “The dossier was compiled by retired British spy Christopher Steele. It contained unverified and salacious allegations about Donald Trump, including claims that his campaign colluded with the Kremlin to win the 2016 election. Trump’s campaign had numerous contacts with Russian agents, and embraced Russian help, but no one was ever formally accused of conspiring with Russia.”

Insurrection. The Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post bragged early in 2017, “Resistance from within: Federal workers push back against Trump.”

The story said, “Less than two weeks into Trump’s administration, federal workers are in regular consultation with recently departed Obama-era political appointees about what they can do to push back against the new president’s initiatives. Some federal employees have set up social media accounts to anonymously leak word of changes that Trump appointees are trying to make.”

This was immoral, unprecedented and unconstitutional. The press acted like not graciously accepting defeat was a good thing.

FBI harassment. Agents had a friendly conversation with General Michael Flynn and later charged him with felony lying to the FBI. I don’t see how this law passes constitutional muster and the Fifth Amendment.

The FBI then leaned on Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who recused himself from Russiagate, allowing the appointment of an unconstitutional special counsel named Bob Mueller who (dramatic pause) was the FBI director (another dramatic pause) on 9/11.

Apparently the intelligence community has six ways till Sunday to get back at its critics but cannot stop 19 hijackers. Why Bush kept Mueller and CIA Director George J. Tenet on after the deaths of nearly 3,000 Americans is beyond me.

I will note that the first thing the government did in the wake of 9/11 was to create a new bureaucracy. Never let a serious crisis go to waste.

Jailing opponents. The FBI investigated dozens of Trump supporters. The Department of Justice bragged, “The guilty plea former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort entered Friday marks a milestone in the Department of Justice’s efforts to enforce the Foreign Agents Registration Act more vigorously.”

The efforts ended when it came to charging Tony Podesta, the brother of Hillary’s campaign chairman.

Raids. CNN bragged, “The rare, dramatic video from CNN Friday capturing the early morning FBI raid of longtime Donald Trump confidante Roger Stone’s Florida home was the product of good instincts, some key clues, more than a year of observing comings at the DC federal courthouse and the special counsel’s office — and a little luck on the timing.”

Bullshit. The FBI tipped them off about SWAT-ing him in the wee hours of the morning.

Ignoring Democrat lawbreaking. In July 2016, FBI Director Jimmy Comey announced he had enough evidence to indict Hillary for national security violations — but he refused to. While no man us above the law, Hillary is a woman.

But wait. There’s more. The FBI verified the veracity of Hunter’s laptop which provided a mother lode of evidence in November 2019 — and never pursued those multiple felonies.

Censorship. The federal government paid Twitter to censor Trump and his supporters. Twitter blocked the New York Post from publicizing its true reports on Hunter’s laptop, while allowing other media outlets to lie about it.

Eventually, Twitter banned President Trump permanently.

Jailing protesters. AP reported, “More than 1,230 people have been charged with federal crimes in the [January 6] riot, ranging from misdemeanor offenses like trespassing to felonies like assaulting police officers and seditious conspiracy. Roughly 730 people have pleaded guilty to charges, while another roughly 170 have been convicted of at least one charge at a trial decided by a judge or a jury, according to an Associated Press database.”

That’s more than twice the number of people who were at the Capitol, where protesters previously faced no more than an arrest and a dismissal of the case.

Lawfare. Democrats pursued four criminal prosecutions and a couple of civil lawsuits in an effort to bankrupt Donald Trump. This backfired as this injustice has become a rallying point for him.

Many of his supporters face prosecution. This bankrupted Rudy Giuliani. At the same time, Democrats have tried to disbar Trump’s lawyers.

Donald Trump has bent but he has not been broken.

There was only one tool left for Democrats.

Assassination. The Secret Service did nothing to stop a sniper in Butler, Pennsylvania, from coming within an inch of killing President Trump. Social media censored the photo of Trump rising from the attack with his fist in the air and yelling, “Fight, fight, fight.”

The nomination of Looney Tunes Tim Walz, the mindless and gutless governor of Minnesota for vice president, seems to be a white flag.

As Sean Trende noted, “If Minnesota — a state the GOP has not won in a presidential election since 1972 — is in play, the election is over. Might he have crossover appeal in Wisconsin? Maybe some, but the track record of vice-presidential picks trying to deliver states beyond where they reside is not terribly impressive. Frankly, Walz’s gubernatorial campaigns in Minnesota weren’t particularly strong either, and by 2022 his support had mostly dried up outside of urban areas (which in Minnesota is enough to win).”

Or maybe putting an out-and-out commie on the ticket is a sign that the fix is in.

Nixon resigned because he had the decency not to put the nation through an impeachment.

Democrats and their deep state have no such decency.

https://donsurber.substack.com/p/watergates-on-steroids?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email&triedRedirect=true

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile
DOJ case against DOJ
« Reply #1926 on: August 10, 2024, 05:10:01 AM »
Doubling up BBG's post here to facilitate ease of finding it down the road:

… and themselves:

The Justice Department Makes The Case Against Hunter Biden . . . and Itself in California

 Special Counsel David Weiss appears to have finally made the long-awaited case exposing years of concealment and political corruption. No, it is not the case against Hunter Biden. The allegations of tax fraud in California are obvious and unavoidable. Weiss just made the case against the Justice Department and himself in protecting Hunter Biden from the most damaging charges of being an unregistered foreign agent. In a new filing, Weiss released evidence on Hunter seeking money to advance the interests of a Romanian on United States policy.

I have previously testified on the Foreign Agents Registration Act and have previously written about the disturbing disconnect in the treatment of the President’s son as opposed to figures like Paul Manafort.

The charge was always one of the greatest fears of the White House. If Hunter Biden was a foreign agent, it would magnify the influence peddling scandal and further link his conduct to work of his father as vice president and later president.

What was previously known about millions received from China, Russia, and other countries made such a charge obvious. In the past, the Justice Department has used the charge early and often in high-profile cases to pressure defendants and force cooperation or plea agreements. During the Trump Administration, an official could not go to Epcot without drawing a FARA charge from DOJ.

This charge has been a favorite of the DOJ before the President’s son was implicated in a massive influence peddling scheme with foreign figures.

Here is the definition used in such cases:

A “foreign agent” is defined as “(1) any person who acts as an agent, representative, employee, or servant, or any person who acts in any other capacity at the order, request, or under the direction or control, of a foreign principal or of a person any of whose activities are directly or indirectly supervised, directed, controlled, financed, or subsidized in whole or in major part by a foreign principal, and who directly or through any other person— (i) engages within the United States in political activities for or in the interests of such foreign principal; (ii) acts within the United States as a public relations counsel, publicity agent, information-service employee or political consultant for or in the interests of such foreign principal; (iii) within the United States solicits, collects, disburses, or dispenses contributions, loans, money, or other things of value for or in the interest of such foreign principal; or (iv) within the United States represents the interests of such foreign principal before any agency or official of the Government of the United States; and (2) any person who agrees, consents, assumes or purports to act as, or who is or holds himself out to be, whether or not pursuant to contractual relationship, an agent of a foreign principal as defined in clause (1) of this subsection.”

For years, I have expressed alarm at the special treatment afforded to Hunter Biden on the charges.  Many of us have also criticized Weiss for allowing the most serious tax charges to expire despite being able to extend the statute of limitations. He has yet to offer a compelling reason why prosecutors would ever allow viable felony charges to expire when they could have extended that period.

Now, Biden is seeking to avoid conviction under the tax charges in California. He is repeating the claims that failed in his recent gun violation. He is claiming that he was an addict and not responsible for his criminal conduct, even though he was flying around the world collecting millions from foreign sources.

To rebut that claim, Weiss’ team said they plan to introduce evidence showing his sophisticated scheme to tap foreign sources interested in influencing the government and federal policy.

In the filing below, Weiss opposes the Biden team effort to exclude the evidence of his working for the Romanians. Senior assistant special counsel Derek Hines writes in the filing that “[t]he evidence of what the defendant agreed to do and did do for [the businessman] demonstrates the defendant’s state of mind and intent during the relevant tax years charged in the indictment. It is also evidence that the defendant’s actions do not reflect someone with a diminished capacity, given that he agreed to attempt to influence U.S. public policy and receive millions of dollars pursuant to an oral agreement.”

That sounds a lot like seeking the work of a foreign agent. Here is the language from FARA:

“The first category of evidence the defendant seeks to exclude is any “reference to allegations that Mr. Biden (1) acted on behalf of a foreign principal to influence U.S. policy and public opinion . . .” Motion at 3 (emphasis added). The government does not intend to reference allegations at trial. Rather, the government will introduce the evidence described above, including that the defendant and Business Associate 1 received compensation from a foreign principal who was attempting to influence U.S. policy and public opinion and cause the United States to investigate the Romanian investigation of G.P in Romania.” (emphasis added)
It is a curious argument. It is akin to saying that we know that he stole the car because he used it in the kidnapping. It leaves most people wondering why you did not charge on the kidnapping crime.

The fact is that this is only one of an array of such contracts that have been detailed by the House Oversight Committee and other House committees. The other foreign dealings reportedly involved Hunter reaching out to government officials while his father was vice president. That includes the controversy over Joe Biden’s sudden decision to issue an ultimatum to the Ukrainian government.

In a 2018 interview at the Council on Foreign Relations, Biden bragged that he unilaterally withheld a billion dollars in US aid from the Ukrainians to force them to fire prosecutor general Viktor Shokin.

The Ukrainians balked, but Biden gave them an ultimatum: “I looked at them and said, ‘I’m leaving in six hours. If the prosecutor is not fired, you’re not getting the money.’ Well, son of a bitch. He got fired.”

However, a State Department memo is shedding disturbing light on that account and shredding aspects of Biden’s justification for the action. It directly contradicts Biden’s insistence that he took this extraordinary stand because there was little hope for the anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine if Shokin remained prosecutor.

The Oct. 1, 2015, memo summarizes the recommendation of the Interagency Policy Committee that was handling the anti-corruption efforts in Ukraine: “Ukraine has made sufficient progress on its reform agenda to justify a third guarantee.” One senior official even complimented Shokin on his progress in fighting corruption. So Biden was told to deliver on the federal aid but elected to unilaterally demand Shokin be fired.

In testimony from Devon Archer, a business associate of Hunter Biden, we learned that Burisma executives made the removal of Shokin a top priority and raised it with Hunter. He described how the need to neutralize Shokin was raised with Hunter and how “a call to Washington” was made in response. While Archer also said that “the narrative spun to me was that Shokin was under control,” he and others also heard concerns over Shokin and the risks of the investigation.

Other transactions directly requested intervention on matters being addressed by the Obama-Biden Administration.

So, now, the Justice Department is citing some of these dealings to show a conscious and premeditated effort to shake down foreigners to influence U.S. policy. Weiss now maintains that “The defendant did receive compensation from a foreign principal to attempt to influence U.S. policy and public opinion, as alleged in the indictment, and this evidence is relevant.”

They have made more than the case against Hunter Biden. They have made a conclusive and overwhelming case against themselves in slow walking and minimizing charges against the President’s son.

Here is the filing: gov.uscourts.cacd.907805.181.0

https://jonathanturley.org/2024/08/08/the-justice-department-makes-the-case-against-hunter-biden-and-itself-in-california/


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18977
    • View Profile
Eli Lake, More evidence of 2 systems of justice
« Reply #1928 on: August 16, 2024, 05:48:54 AM »
https://www.thefp.com/p/we-know-hunter-biden-was-lobbying

FARA, foreign agent registration act, they jailed Trump players for it and look away on Hunter.

Bannon in jail for not testifying in Congress.  Eric Holder promoted.

How blatant does it have to be to offend left voters.  No limit?

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 71210
    • View Profile