Saturday, September 21, 2019

U.S. Supreme Court Schedules NRA-Supported Second Amendment Case for Argument



USA – -(Ammoland.com)- In January, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear a Second Amendment challenge to a gun control law for the first time in nearly 10 years.

The case arose from a New York City regulation that banned city residents with “premises” handgun licenses from taking their own legally-owned firearms outside Gotham for lawful purposes. The city defended the law all the way to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, insisting it was essential to public safety. But ever since the Supreme Court agreed to hear the appeal of that decision, city and state officials in New York have been running scared, desperately maneuvering to convince the justices to dismiss it.

Now, it seems, their reckoning may be nigh, as the high court has scheduled the case for argument on Dec. 2.

The lawsuit, New York State Rifle & Pistol Assoc., Inc. v. City of New York, offers a revealing look into the mindset of gun control extremists, and in particular, their refusal to acknowledge the Supreme Court’s precedents that recognize the right to keep and bear arms as a fundamental, individual liberty.

Indeed, over a decade after the Supreme Court made clear that handguns are a protected Second Amendment “arm” and cannot be banned, New York State still generally prohibits the mere possession of pistols and revolvers. State residents, however, may qualify for an “exception” to this ban by obtaining a license issued by the locality in which they reside. The difficulty of obtaining a license depends on where in the state a person lives.

New York City, to no one’s surprise, is the most onerous place to get a handgun license. For the “average” person (that is, for someone who is not well-connected to city officialdom or rich and famous) the only feasible choice is a “premises license.” That license allows a person to keep a handgun in his or her home or place of business. Even then, the process takes many months, multiple trips to police headquarters, and hundreds of dollars in mandatory fees. Licensing officials also have broad discretion to deny licenses, even when the applicant has no criminal convictions.

Until this court case arose, premises licensees could only transport their firearms outside their homes for narrowly circumscribed purposes, and only then, if the firearm were unloaded and in a locked container and separated from any ammunition. Licensees could visit a shooting range within the city itself, for example, but they could not leave the city with their own guns, even for lawful purposes like firearm training or competition or to take the gun to a second residence elsewhere in the state.

City officials tried to justify these restrictions by claiming they could not keep tabs on licensees who left New York City, although they had no evidence the licensees were causing problems with their handguns beyond city limits. The thinking seemed to be that unless New York City bureaucrats somehow monitored and documented every place licensees went with a handgun and what they did with it, the licensees must be doing something bad.

Courts in New York (including federal courts), do not like the Second Amendment, which emboldens the state’s anti-gun officials to pass ridiculous, overreaching, and punitive gun control laws like New York City’s travel ban. Thus, the ban survived judicial scrutiny all the way to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.

But the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly made clear that the Second Amendment protects a fundamental, individual right to keep and bear arms – including handguns – for lawful purposes, particularly self-defense. Nevertheless, the court has since 2010 declined to hear any Second Amendment cases challenging gun control laws. In the interim, however, President Trump has appointed two new justices to the court – Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh – with strong records of taking the Second Amendment seriously.

And so it was in January that when the plaintiffs in the New York City case asked the court to review the Second Circuit’s decision upholding New York City’s travel ban, the court agreed.

New York City initially reacted with defiance, but as the reality began to sink in that they would finally have to justify their laws against serious judicial scrutiny, they began to furiously backpedal. First, the city amended its regulations to allow the plaintiffs to take their handguns to ranges and residences outside city limits. Then state officials got into the act, passing a law to underscore that handgun licensees could transport their licensed handguns for certain permissible purposes. The city then asked the court to dismiss the case, claiming they had given the plaintiffs everything they wanted.

The plaintiffs, however, urged the court to go forward, noting that the recent laws could always be changed and that New York City handgun licensees still remained subject to the anti-gun whims of city officials. Only a clear Second Amendment ruling could protect their rights in the long term.
The court responded by scheduling a hearing in October on the question of whether the case should go forward.

In the meantime, however, five anti-gun U.S. senators stuck their noses into the matter by submitting a “friend of the court” brief in August authored by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI). More an unhinged political rant than a legal argument, the brief essentially accused the court of unprofessional political bias, insisted that it not hear the case, and warned that the court might need to be “restructured” to be more favorable to Democrats.

Perhaps it is a merely a coincidence that it took the court just over a month since that brief was filed to schedule a case that had been pending since January.

Nevertheless, it is not a forgone conclusion that the court will even hear the case in December, much less that it will issue a sweeping ruling on the right to keep and bear arms that will finally bring Second Amendment deniers like New York City to heel. The case could still end at the October procedural hearing without being decided on the merits.

Will the Supreme Court hear the case in December en route to a sweeping ruling on arms? It remains unclear. What is clear is the need for a lawful ruling that finally brings Second Amendment deniers like New York City to heel.

 https://www.ammoland.com/2019/09/u-s-supreme-court-schedules-nra-supported-second-amendment-case-for-argument/#axzz60A8I40SR

 Knife Rights' NYC Gravity Knife Case Appeal Headed To U.S. Supreme Court

Corrupt Obama Ambassador Refused Visas to Ukranian Officials Wanting to Expose Obama Administration Misconduct



U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovich, who was appointed by Barack Obama, is a Trump hater who blocked Ukrainian officials from coming to the United States in order to turn over evidence of what they believe to be crimes committed within the Obama administration. A Clinton surrogate made a trip to the Ukraine in 2016 in order to get dirt on Donald Trump or members of his campaign. Shortly thereafter, they released false information implicating Paul Manafort in crimes.

We also know that shortly after visiting Ukraine with his son Hunter, Joe Biden’s son got a big contract with Ukraine. It’s also a fact Biden himself that he got a prosecutor fired who was investigating his son. He now denies that he knew the prosecutor was investigating Hunter. If that is true, why did he use a 1 billion dollar loan package to get him fired?

U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovich (pictured) was a Trump-hater. She was appointed by Obama as ambassador to Ukraine in 2016.

She was US ambassador to Ukraine during the 2016 election when the Ukrainian government was colluding with the DNC and Hillary Campaign to undermine the US presidential election.

Starting in 2018 Yovanovich denied Ukrainian officials visas to enter the United States to hand over evidence of Obama administration misconduct to Trump administration officials.

US Ambassador Yovanovich, an Obama appointee, was removed from her post in Ukraine early in May 2019.
John Solomon at The Hill reported:
According to interviews with more than a dozen Ukrainian and U.S. officials, Ukraine’s government under recently departed President Petro Poroshenko and, now, Zelensky has been trying since summer 2018 to hand over evidence about the conduct of Americans they believe might be involved in violations of U.S. law during the Obama years.
The Ukrainians say their efforts to get their allegations to U.S. authorities were thwarted first by the U.S. embassy in Kiev, which failed to issue timely visas allowing them to visit America. 

The Whistleblower May Not Be A Whistleblower At All

In plain language, a spy who spied on the president does not have a legitimate whistleblower complaint against that president under the law. 


The latest media mass hysteria over a whistleblower’s complaint that, according to FoxNews.com “reportedly involved allegations President Trump made a troubling and unspecified ‘promise’ to a foreign leader,” is based on precious little information.  That has not stopped journalists from convicting Trump in the court of public opinion and predicting his imminent demise.

Who exactly is this unidentified “whistleblower”?  What is the specific nature of his or her “urgent concern” complaint against the president?  Does this complaint really qualify under the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act (ICWPA)?  These are just a few of the most fundamental questions that remain largely unknown.

Despite the paucity of facts, some reasonable observations and conclusions can be drawn:

1.     It appears that an American spy in one of our intelligence agencies may have been spying on our own president.  The complaint suggests that this intel agent was secretly listening in on Trump’s conversation with a foreign leader.  Was this person officially asked to listen to the conversation or was he or she secretly listening in?  We don’t know.

2.     This agent, who is an unelected and inferior federal employee in the government hierarchy, apparently believes that it is his/her job to second-guess the motivation behind the words of the elected president, who is the most superior officer in the U.S. government.

3.     Article II of the Constitution gives the president sweeping power to conduct foreign affairs, negotiate with leaders of other nations, make demands or offer promises.  The Constitution does not grant the power of review, approval or disapproval to spies or other unelected officials in the executive branch.

4.     The ICWPA law defines the parameters of an “urgent concern” complaint as an abuse or violation of law “relating to the funding, administration, or operations of an intelligence activity involving classified information, but does not include differences of opinions concerning public policy matters.”  The president’s conversation with a foreign leader does not seem to fall under this whistleblower definition.

5.     It appears the acting Director of National Intelligence (DNI) agrees with this assessment.  His agency’s general counsel wrote a letter stating the complaint did not meet the ICWPA definition because it involved conduct “from someone outside the intel community and did not relate to intelligence activity”, according to a report by Fox News.  This is why the DNI refused to forward the complaint to congress.
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To put this in plain language, a spy who spied on the president does not have a legitimate whistleblower complaint against that president under the law…
To put this in plain language, a spy who allegedly spied on the president does not have a legitimate whistleblower complaint against that president under the law.  The ICWPA is a mechanism to report alleged misconduct by members within the intelligence community, of which the president is not.  Yes, the alphabet soup of intel agencies ultimately report to the president, but that does not make Trump a member of that community and subject to its rules of conduct.

So, it turns out that the “whistleblower” may not be a whistleblower at all.  But you will not hear that from the mainstream media.  They are too busy lighting their own hair on fire.

Missing piece to the Ukraine puzzle:

State Department asked Rudy Giuliani



When I was a young journalist decades ago, training to cover Washington, one of my mentors offered sage advice: When it comes to U.S. intelligence and diplomacy, things often aren’t what they first seem.

Those words echo in my brain today, as much as they did that first day. And following the news recently, I realize they are just as relevant today with hysteria regarding presidential lawyer Rudy Giuliani’s contacts with Ukraine’s government.

The coverage suggests Giuliani reached out to new Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s team this summer solely because he wanted to get dirt on possible Trump 2020 challenger Joe Biden and his son Hunter’s business dealings in that country. 

Politics or law could have been part of Giuliani’s motive, and neither would be illegal. 
But there is a missing part of the story that the American public needs in order to assess what really happened: Giuliani’s contact with Zelensky adviser and attorney Andrei Yermak this summer was encouraged and facilitated by the U.S. State Department.
Giuliani didn’t initiate it. A senior U.S. diplomat contacted him in July and asked for permission to connect Yermak with him. 

Then, Giuliani met in early August with Yermak on neutral ground — in Spain — before reporting back to State everything that occurred at the meeting.

That debriefing occurred Aug. 11 by phone with two senior U.S. diplomats, one with responsibility for Ukraine and the other with responsibility for the European Union, according to electronic communications records I reviewed and interviews I conducted.
When asked on Friday, Giuliani confirmed to me that the State Department asked him to take the Yermak meeting and that he did, in fact, apprise U.S. officials every step of the way.

“I didn’t even know who he (Yermak) really was, but they vouched for him. They actually urged me to talk to him because they said he seemed like an honest broker,” Giuliani told me. “I reported back to them (the two State officials) what my conversations with Yermak were about. All of this was done at the request of the State Department.”

So, rather than just a political opposition research operation, Giuliani’s contacts were part of a diplomatic effort by the State Department to grow trust with the new Ukrainian president, Zelensky, a former television comicmaking his first foray into politics and diplomacy.

Why would Ukraine want to talk to Giuliani, and why would the State Department be involved in facilitating it? 

According to interviews with more than a dozen Ukrainian and U.S. officials, Ukraine’s government under recently departed President Petro Poroshenko and, now, Zelensky has been trying since summer 2018 to hand over evidence about the conduct of Americans they believe might be involved in violations of U.S. law during the Obama years.

The Ukrainians say their efforts to get their allegations to U.S. authorities were thwarted first by the U.S. embassy in Kiev, which failed to issue timely visas allowing them to visit America.

Then the Ukrainians hired a former U.S. attorney — not Giuliani — to hand-deliver the evidence of wrongdoing to the U.S. Attorney's Office in New York, but the federal prosecutors never responded. 

The U.S. attorney, a respected American, confirmed the Ukrainians’ story to me. The allegations that Ukrainian officials wanted to pass on involved both efforts by the Democratic National Committee to pressure Ukraine to meddle in the 2016 U.S. election as well as Joe Biden’s son’s effort to make money in Ukraine while the former vice president managed U.S.-Ukraine relations, the retired U.S. attorney told me. 

Eventually, Giuliani in November 2018 got wind of the Ukrainian allegations and started to investigate. 

As President Trump’s highest-profile defense attorney, the former New York City mayor, often known simply as “Rudy,” believed the Ukrainian’s evidence could assist in his defense against the Russia collusion investigation and special counsel Robert Mueller’s final report.

So Giuliani began to check things out in late 2018 and early 2019, but he never set foot in Ukraine. And when Ukrainian officials leaked word that he was considering visiting Ukraine to meet with senior officials to discuss the allegations — and it got politicized in America — Giuliani abruptly called off his trip. He stopped talking to the Ukrainian officials. 

Since that time, my American and foreign sources tell me, Ukrainian officials worried that the slight of Giuliani might hurt their relations with his most famous client, Trump.

And Trump himself added to the dynamic by encouraging Ukraine’s leaders to work with Giuliani to surface the evidence of alleged wrongdoing that has been floating around for more than two years, my sources said.

It is likely that the State Department’s overture to Giuliani in July was designed to allay fears of a diplomatic slight and to assure the nascent Ukrainian administration that everything would be okay between the two allies.  

The belief was that if Zelensky’s top lawyer could talk to Trump’s top lawyer, everything could be patched up, officials explained to me.

Ukrainian officials also are discussing privately the possibility of creating a parliamentary committee to assemble the evidence and formally send it to the U.S. Congress, after failed attempts to get the Department of Justice’s attention, my sources say.

Such machinations are common when two countries are navigating diplomatic challenges and, often, extracurricular activities with private citizens are part of the strategy, even if they are not apparent to the American public.  

So the media stories of Giuliani’s alleged political opposition research in Ukraine, it turns out, are a bit different than first reported. It’s exactly the sort of nuanced, complex news development that my mentor nearly 30 years ago warned about.

And it’s too bad a shallow media effort has failed to capture the whole story and tell it to the American public in its entirety.  

It’s almost as though the lessons of the now debunked Russia-Trump collusion narrative never really sunk in for some reporters. And that is a loss for the American public. The continuing folly was evidenced when much attention was given Friday to Hillary Clinton’s tweet suggesting Trump’s contact with Zelensky amounted to an effort to solicit a foreign power to interfere in the next election. 

That tweet may be provocative but it’s unfair. The contacts were about resolving what happened in the last election — and the last administration. 

And if anyone is to have high moral ground on foreign interference in elections, Clinton can’t be first in line. Her campaign lawyers caused Christopher Steele, a British foreign national desperate to defeat to Trump, to be hired to solicit unverified allegations from Russians about Trump as part of an opposition research project and then went to the FBI to trump up an investigation on Trump. And her party leaders, the Democratic National Committee, asked the Ukraine embassy to also try to dig up dirt on Trump. That’s not a record worthy of throwing the first punch on this story.

The truth is, getting to the bottom of the Ukraine allegations will benefit everyone. If the Bidens and Ukraine did nothing wrong, they should be absolved. If wrongdoing happened, then it should be dealt with. 

The folly of the current coverage is preventing us from getting the answer we deserve. 

AUDIO:

CNN Contributor Exposes The Whole Trump Whistleblower Story As Another Nothing Burger


So, we have some whistleblower within the intelligence community sending some information to the inspector general. The intelligence community inspector general is looking into it, calling the allegations serious. Apparently, Trump spoke to a leader of another country (gasp!). That’s pretty much the crux of the controversy (via Daily Caller):
A whistleblower who works in the intelligence community filed the complaint with the community’s inspector general on Aug. 12 over communication in which Trump made some sort of “promise” to the foreign leader, who has not been identified, according to two former U.S. officials, The Washington Post reported Wednesday.
[…]
Michael Atkinson, the intelligence community’s inspector general, characterized the whistleblower complaint as an “urgent concern,” a threshold that requires the Office of   the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) to submit the complaint to the House and Senate intelligence committees within seven days after it is filed.
[…]
Trump’s conversation with his foreign counterpart alarmed the whistleblower, the former officials said according to WaPo. One said it was a phone conversation. Trump is known to have spoken by phone to Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 31 and met with the presidents of Pakistan and Qatar in the weeks preceding the whistleblower complaint.
So what? The president can talk to whomever he wants and he or she can say whatever he wants to them. Period. It’s also not the intelligence community’s job to snitch on the president. Phil Mudd, who worked for the CIA and FBI, in his capacity as a CNN contributor, absolutely torched this whistleblower for going way beyond his mandate. Mudd said that he wanted to “blow a gasket” over this development. He called this whole episode incredibly unusual and he was someone who did what this whistleblower has done: listen in on presidential communications. When he did this, he was focused on ensuring the security of the nation was solid, not reporting to some anti-Trump Democrats what Trump was saying to the leader of another country (via Washington Examiner): 





Mudd discussed the revelations in the story and his distaste for it during an interview with Chris Cuomo on Wednesday night.
"Boy, I’m about ready to blow a gasket. That is extremely unusual and I listened to presidential phone calls when I was an official at the White House under George W. Bush in 2001. Can you explain to me, a, why it’s the U.S. Intelligence community’s responsibility to listen to the president of the United States speaking to a foreign leader," Mudd began. "Last I checked, Chris, when I served, we were responsible for chasing the Russians, the Chinese, the Iranians, and terrorists. We’re not responsible for reporting to the Congress what the president says."
"So you don’t like that somebody snitched on the president?" Cuomo asked.
Mudd answered, "Correct.
[…]
"Hold on a second," the host pushed back. "What if he did say something to a foreign leader that sounded like a promise that went over the line enough that somebody of good conscience said he’s not supposed to say things like this."
"What the heck is over the line? The president can say what he wants to Putin, he can say what he wants to Kim Jong Un.
It’s surprising as Mudd really isn’t Donald Trump’s biggest defender at all.  

The Case for Impeachment…. of Joe Biden


Joe Biden has been in politics for a long time, on the order of about five DECADES. Since he threw his hat in the ring for the presidency, however, many reports have been brought to light of, shall we say, “questionable” dealings made in which he used his political influence to enrich his coffers. Interestingly enough, some of the most notably egregious instances of wealth transfer into his account and to those of his family, particularly his son, Hunter, happened while he was Vice President.


Charlie Kirk is a young man wise well beyond his years, and he opined an interesting proposal from which I think you’ll get quite a chuckle. Since the Democrats seem to be winding up for a few fastballs across the impeachment home plate, Charlie suggests that perhaps a good way to let some air out of their tires would be to impeach – wait for it – Joe Biden!  

It’s September, and apparently the time of year when a liberal’s fancy turns to thoughts of impeachment.
Democrats want to move forward with impeaching the president, while The New York Times has just launched an effort to do the same with Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
The “new” Kavanaugh story relates to an anecdote published in the book The Education of Brett Kavanaugh: An Investigation, written by Times reporters Robin Pogrebin and Kate Kelly. The Times ran a review of the book over the weekend that focused in part on that accusation and flagrantly drove readers toward the conclusion that Kavanaugh had lied under oath and needed to be impeached.
There was a small problem with the story, however.
Mollie Hemingway, Sr. Editor at The Federalist and author of the bestseller Justice on Trial, The Kavanaugh Confirmation and the Future of the Supreme Court, took to Twitter to point out that the female protagonist from Stier’s story had said she had no recollection of the incident and didn’t know what Stier was talking about. The Gray Lady was forced to issue a correction on Sunday. Nonetheless, Democrat candidates for president all began to call like lemmings for Kavanaugh’s impeachment.
Along with the mass hysteria manufactured by Democrats since 2016, they now are seeking to corrupt the Constitution for the purpose of removing not one, but two high-ranking government officials from office. Impeachment, the ultimate political punishment, is an awful process used only when someone in office has committed provable transgressions of the most serious variety—not to be used as just another weapon among many in the modern political arsenal. Democrat presidential candidates have thrown this time-honored restraint aside in the era of Trump.
Since the Democrats have become so fond of impeachment, let’s use their own logic and see who else might qualify for the “political death penalty.”
His actions certainly meet the criteria necessary to invoke the most serious of all political processes. I move at this time to take up the matter of impeaching Joe Biden for his actions on behalf of his son, Hunter, while serving as Vice President of the United States.
I floated this last Wednesday on Twitter. Mostly tongue-in-cheek at the time, I wrote the following:
Did you know former presidents (and VP’s) can be impeached? If the Democrat House proceeds with impeachment against Trump, the Senate should hold hearings to investigate how Biden’s son received $1 billion from the Chinese days after flying with his father to China. Investigate!
The premise for a post-office impeachment would be to disqualify someone from future service. While it has never been used, there was some discussion about attempting it back in 2001 after Bill Clinton left office and his pardon of Mark Rich had people justifiably enraged.  Perhaps it’s time to give it a try?
Article 1, Section 3 of the United States Constitution reads, in part, as follows:
Judgment in Cases of Impeachment shall not extend further than to removal from Office, and disqualification to hold and enjoy any Office of honor, Trust or Profit under the United States: but the Party convicted shall nevertheless be liable and subject to Indictment, Trial, Judgment and Punishment, according to Law.
Peter Schweizer, President of the Government Accountability Institute, has been instrumental in spearheading the investigative journalism that has exposed Biden’s self-dealing activities while vice president. There are two clear and distinct incidents of corruption, one involving China, the other involving Ukraine.
In 2013, Joe and Hunter flew together on Air Force Two to China for a visit.  Less than two weeks later, Hunter’s investment banking firm, Bohai Harvest RST, inked a $1 billion — later expanded to $1.5 billion — investment deal with a Chinese banking subsidiary. That started a process which led to the Chinese acquisition of the American company Henniges Automotive, specializing in dual technologies with military applications.  The Chinese actually only acquired a controlling 51% interest. Hunter’s company acquired the other 49%.
Three years later in Ukraine, Joe Biden admittedly played an instrumental role in forcing Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin out of his job in 2016 while the general was investigating a company called Burisma Holdings. Hunter Biden was on the Board of Burisma at the time and was being paid a monthly retainer of $50,000.
In 2018, during a speech to the Council on Foreign Relations, Biden bragged about strong-arming the Ukrainian government, recalling himself saying, “’If the prosecutor is not fired, you’re not getting the money.’ Well, son of a bitch, he got fired.”
If this is new to you, no, I’m not making this up.
Unlike the unsupported fables surrounding the actions of Brett Kavanaugh during the last century, the actions of Joe and Hunter Biden are factually documented and took place in just the last administration. This is an impeachment effort people should be able to get behind. At least, it’s an impeachment effort that would likely be deemed justifiable in the eyes of the law.
I know full well that an impeachment of Joe Biden is not going to happen. What I also know is that an impeachment of President Trump and Justice Kavanaugh shouldn’t happen. Will either of them? At this point, the only voice of reason in the Democrat Party when it comes to impeachment is Speaker Pelosi. Those are words I never thought I’d write. It’s also a premise upon which I can never comfortably rest.
Heaven help us if the Democrats manage to defy Sen. Lindsey Graham’s famous confirmation hearing rebuke, and secure the power they so desperately seek.
You’ll have to forgive me for a moment here while I clean my computer screen. I should know better than to take a drink of water and then read something this amusing. So, tell me what you think. Does Charlie’s proposal sound like a good plan? It seems like impeachment proceedings against Joe Biden have the potential to gain some traction if someone was inclined to press for it. Considering that some of the most flagrant abuses happened while he was one click away from the Oval Office less than three years ago, it might be a good plan to have waiting in the wings.

‘Rambo: Last Blood’ Review: Sylvester Stallone Tells a Vital Truth the Media Won’t

Movie review by John Nolte in "Breitbart":

Sylvester Stallone’s Rambo: Last Blood is not only a deeply satisfying and excessively violent good time, it does a moral good by telling a vital truth the corrupt media won’t.

When history looks back at the abominable behavior of the establishment news media in the first two decades of the 21st century, there will of course be condemnations for the breathtaking lies and a full-blown coup attempt against a sitting president. But let’s not forget the media’s unforgivable sins of omission, especially their ongoing cover up of the ravages that come with our wide-open southern border.

The media themselves are not harmed by these ravages. Illegal reporters are not flooding the country to take media jobs,  and those who control the media live in high-rise apartments and will never feel the effects of the crime spawned by an open border.
No, the only people who feel these ravages are the people the media most hate: everyday Americans. Yes, the flood of cheap labor depresses their wages and steals their jobs, but it’s the violence — my God, the violence.

All throughout our country, illegal aliens who should have never gained entry, and many who would have been deported were it not for Democrat-run sanctuary cities, commit the most heinous crimes imaginable, including rape and murder.

What’s more, our open border is also a haven for Mexican drug cartels to traffic their poison and their sex slaves, almost all of them young girls from Mexico, and…
Those young Mexican girls are another group the American media do not care about, a story they dare not tell because it interferes with their desire for the open border that will turn Texas blue. The media’s attitude is, Not gunna let some brown sex slaves get in the way of winning an election!

So here we sit in a country with an open border responsible for atrocity after atrocity after atrocity, and a media that enables those atrocities through a conspiracy of silence.

Enter Sylvester Stallone…

You can laugh at the fact that Last Blood is an 89-minute genre film, the fifth chapter in a nearly 40-year-old franchise starring a geriatric who just turned 73: Oh, this is dumb. It’s just a movie. A disposable throwaway.
Sorry, but that’s not how pop culture works. Movies matter, and Last Blood matters… Untold million will eventually see this, will see The Truth through the most powerful propaganda tool there is: a story — not a news story, not a cable TV segment — but a story-story told with sound and picture.

And Last Blood is a fantastic story, deceptively simple, beautifully structured, thoroughly engrossing, and ridiculously satisfying.

Better still it is a truth told in the most effective way there is, through wish-fulfillment. Rambo is finally doing something about an injustice. It feels good to see something being done, and dammit I want something done!

In the 70s, genre movies like Dirty Harry and Death Wish opened our eyes to a criminal justice system that forgot about the victims. On the political flip-side, movies like The China Syndrome and Silkwood opened our eyes to the dangers of nuclear power. And now, in 2019,  Last Blood courageously seeks to open our eyes about the dangers of an open border.

And I say “courageous,” because in modern-day America it takes moral courage to tell a truth when the telling means you will be  slandered as a racist — something that has already happened to Stallone.
But I would never tell anyone to see a movie because the politics are “correct,” just as I would never pan a movie for “incorrect” politics. A good movie is a good movie, and Last Blood is more than worth your time and money.

When we last met John Rambo a full 11 years ago (man, those 11 years went fast!), he had finally worked through what he needed to work through enough to return home, stateside to the family farm.
And life was good during those 11 years — what you might call rocking-chair-on-a-porch-good.

Rambo still suffers from PTSD, but he “keeps a lid on” with prescription drugs and by fighting a war he hopes will never come. When not training horses, Rambo maintains an endless series of tunnels he dug under his farm, which includes a workshop where he forges  — God bless him — weapons of war.

With the help of his old friend Maria (Adrianna Barraza) he’s also raising 17-year-old Gabrielle (Yvette Monreal), whose good-for-nothing father took off after her mother died of cancer. But now that Gabrielle knows where her dad is, she wants to see him, and it’s just a short drive from the farm in Arizona to Mexico.

Uncle John tries to explain the facts of life to her, what he knows about the “black hearts of men,” but she’s 17, which means she’s smarter than everyone else, so when no one’s looking, off she goes…

The scenes involving Gabrielle’s sex slavery are unbelievably harrowing. Director Adrian Grunberg and co-writer Stallone refuse to turn away from this truth. Our nose is rubbed in it, as it should be.

Naturally, Rambo throws away his pills and goes to war  — “Cops can’t cross the border, and down there they don’t do shit.” — and let’s just say that when John J. Rambo says he’s going to blow your head off and rip your heart out, that ain’t no figure of speech.

Along the way, Rambo receives courageous help from Carmen Delgado (Paz Vega) an “independent journalist,” because Last Blood wants to remind us that establishment journalists want nothing to do with this truth.

We also get a dispiriting look at our ridiculously inept border fencing, which elicited laughter in the audience, and there’s one brief moment where I thought I caught Rambo smiling — and it was glorious.

“I want revenge. I want them to know death is coming.” And so it does, wrapped in truth.

This one’s for the Angel Moms … on both sides of the border.

 https://www.breitbart.com/entertainment/2019/09/20/rambo-last-blood-sylvester-stallone-tells-truth-media-wont/


rambolastblood2


Despite Warnings Media Steps on a Rake With “Whistleblower” Story –

Ukraine Government Initiated Contact – Giuliani Engagement Was Requested by State Dept. Officials 


Well, well, well… the media cannot say President Trump didn’t try to warn them about throwing fake-news rakes in front of their narrative parade – then wondering why they keep getting black-eyes.   Here we go, the details begin to surface.

With more reporting by John Solomon, cited and attributed to on-the-record officials in the State Department and Ukraine, a much more clear picture emerges. In reality, and unfortunately as expected, the fulsome picture is 180° divergent from the media narrative. 

The government of Ukraine under both Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, and now President Volodymyr Zelensky, had been trying to deliverinformation about Obama officials and Democrat party officials (DNC on behalf of Hillary Clinton) requesting the government of Ukraine to interfere in the 2016 election.

Both Poroshenko and Zelensky administrations had tried, unsuccessfully, to get information to current U.S. officials. U.S. State Department officials in Ukraine were refusing to give visa’s to Ukrainian emissaries because they did not want the damaging information sent to the President Trump administration.

Failing to get help from the U.S. State Department, the Ukranians tried a workaround, and hired a respected U.S. lawyer to hand deliver the documentary evidence directly to the U.S. Department of Justice. The contracted American lawyer hand-delivered the information to the U.S. Department of Justice in New York.

However, after delivering the info and not hearing back from the U.S. government, the Ukrainian government, now led by President Zelensky, interpreted the silence as the Trump administration and U.S. government (writ large) being upset about the Ukraine involvement overall. Out of concern for a serious diplomatic breakdown, the Zelensky administration made a personal request to the U.S. State Department for assistance.

The U.S. State Department then reached out to Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani; and asked him if he would meet with Zelensky’s top lawyer, Andrei Yermak.
Rudy Giuliani agreed to act as a diplomatic intermediary and met with Yermak in Spain. After the meeting, Mr. Giuliani then contacted the State Department Officials in charge of Ukraine and Europe and debriefed them on the totality of the subject matter as relayed by Andrei Yermak.

All of this activity preceded the phone call between U.S. President Donald Trump and Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
President Trump and President Zelensky discussed the issues, and this phone call is the one now referenced by the concerned “whistleblower”. The “whistleblower” obviously had no knowledge of the background and why the subject matter discussed in the phone call was framed as it was.

Apparently in the phone call, President Zelensky was explaining what action the Ukranian government had already taken to try and get the information about corrupt U.S. officials, including former VP Joe Biden, to the U.S. government.

It was from this clarification of information that President Trump is reported to have told Zelensky it was OK to proceed with any internal investigation of corruption in Ukraine that might also encompass former U.S. officials.  Yes, that would include Joe Biden.
From this context we can see how the “whistle-blower”, knowing only half of the information – might incorrectly perceive the conversation. Additionally, there’s a possibility the “whistle-blower” may be ideologically aligned with the same government entities that were trying to block the Ukrainian government from delivering the information in the first place.

Beyond the media, pundits and democrat politicians making fools of themselves, four very significant questions/issues become obvious:
  • (#1) who in the U.S. State Department Ukraine embassy was blocking the visas of Ukrainian officials, and why?
  • (#2) Who was the official at the New York office of the DOJ who took custody of the records hand-delivered by the American lawyer working on behalf of Ukraine?…. and
  • (#3) why were those records never turned over to Main Justice?…. Or
  • (#4) if they were turned over to Main Justice, why didn’t they inform the Trump administration they had received them?
At the end of this fake news narrative parade, these will be the questions that remain. 


When They Want Their Vote

Charles Barkley: 

Dems Only Talk To Blacks Every 4 Years 

When They Want Their Vote



Photo by Mitchell Leff/Getty Images 

On Wednesday, speaking on Michael Smerconish’s SiriusXM radio show, NBA Hall Of Famer Charles Barkley, in his inimitably blunt style, said Democrats only talk to black Americans when they want their votes.

As Mediaite reported, Barkley was reminiscing about his work with Alabama Sen. Doug Jones when Jones ran against GOP candidate Roy Moore in a special election in 2017.

Barkley recalled, "I said 'Doug, I’m going to support you. I’m going to try to get every black person in Alabama to vote for you.' And it worked out. We won for the first time in 40 years. But I said, 'We need to start holding you Democrats accountable' because they’ve been taking black people’s votes – and they only talk to black people every four years. All of these politicians only talk to black people every four years because they want their vote."

Barkley added, "Oh, actually, the Republicans don’t, the Democrats do. But when they get elected, they do nothing in the four years in-between."

Barkley also opined on the supposed racism of Trump supporters, saying, "I don’t think everybody who voted for Trump is racist … I think some of them are, but I don’t think everybody who voted for Trump is racist. But this thing started way, way back. When we started shipping all our jobs overseas many, many years ago, it was really going to have a negative effect in the long run; you notice now that all these malls and places are closing because people are doing all their shopping online, that’s going to have a negative effect … that’s not the president’s fault."

After Jones was elected, Barkley, who hails from Alabama, told CNN, "I'm so proud of my state. I love my state. We got some amazing people here. Yeah, we got a bunch of rednecks and a bunch of ignorant people, but we got some amazing people here and they rose up today." Then he added that Democrats should stop taking the black vote for granted, snapping, "It's time for them to get off their ass and start making life better for black folks and people who are poor."

Barkley is well-known for bluntly challenging the status quo; in January 2016, he ripped ESPN for race-baiting in the run-up to the Super Bowl, saying on "The Dan Patrick Show" that ESPN was "framing the narrative" of the game featuring Peyton Manning's Denver Broncos and Cam Newton's Carolina Panthers. He said, "ESPN has already started their crap about black versus white, good versus evil—and I know a lot of those fools over there got radio talk shows … It really annoys the hell out of me. We really just can’t appreciate the greatness of Peyton [Manning]. And, clearly, Cam is on the track to become one of the greatest players ever. You can already see them framing this narrative 'black versus white, good versus evil.'"

He added, "The best way to make talk radio good is to make it racial … I hate bringing up the race card because there’s more important race stuff, but race does have something to do with it. There is a racial component, but I hate talking about that because we, as black people, we got way more important things where race is a factor than something silly like sports."

The Russian Spy Who Wasn’t

Defamation Case Accuses U.S., U.K. Intelligence Of Using Michael Flynn For Spygate Hoax 


Svetlana Lokhova pieced together an apparent coordinated effort that connected U.S. and British intelligence and media outlets to paint her as a Russian spy and take down Flynn — creating a scandal for President Trump. 


Two court filings from the last month suggest U.S. and British intelligence agencies used the Russian-born Svetlana Lokhova and a complicit press to peddle the Russia-collusion narrative and to destroy Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn. But the masterminds behind Spygate made a fatal mistake in casting Lokhova as a Russian operative with designs on Flynn, as her recently filed amended complaint proves.
Lokhova, who left Russia as a teen and became a British citizen in 2002, made headlines in May 2019, when she sued outed informant and “ratf-cker” Stefan Halper. Lokhova’s original complaint claimed Halper, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and MSNBC defamed her.
The defendants “embroiled an innocent woman in a conspiracy to undo the 2016 Presidential election and topple the President of the United States of America,” Lokhova alleged. She continued: “Halper manufactured and published numerous false and defamatory statements,” including that she was “‘a Russian spy’ and a traitor to her country and that Plaintiff had an affair with General Flynn on the orders of Russian intelligence.”
Her initial complaint laid out the details of the alleged conspiracy between Halper and the media outlets. But it was the amended complaint Lokhova filed at the end of August that connected Halper, British intelligence, and the press with former CIA Director John Brennan and a concerted effort to destroy Flynn — which explains why the motion to compel under seal in the Flynn criminal case earlier this month included a demand by defense counsel Sidney Powell for prosecutors to turn over the following:
All payments, notes, memos, correspondence, and instructions by and between the FBI, CIA, or DOD with Stefan Halper—going back as far as 2014—regarding Michael Flynn, Svetlana Lokhova, Mr. Richard Dearlove (of MI6), and Professor Christopher Andrew (connected with MI5) and Halper’s compensation through the DOD Office of Net Assessment as evidenced by the whistleblower complaint of Adam Lovinger, addressed in our brief.
If the year 2014 seems antiquated compared to the Russia-collusion narrative that didn’t hit its stride until mid-to-late 2016, that’s exactly what Lokhova thought too.
Lokhova told The Federalist that after several news organizations contacted her around the same time in March 2017 about a dinner in honor of Flynn that she had attended as a graduate student at Cambridge more than three years prior, she wondered why. “What prompted all of these different journalists to quiz me about this innocuous academic dinner gathering held in February of 2014?” Lokhova asked herself.
As a graduate student at Cambridge, Lokhova often received appeals to attend academic gatherings. Such was the case when, “in January 2014, while working to complete her Ph.D. at Cambridge University, her mentor Professor Christopher M. Andrew (‘Andrew’), and Sir Richard Dearlove (‘Dearlove’), invited Lokhova to attend a group dinner with Flynn,” who then served as President Barack Obama’s director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.
According to her complaint, the dinner served to promote the Cambridge Security Initiative (CSI), “a group chaired by Dearlove,” which sought “to advance education in international security and intelligence issues and to help support graduate students, such as Lokhova, while they were studying at Cambridge.” About 20 people attended that Feb. 28, 2014, academic event, and during the evening, Lokhova was introduced to Flynn and spoke with him briefly.

Svetlana Lokhova Learns of Claims That She Is a Spy

Fast forward three years.
“I had just given birth to my first child, when the calls and emails came, followed by these ridiculous claims that I was a Russian spy and had engaged in an inappropriate relationship with a man I had only briefly met during a university function.” Lokhova explained.
Later, she would seek out answers. “I approached the question of ‘why’ and ‘why now,’ as a historian,” Lokhova, the author of the upcoming book, “The Spy Who Changed History: The Untold Story of How the Soviet Union Stole America’s Top Secrets,” told The Federalist. Through researching newspaper archives, eyewitness accounts, and public records, she pieced together an apparent coordinated effort that connected Halper, Brennan, British intelligence, and media outlets in an effort to paint her as a Russian spy and thereby take down Flynn — and in turn, create a scandal for President Trump.
“I had known Halper at Cambridge,” Lokhova said, “but he was just a boring old academic. I couldn’t see why he was painting me as a Russian spy,” she told The Federalist, “until Halper was exposed as an informant. Then the pieces all fit together.”
Chuck Ross had already identified Halper as a London-based academic with ties to the intelligence community who had a mysterious meeting with Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos, when the New York Times and Washington Post ran stories in May 2018, describing in detail an unnamed CIA and FBI source. While the Times and Post omitted Halper’s name, the specifics provided outed Halper as the informant. Later, we would learn that Halper had contact with not just Papadopoulos, but also Trump adviser Carter Page and campaign chairman Sam Clovis. Now Flynn can be added to the mix.

A Coordinated Effort To Take Down Flynn — and Trump

Lokhova’s amended complaint details the Halper connection and presents a compelling case that he, along with Andrew and Dearlove — both of whom are connected to British intelligence — coordinated with Brennan and multiple media outlets to paint Lokhova as a spy in order to portray Flynn as, at best, compromised and, at worst, a traitor and Russian compatriot.
While the plot had its roots in 2014, when Lokhova briefly met Flynn, it was not executed until Feb. 19, 2017, when Lokhova’s former mentor, Christopher Andrew, penned a piece for the U.K.’s Sunday Times titled “Impulsive General Misha shoots himself in the foot.” Andrew, the former official historian of the British domestic security system, MI5, used every rhetorical device available to craft a tale of intrigue and espionage.
In his short 635-word article, Andrew turned an uneventful academic dinner into the foundation for the false narrative that Flynn — recast as “General Misha” to serve the Russia-conspiracy angle — had a love interest in a then-yet-unidentified Lokhova, described merely as “a bilingual postgraduate, with dual British-Russian nationality.” Andrew would claim in his article that “by evening’s end [Flynn] had invited her to accompany him on his next official visit to Moscow,” a claim Lokhova denies.
The Wall Street Journal picked up the story, and on March 18, 2017, it repeated the gist of Andrew’s article, while now naming Lokhova as the graduate student who supposedly had caught Flynn’s attention. On March 31, 2017, The Guardian furthered the narrative by reporting that “US intelligence officials had serious concerns about Michael Flynn’s appointment as the White House national security adviser because of his history of contacts with Moscow and his encounter with a woman who had trusted access to Russian spy agency records.” The article also identified Lokhova as the woman of concern.
Had things gone according to plan, those articles connecting the Russian-born, supposed-spy Lokhova with Flynn would have bookended former CIA director Brennan’s testimony before the House Intelligence Committee. On March 7, 2017, it was publicly announced that the House Intelligence Committee would hold an open hearing on the Russia probe, beginning on March 20, 2017. Brennan was set to testify on March 28, 2017, but just days before his scheduled appearance, then-Chairman Devin Nunes unexpectedly postponed the hearings.

John Brennan Testifies Before the Intelligence Committee

Two months later, Brennan finally testified before the House Intelligence Committee. He told the members of Congress that he had referred to the FBI information about contacts between Russians and individuals connected to the Trump campaign.
“We were uncovering information and intelligence about interactions and contacts between U.S. persons and the Russians,” Brennan told Rep. Trey Gowdy. “I encountered and am aware of information and intelligence that revealed contacts and interactions between Russian officials and U.S. persons involved in the Trump campaign,” Brennan explained, noting that “as we came upon that, we would share it with the bureau.”
Brennan refused to identify the specific individuals connected with the Trump campaign who also had contacts with Russians. Yet, in her complaint, Lokhova alleged that in that testimony, Brennan, “of course, was expressly referring to Flynn and Lokhova,” and that “the source of Brennan’s ‘intelligence’ was Halper.” Lokhova further alleged that “Brennan passed on Halper’s warning about Flynn and Lokhova to the FBI to be used in the counterintelligence operation against President Trump.”
Lokhova’s complaint provided no support for her claim that Brennan was speaking about Flynn’s interactions with her. But here’s where the timing proves key: Had Brennan appeared before the House Intelligence Committee in March, as planned, his testimony would have followed on the heels of the Wall Street Journal article about Lokhova and Flynn. And Brennan’s testimony mirrored the Wall Street Journal’s angle, so, if the timing had stood, the narrative of a Flynn-Lokhova intrigue and espionage would have stuck.
Specifically, Brennan testified to the House Intelligence Committee that “having been involved in many counterintelligence cases in the past, I know what the Russians try to do. They try to suborn individuals, and they try to get individuals, including U.S. persons, to act on their behalf, either wittingly or unwittingly.” The former CIA director then explained the “tradecraft,” “which is to identify individuals that you think are either very influential or rising stars,” and then “the Russians try to cultivate relationships with [those] individuals.”
“They won’t identify themselves as Russians or as members of the Russian government,” Brennan told the House Committee, but “they will try to develop that personal relationship, and then over time, they will try to get individuals to do things on their behalf. … And these are contacts that might have been totally, totally innocent and benign.”
Brennan then stressed “that Russian intelligence agencies do not hesitate at all to use private companies and Russian persons who are unaffiliated with the Russian government to support their objectives.” And many times, according to Brennan:
They do not even know that the person that they are interacting with is a Russian. And frequently, individuals who go along a treasonous path do not even realize they’re along that path until it gets to be a bit too late. And that’s why, again, my radar goes up early when I see certain things that I know what the Russians are trying to do, and I don’t know whether or not the targets of their efforts are as mindful of the Russian intentions as they need to be.

Brennan Testimony Aligns With Media Reporting

The ”tradecraft” Brennan cataloged for Congress matched the Wall Street Journal’s reporting of Flynn and Lokhova’s meeting. That article began by noting “Flynn interacted with a graduate student with dual Russian and British nationalities” — a “totally innocent and benign” event with a person “unaffiliated with the Russian government.”
Next, repeating the claims in the earlier U.K. Sunday Times hit piece authored by Andrew — who is described as the author of the “authorized history of MI-5, Britain’s domestic security service” — the Journal reported that by the end of the evening, “Flynn asked the woman to travel with him as a translator to Moscow on his next official visit,” and that “the two continued an email exchange on Russian history after the meeting.” Again, this matched Brennan’s summary of the Russian’s modus operandi that “they will try to develop that personal relationship and then over time, they will try to get individuals to do things on their behalf.”
The Journal followed with details of Flynn’s connections with Russian companies: “Flynn was paid tens of thousands of dollars by Russian companies, according to documents obtained by a congressional oversight committee that were released this past week.” And he “was paid $11,250 each by a Russian air cargo company that had been suspended as a vendor to the United Nations following a corruption scandal, and by a Russian cybersecurity company that was then trying to expand its business with the U.S. government.”
These details matched Brennan’s testimony “that Russian intelligence agencies do not hesitate at all to use private companies and Russian persons who are unaffiliated with the Russian government to support their objectives,” and that “frequently, individuals who go along a treasonous path do not even realize they’re along that path until it gets to be a bit too late.”
Then to stress the supposed seriousness of the interaction, the Journal cited “a former senior U.S. official,” who claimed, “Flynn was expected to notify officials about any contacts with foreigners he didn’t know, particularly from an adversary nation such as Russia.” The same unnamed source said there was no record showing that “Flynn had reported his interaction with Ms. Lokhova to security officials.”

The Truth May Come Out Despite the Media’s Best Efforts

Finally, the article disclosed exactly what Brennan later confirmed in his congressional testimony — that “several U.S. intelligence agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, are conducting a wide-ranging counterintelligence probe into any contacts that Trump personnel may have had with Russian officials.”
Had Brennan’s testimony proceeded as planned in March, his refusal to name the Trump campaign officials who had contacts with people connected to Russia would have been meaningless. As it was, the Washington Postreported that Brennan’s testimony that “Russian agencies routinely seek to gather compromising information, or ‘kompromat,’ to coerce treason from U.S. officials who ‘do not even realize they are on that path until it gets too late’ … appeared to be in reference to Flynn.”
But had the former CIA director given this testimony two months earlier, every mainstream media journalist would have seized on the just-reported news of Flynn’s supposed improper and unreported interactions with Lokhova, and the narrative of an affair with a Russian spy would have been cemented in the public’s consciousness.
That is exactly the M.O. intelligence agencies and the mainstream media have used since the launch of Spygate: In advance of official revelations, unnamed officials leak (or lie) to friendly journalists who then frame the story for the maximum effect, whether true or not, with the goal of taking down a president.
Flynn not only served that purpose, but for an intelligence community unhappy with his calls for an audit of their covert operations, destroying him in the process also served as a bonus. But with Lokhova’s civil suit, and Powell now representing Flynn and seeking information concerning Halper, Dearlove, Andrew as related to Flynn, and Lokhova, the truth may yet come out.