Tuesday, December 17, 2019

FISA Court Judge Rips FBI: Your Deceptive Behavior Calls Into Question All the Warrants Against Carter Page

 Article written by Matt Vespa in "Townhall":

Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz torched the Federal Bureau of Investigation for their FISA operation during the 2016 election. Using the debunked, unverified, and wildly inaccurate Trump dossier, the bureau secured a FISA spy warrant against Carter Page, a former Trump official. The dossier was a biased piece of political opposition research that was funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democrats. This document, which was vetted by the FBI, was the cause of the Russian collusion hysteria that dominated headlines for two years. It was a myth. The IG report found that there were multiple instances where the FISA application process underwent alterations, including the omission of key information about Page, like his past work with the CIA. He wasn’t a foreign agent, though that was the allegation. Horowitz said that someone should be fired for these oversights that were systemic.

A judge on this secretive FISA court, which approves these surveillance warrants, torched the FBI as well, calling into question all of the warrants that were sought against Page. She also demanded that a detailed plan to ensure this never happens again is put forward by January 10 (via The Federalist):

The U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court harshly rebuked the FBI in a Tuesday afternoon order, saying FBI misconduct in applying for warrants against Trump campaign official Carter Page calls all past warrant applications into question, and setting a fast-approaching deadline to fix the system.
[…]
“This order,” FISC Judge Rosemary Collyer wrote at the top of the four-page document, “responds to reports that personnel of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) provided false information to the National Security Division (NSD) of the Department of Justice, and withheld material information from NSD which was detrimental to the FBI’s case, in connection with four applications to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) for authority to conduct electronic surveillance of a U.S. citizen named Carter W. Page.”
“The frequency with which representations FBI personnel made to the court turned out to be unsupported or contradicted by information in their possession, and with which they withheld information detrimental to their case,” Judge Collyer continued, “calls into question whether information contained in other FBI applications is reliable.”

The errors in the dossier could’ve easily been picked up. It would’ve raised red flags. The warrants probably wouldn’t have been approved. But this Russian collusion allegation just had to be looked into, despite it being total bunk. The IG report says there was no bias in these investigations. That’s just simply not believable. Every oversight that was cited ended up hurting the Trump campaign. Every. Single. One. And why wasn’t this dossier vetted prior to obtaining a spay warrant against the campaign official from the presidential campaign of the rival party of the sitting administration? Given the FBI’s behavior that’s been aired out during this cycle exposes could probably give you that answer.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2019/12/17/fisa-court-judges-rips-fbi-n2558176

Image result for cartoons about trump investigation


The New Hogan Heroes? Or Keystone Cops?





I guess we all have seen the
I Know Nothing Defense right?

It seems James Comey knows all about that, when Chris Wallace asked him about the issues in the Horowitz Report, Comey evokes the Sargent Schultz Defense. 


Now we see McCabe evoke the same Defense.

We also see in the Horoqitz Report Brennan was a liar.

How soon can we see Comey, McCabe.Brennan, Clapper and Schiff placed under arrest and prosecuted for Sedition?

Democrats repeat failed history with mad dash to impeach Donald Trump

Article by Jonathan Turley in "The Hill":


“Let them impeach and be damned.” Those words could have easily come from Donald Trump, as the House moves this week to impeach him. They were, however, the words of another president who not only shares some striking similarities to Trump but who went through an impeachment with chilling parallels to the current proceedings. The impeachment of Trump is not just history repeating itself but repeating itself with a vengeance.

The closest of the three prior presidential impeachment cases to the House effort today is the 1868 impeachment of Andrew Johnson. This is certainly not a comparison that Democrats should relish. The Johnson case has long been widely regarded as the very prototype of an abusive impeachment. As in the case of Trump, calls to impeach Johnson began almost as soon as he took office. A southerner who ascended to power after the Civil War as a result of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, Johnson was called the “accidental president” and his legitimacy was never accepted by critics. Representative John Farnsworth of Illinois called Johnson an “ungrateful, despicable, besotted, traitorous man.”

Johnson opposed much of the reconstruction plan Lincoln had for the defeated south and was criticized for fueling racial divisions. He was widely viewed as an alcoholic and racist liar who opposed full citizenship for freed slaves. Ridiculed for not being able to spell, Johnson responded, “It is a damn poor mind that can only think of one way to spell a word.” Sound familiar? The “Radical Republicans” in Congress started to lay a trap a year before impeachment. They were aware that Johnson wanted their ally, War Secretary Edwin Stanton, out of his cabinet, so they then decided to pass an unconstitutional law that made his firing a crime.

To leave no doubt of their intentions, they even defined such a firing as a “high misdemeanor.” It was a trap door crime created for the purposes of impeachment. Undeterred, Johnson fired Stanton anyway. His foes then set upon any member of Congress or commentator who dared question the basis for the impeachment. His leading opponent, Representative Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania demanded of them, “What good did your moderation do you? If you do not kill the beast, it will kill you.”

As with Trump, the Johnson impeachment was a fast and narrow effort. On paper, his was even faster, since Johnson was impeached just days after the approval of an inquiry. But the underlying investigation began more than a year earlier and was actually the fourth such effort. Yet it also was largely based on the single act of firing Stanton. It collapsed in the Senate due to seven courageous Republicans who voted to acquit a president they despised. One of them, Edmund Ross of Kansas, said that voting for Johnson was like looking down into his open grave. Ross then jumped because he felt his oath to the Constitution gave him no alternative.

The Trump impeachment is even weaker than the Johnson impeachment, which had an accepted criminal act as its foundation. This will be the first presidential impeachment to go forward without such a recognized crime but, like the Johnson impeachment, it has a manufactured and artificial construct. The Trump impeachment also marks the fastest impeachment of all time, depending on how you count the days in the Johnson case.

Take the obstruction of Congress article. I have strongly encouraged the House to abandon the arbitrary deadline of impeaching Trump before Christmas and to take a couple more months to build a more complete record and to allow judicial review of the underlying objections of the Trump administration. But Democrats have set a virtual rocket docket schedule and will impeach Trump for not turning over witnesses and documents in that short period even though he is in court challenging congressional demands. Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton both were able to go to court to challenge demands for testimony and documents. The resulting judicial opinions proved critical to the outcome of the cases.

Under the theory of the House, members can set any ridiculously short period and then impeach a president who, like Trump has done, seeks judicial review over claims of executive privileges and immunities. It is another trap door impeachment. Democrats did subpoena documents until October but have not issued any subpoenas for critical witnesses such as John Bolton. They did not hold a vote for an inquiry until the end of October. They set a vote for December to manufacture a time crush.

The same is true with the abuse of power article. I testified that the House had a legitimate reason to investigate this allegation and, if there was a showing of a quid pro quo, could impeach Trump for it. Democrats called highly compelling witnesses who said they believed such a quid pro quo existed, but the record is conflicted. There is no statement of a quid pro quo in the conversations between Trump and the Ukrainians, and White House aides have denied being given such a demand. Trump declared during two direct conversations, with Republican Senator Ron Johnson and Ambassador Gordon Sondland, that there was no quid pro quo.

One can question the veracity of his statement, as he likely knew of the whistleblower at the time of the calls. But there is no direct statement in the record by Trump to the contrary. Democrats and their witnesses have instead insisted that the impeachment can be proven by inferences or presumptions. The problem is that there still are a significant number of witnesses who likely have direct evidence, but the House has refused to go to court to compel their appearance. The House will therefore move forward with an impeachment that seems designed to fail in the Senate, as if that is a better option than taking the time to build a complete case.

With half of the country opposing impeachment, the House is about to approve two articles of impeachment designed to play better among progressive activists than in the Senate. Meanwhile, a lack of tolerance for constitutional objections is growing by the day. Some critics have actually cited Johnson as precedent to show that impeachment can be done on purely political grounds. In other words, the very reason the Johnson impeachment is condemned by history is now being used today as a justification to dispense with standards and definitions of impeachable acts. One commentator has embraced the use of Johnson as precedent with a statement that might make every “Radical Republican” from the 19th century smile, saying, “At least they impeached the motherf----r.”

Indeed, many Democrats seem to be taking away the wrong lesson on impeachment from Johnson himself, who declared, “Whenever you hear a man prating about the Constitution, spot him as a traitor.” This is how history not only repeats itself, but repeats itself with a vengeance.

https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/474887-democrats-repeat-failed-history-with-mad-dash-to-impeach-donald-trump 



After years of delays, NATO receives U.S.-made spy drones

December 17, 2019
By Robin Emmott
SIGONELLA, Italy (Reuters) – NATO will receive its second U.S.-made Global Hawk drone on Thursday and aims to have all five unmanned aircraft of its $1.5 billion surveillance system operational in 2022, alliance officials said on Tuesday.
After years of delays, the drone system, which NATO says will be the world’s most advanced, will give the alliance 24-hour, near-real time surveillance of land and sea beyond its borders and provide greater visibility than satellites.
“It’s been a very, very long road,” said Brigadier General Volker Samanns, a senior manager at the NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) drone system, which was first discussed three decades ago and was scheduled to operate from 2017.
Having resolved contractual disputes over cost with manufacturer Northrup Grumman, the first drone was delivered last month to the Sigonella air base in Italy.
Following Thursday’s delivery of a second drone, three more will come by next summer, Samanns said.
“We are basically creating a small air force,” he told reporters at the air base in Sicily, where NATO showed off the drone, which can fly for up to 30 hours at high altitude in all weather, seeing through clouds and storms to produce detailed maps, photos and data for commanders.
Fifteen NATO allies have funded the acquisition of the aircraft, including Germany, Poland, the United States and Italy, as well as ground stations built by Airbus.

All 29 allies will have access to the intelligence they generate, which could include missile sites in Russia, militant activity in the Middle East or pirates off the coast of Africa.
The drones will be piloted remotely from Sigonella and will fly within NATO airspace, but could be flown more widely in a conflict. Drones are increasingly a feature in modern warfare because of their long flying times and intelligence-gathering.
The delivery of the NATO drones marks a breakthrough for European allies after Germany canceled plans to buy its own Global Hawks due to cost and certification issues, while a Franco-German project for a Eurodrone has been delayed.
They also help underpin Western efforts to remain more technologically advanced than Russia and China, officials said.
Brigadier General Phillip Stewart, a former Global Hawk commander in the United States, said he did not believe Moscow and Beijing had the sophistication of the NATO system.
“This is a quantum leap forward,” Stewart told reporters.
The delivery comes as NATO is spending $1 billion to modernize its 14 AWACS reconnaissance planes, which along with the drones, are the few military assets owned by NATO.
https://www.oann.com/after-years-of-delays-nato-receives-u-s-made-spy-drones/

TDS Proves to be Detrimental to Democrats Future

First we had the Russian Collusion Delusion, after a 22 month investigation and $45 million spent, what did Democrats get?
No proof of collusion with Russia.
Second we had the Ukrainian Quid Pro Quo Delusion where Democrats screamed, Bribery, Shakedown, Treason, after several weeks and probably too many millions of dollars, what did Democrats get?
Democrats vote to impeach for Abuse of Power and Obstruction of Congress!
McConnell in the Senate says he'll kill this dumb action quickly!
Chuckles Schumer cries unfair!
Meanwhile:
U.S. manufacturing output and industrial production rebounded sharply in November, beating economists’ expectations and ending a two-month period of softness.
Manufacturing production rose 1.1 percent in November, more than reversing the upwardly revised seven percent decline in October, the Federal Reserve said Tuesday. Economists had expected a less than 1 percent rebound following the end of the strike by General Motors autoworkers.
Highlighting the role of the strike, which put around 46,000 workers off the job until it ended in late October, production of motor vehicles and parts jumped 12.4 percent. Excluding this, manufacturing production rose 0.3 percent.
Manufacturing of business equipment also showed a strong rebound, rising 1.7 percent. This has been touch-and-go in recent months, falling in three out of the last six months. But November’s recovery is the strongest growth pace of growth since June of 2018, perhaps indicating that business investment is gaining strength and on a stronger footing.
Production of consumer goods jumped 2.1 percent higher, ending a three-month losing streak. That is the largest monthly jump since August of 1998. For reasons not entirely understood, this has become a much more volatile category in the wake of the financial crisis and recession.
BWHAHAHAHA!!!!!!
The news just keeps getting worse for the Democrats.
Remember, Obama wondered what kind of magic wand Trump would use to bring back Manufacturing that was never coming back!
  • Democrats decide to impeach!
  • Trump gets USMCA passed through the House!
  • Trump announces Phase 1 Chins trade deal!
  • Stock Market careens higher!
  • Impeacment Polls continue to drop!
  • Democrat Congressman switches party!
  • Jobs Report shows great gains!
  • Multiple Spending Bills get passed in House!
  • Schumer complains McConnell is not being fair!
  • McConnell laughs at Schumer!
Democrats get more amusing by the day.

Poland may have to leave EU, Supreme Court warns

Poland could have to leave the EU over its judicial reform proposals, the country's Supreme Court has warned.
The proposals would allow judges to be dismissed if they questioned the government's judicial reforms.
Judges say the proposals threaten the primacy of EU law and could be an attempt to gag the judiciary.
Poland has already been referred to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) regarding rules for judges.
Under the proposals put forward by the socially conservative Law and Justice party government, judges can be punished for engaging in "political activity".
Any judge that questioned the legitimacy of judges nominated by the National Council of the Judiciary could be handed a fine or in some cases dismissed.
Politicians will start discussing the proposals on Thursday.
.
The ruling party claims changes to the law are needed to tackle corruption and overhaul the judicial system, which it says is still haunted by the communist era.
However, the EU has accused Law and Justice (PiS) of politicising the judiciary since it came to power in 2015.
The Supreme Court says the party is undermining the principle of the primacy of EU law over national law.
It said in a statement: "Contradictions between Polish and EU law.... will in all likelihood lead to an intervention by EU institutions regarding an infringement of EU treaties, and in the longer run [will lead to] the need to leave the European Union."
It also said that the proposed bill was "evidently" designed to allow President Andrzej Duda to pick a new head of the court before a presidential election which is expected in May.
 https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-50828516#

Time’s Commie Nag..

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own
and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall

TIME's Commie Nag of the Year Can Go Pound Sand

TIME's Commie Nag of the Year Can Go Pound Sand
Source: AP Photo/David Keyton


Clearly Greta Thunberg is being exploited by her cynical puppetmasters, but equally clearly she’s a tiresome, bizarre Marxist scold whose exploitation of the hapless dummies who buy into the climate change hoax is part of what is an increasingly violent plot to undermine capitalism and freedom. Recently, the cretins at TIME, which shockingly still exists in 2019, named her “Person of the Year.” That’s appropriate, since 2019 has been a very annoying year.

In 2029, after the world hasn’t ended but her usefulness has, she’ll be a Jeopardy question and probably shacked up with an unemployed performance artist named Björn in an Oslo suburb. Fun fact: “Greta Thunberg” is Swedish for “Cindy Sheenhan.”

But today, we’re all supposed to fall over ourselves over Pippi Longnagging – at least that’s what our betters command – yet it’s unclear why. Teenagers are notoriously ignorant, and ones spewing recycled Marxism are the worst of all. But the idea is not that this tiresome truant is some visionary thinker. The idea is to leverage her youth and awkwardness to keep you from speaking the indisputable truth that she’s a weird brat who presses for an ideology that butchered 100 million people in the last century. And now, she is hinting she wants to run up that score.

Trump mocked her and a zillion pearls were clutched. How dare you…criticize the Luddite pest who presumes to tell you how to live, leveraging the full benefit of her nearly 17 years of experience to explain to you how stuff should be. How dare you!

Oh, shut-up. Pound sand, you scowling urchin.

The kid is a fanatic, and though that’s no fault of her own – she’s a victim of her pinko exploiters – she is still spewing bloodstained poison. 

Bloodstained poison, really? Isn’t she just a nice Eastern Norwegian who wants a better world with love and hugging? Or is she yet another aspiring fanatic ready to kill for the kreepy kommie climate kult?

The other day, this malignant muppet “told cheering protesters … 'we will make sure we put world leaders against the wall' if they fail to take urgent action on climate change.” Now, maybe her English is bad, or maybe she’s just ignorant, but then again the murder of opponents is the Marxist way. Marxist? St. Greta? Well, let’s take a look at what was carved on the tablets she recently brought down from Mount Socialism:

"Schoolchildren, young people, and adults all over the world will stand together, demanding that our leaders take action, not because we want them to, but because the science demands it," she said. "That action must be powerful and wide-ranging. After all, the climate crisis is not just about the environment. It is a crisis of human rights, of justice, and of political will. Colonial, racist, and patriarchal systems of oppression have created and fueled it. We need to dismantle them all. Our political leaders can no longer shirk their responsibilities."

Wait, “the science demands” that we “dismantle” all our “[c]olonial, racist, and patriarchal systems of oppression?” Now, what science exactly is that? Is it geology? Physics? Phrenology maybe?

How stupid do they think people are? Very. And to judge by the judges at TIME, they’re often right. Maybe Greta never heard of Siberia or Cambodia, but we have. Screw that – if she wants to impose her masters’ Marxist fantasies on us, she’ll need to be packing something deadlier than “How dare you!”

Everyone who isn’t an idiot knows the climate change hoax was never about “science." That’s a hack lie they use to shut you up when you point out that the ice age, floods, and mass polar bear die-offs they are always promising never, ever seem to happen. It’s a deliberate scam that blends leftism, hysterical hyperbole, and outright fraud into a gooey pudding designed to fill the spiritual void in empty-souled western suckers while providing a tool for our global leftist establishment to steal more of our money and freedom.

Quick: name a climate change remedy that does not result in you being less free and/or paying more money. It’s actually remarkable. Every single thing that we absolutely must do right now no time to wait how dare you pause to think how dare you is something leftists always wanted but could never talk people into doing until the threat of weather vengeance started lurking around the corner.

You can’t name any. There aren’t any, because the weird climate cult is not about weather but about separating you from your liberty and loot. And, apparently, your life if you won’t obey.

It’s still unclear why the weather weirdos decided to make the odd Ikea kid into their poster child. Americans aren’t that stupid, electing Obama aside. Now, Europeans are suckers for bizarre totalitarian ideologies – that cesspool of a continent gave the world communism and Nazism, so it’s no surprise that the dummies who didn’t get off der buttenhiemers and sail over to America would swoon over her nonsense. But it’s just another example of how out of touch our own garbage ruling caste is when it thinks her Swedish chef scolding is going to work on Normal Americans.

Hey American person, some vapid punk from Malmö demands you give up your steaks and Ford Explorers.

Oh.” [Consumes a rib-eye and lets his SUV run in the lot outside the restaurant].

Hey, if she and her herring-gnawing comrades want to start playing real life revolutionaries, bring it on. In the USA, these Pol Potheads wouldn’t be the only people doing the shooting. Maybe cowardly euroweenies will obediently jump on the train to the gulag, but our American response to Marxist murder dreams would be measured in calibers.

Now, Greta clearly believes all the silliness she is regurgitating, and she will certainly be sad when we ignore it. And that’s too bad. Her feelz are utterly immaterial. In fact, the sadder she gets, the freer we are.

In a general sense, I hope that Greta someday liberates herself from the clutches of the people exploiting her naïve credulousness in order to take our freedom and dollars. But in a more specific way, I could not care less what Greta thinks or feels. And you shouldn’t either. 

“People Will Be Prosecuted for Crimes Against a Sitting President”

source: sundance at CTH

Decide for yourself why this was needed.  On the eve of Trump’s impeachment the Trusty Planners join with the Tick Tockers on Fox News.  We know Bill Barr will appear on Fox tomorrow to justify his lack of action.   CTH has a pretty good grasp of what’s going on.  Millions of battered conservatives still don’t see it.  Codependent no more.
At a key point in the interview Ms. Bartiromo says:

…”the lies are real, people will be prosecuted, and you are looking at crimes; not only against Carter Page, but against a sitting president”…



How incredibly tragic is it with all the documents and communications that Barr & Durham can see today, that they have not taken action BEFORE the House can brand President Trump with the words “Impeached President” for the rest of eternity.
Amid all the shameful conduct from Washington DC over decades, the purposeful inaction by a lying U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr will forever cement his place in history.

Apparently John Durham’s Renowned Consummate Professionalism Is Now Questionable Simply Because He’s Working on a Case That Could Help Trump



In a new piece at the Washington Post, two reporters quote associate after associate of U.S. Attorney John Durham, currently the lead investigator on the criminal probe looking at the predicate for the Russia collusion investigation, and each in turn cites Durham’s consummate professionalism and dispassionate and non-partisan approach to his work.

That is apparently not enough for the intrepid WaPo reporters however, as the entire thrust of their piece is that despite all this good chatter, Durham might be compromised simply because he’s working on a case that has the probability of helping Donald Trump.

There’s really no other way to read it.
Former assistant U.S. attorney Brian T. Kelly, who worked with Durham on the case, said Durham was a “consummate professional” who would not be swayed by partisan concerns in the Russia matter.
“He’ll call balls and strikes as he sees them,” Kelly said.
Former attorney general Michael Mukasey, who asked Durham in 2008 to investigate the CIA’s destruction of video tapes showing detainee interrogations overseas, said he chose Durham because he was “somebody of just complete integrity and discretion.” He said he found Durham’s recent statement was “unusual,” but not inappropriate.
Despite all this — and there’s more in their report where that came from — they insinuate that Durham, particularly in issuing his statement disagreeing with IG Michael Horowitz’s light-handed assertions involving political bias at the FBI, that the man famous for his professionalism might be working as a stooge for Trump.

At issue, apparently is a rumor that a previous draft of the Horowitz report contained a footnote saying that Durham had confirmed he had no evidence to suggest that the investigation was a setup by Joseph Mifsud. That rumor says the footnote was eventually redacted for the Horowitz report.

It’s important to remember, however, that Horowitz never mentioned it in his hearing. This is coming from people “familiar” with earlier drafts.

The WaPo piece also cites what can only be termed a threat by former Attorney General Eric Holder warning Durham about the fragility of reputation.
Former attorney general Eric Holder, who tapped Durham to expand his examination of the treatment of CIA detainees after his work for Mukasey, wrote in a Washington Post column that he had been “proud to know John for at least a decade,” but was troubled by the prosecutor’s public statement.
“Good reputations are hard-won in the legal profession, but they are fragile; anyone in Durham’s shoes would do well to remember that, in dealing with this administration, many reputations have been irrevocably lost,” Holder wrote.
Same old tricks from the same old crowd. Despite assertions in the WaPo piece that Durham was merely duplicating Horowitz’s work, it bears repeating that Durham can bring criminal charges based on the results of his investigation, something Horowitz could not do.

And, given the general tone of the WaPo op-ed, there’s a pretty good chance his investigation will lead to indictments.

In any event, at the end of the day, something tells me justice is more important to the attorney than reputation.

Ukrainian Oligarch Paid $700,000 To The Husband Of A House Judiciary Committee Democrat



Robert Powell, the husband of Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, D-Fla., reportedly took $700,000 from a Ukrainian oligarch named Igor Kolomoisky. Mucarsel-Powell sits on the House Judiciary Committee, the committee that drafted two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump for his alleged abuse of power with regards to Ukraine.

In 2018, the Daily Beast reported that a number of businesses linked to Kolomoisky hired Powell as an attorney. One of those firms paid Powell at least $700,000 over two years, according to public records.

The Miami Herald reported Powell was working for companies tied to Kolomoisky for 10 years. Powell made most of his money in the two years leading up to his wife’s election in 2018.

Kolomoisky has been accused of contract killings and embezzlement in the past. Yet, in 2018 when Mucarsel-Powell was running for her seat, she did not see her husband’s work as relevant to her campaign.

“Debbie Mucrasel-Powell is running for Congress, not her husband. To imply that Debbie has anything to do with her indirect shareholder of a parent company that once employed her husband is an enormous stretch,” said Michael Hernandez, senior communications advisor for her campaign in 2018.

While Mucrasel-Powell may have convinced her constituents that her husband’s work is unrelated, it is a clear conflict in the current impeachment of Trump. Mucarsel-Powell voted to impeach Trump.


The House has moved to impeach Trump over a July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. When the House initiated impeachment hearings, they were arguing Trump asked for a quid pro quo or potentially bribed the Ukrainian president. No evidence to corroborate those charges has been found, so now the House is charging the president with abuse of power and obstructing Congress in relation to the Ukrainian phone call. 

And yet, no Democrats see a problem with one of their own committee members’ spouses doing business with a Ukrainian ogliarch. There has been no check on whether Mucrasel-Powell is benefitting from her husband’s work with a foreign power that interfered in the 2016 election. 

There is a double standard in Mucrasel-Powell’s ability to impeach the President for his work in Ukraine, simultaneously, allowing her husband to earn money from Kolomoisky, a thug from the same foreign power.

The Impeachment Show Trial

 Article by E.W. Jackson and Jerome Corsi in "The American Thinker":

Representatives Adam Schiff and Jerry Nadler set a very dangerous precedent when they refused to conduct impeachment hearings according to constitutional due process standards. Democrats are so desperate for power that they would overturn the election of a President of the United States based on their biased and partisan interpretation of his telephone conversation with a foreign leader.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was initially reluctant to risk the electoral backlash of impeachment. She finally bowed to far-left pressure, ignoring the President's astounding economic and foreign policy successes. Her worst nightmare is coming true -- rising approval for President Trump and rising disapproval for the Democrat Party and their presidential candidates.

This is because the impeachment process we are witnessing is decidedly un-American. Using secretive, totalitarian-style, one-party interrogations is not due process and is unworthy of a constitutional republic.

Democrats ignored the constitutional standard for impeachment to remove a president:  “Treason, Bribery, or other High Crimes and Misdemeanors.”  No unbiased  adjudicator could conclude that President Trump’s telephone discussion with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky is an impeachable offense. Far from a “high crime,” the President was carrying out his duty to the people of the United States. He was guarding our treasure and protecting our national integrity. Ukraine has been one of the most corrupt nations in the world, and he was right to request an investigation. If taxpayer funded aide was used as leverage to enrich the former vice president’s son, the American people should know.

Instead of thanking the President for his diligence, Democrats in Congress had the temerity to accuse him of committing an “abuse of power.” The Executive Branch of the United States government is separate and co-equal. George Washington University law professor and constitutional scholar Jonathan Turley told the House Judiciary Committee that it would be Congress abusing power if they try to stop the President from exercising his constitutional prerogatives. Schiff, Nader and Pelosi ignored that unbiased counsel.

They have chosen instead to drag the country through an impeachment process while trampling the constitutional and due process rights of a sitting President. If they ignore his rights, why would they respect those of the average citizen?

Due process rules are not reserved to criminal trials alone. They are essentially the same in regulatory and administrative hearings. Those rules reach even to private entities operating under “color of law.” To suggest that a proceeding as grave as a presidential impeachment need not follow the same basic procedural rules of fairness is ludicrous on its face.

Hearsay is excluded from evidence in court proceedings because it is notoriously unreliable. Yet Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George Kent and acting U.S. ambassador to Ukraine William Taylor were called before the House Intelligence Committee with great pomp and ceremony to offer only hearsay. Defendants always have a right to confront their accusers, yet the “whistleblower” remains an anonymous figure.

Adam Schiff went beyond hearsay to outright falsehood. Speaking on the floor of Congress, he reported that President Trump said to President Zelensky, “I want you to dig up dirt on my opponent and lots of it.” The President said nothing of the kind. Schiff later claimed it was a parody.”  This is the same Adam Schiff who said he had incontrovertible evidence that President Trump colluded with Russia. The only conclusion supported by evidence is that Adam Schiff is a pathological liar.

Democrats also violated the principle that the accused has a right to a vigorous defense. The earliest hearings were closed to Republicans. Information from those inquiries was selectively leaked to the press. Depositions were taken in secret. Rep. Andy Biggs, Chairman of the House Freedom Caucus, compared the sessions to Soviet secret hearings. He proposed a resolution on the House floor to condemn and censure Schiff, but of course House Democrats tabled the proposal.

Long gone is the Democratic Party of President John F. Kennedy, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Senators Scoop Jackson and Sam Nunn. It is now a party of hardcore leftists, more aligned with Karl Marx than Thomas Jefferson. They are now completely driven by extreme leftist ideology.  Lacking evidence that President Trump committed any crime or even did anything morally wrong, they recklessly passed articles of impeachment, with no regard to the great damage they are doing to our Republic. The Democratic Party once had statesmen, but it is now the refuge of demagogues.

Their Stalinist impeachment show trial demonstrated gross disrespect for our elections and the peaceful transition of power. This has been nothing less than an attempted coup d’etat, but these de facto communist revolutionaries will face the wrath of the American voter. Tuesday, November 3, 2020 will be a day of reckoning.
 
 

Our Russia Collusion Nightmare: All Hillary's Fault?

 Article by J.B. Shurk in "The American Thinker":

The biggest political scandal in the history of the United States.  Three years of constant lies told by government agents, political operatives, and deceitful news personalities.  Thousands of hours of criminal investigative interviews; thousands of written stories and television segments; thousands of leaks and insinuations and threats.  All to take down the legitimately elected American president, Donald J. Trump.

Now that some light is finally revealing just how rotten this whole nonsense has been from the very beginning, the most maddening aspect of all is the one thing not said nearly enough: every bit of this frame-up job to hang the American president for being a Russian agent and traitor to his nation began as a way to inoculate Hillary Clinton from her largest political vulnerabilities going into the 2016 campaign.

Aside from her questionable health and a lifetime of scandal, Hillary had two sizable liabilities (of her own creation) that threatened her ability to win the general election: (1) her use of the Clinton Foundation as a vehicle for laundering bribes from foreign governments and moneyed interests and (2) her decision to conduct the business of the State Department (as well as to discuss our nation's most guarded secrets) on an unsecured private email server that had been hacked by known and unknown foreign governments and adverse entities.  Peter Schweizer's Clinton Cash did a remarkable job exposing the Clinton Foundation as a spectacular pay-to-play operation that had allowed Hillary to trade the powers of her office for personal aggrandizement (including the sale of 20% of America's uranium to Russia for, among other things, $145 million transferred to her foundation).  And even though the Obama Justice Department was doing its best to minimize the revelation of Hillary's gross breach of national security and slow-walk any repercussions, the American people were discovering that life-and-death secrets had been entrusted to a person with such disregard for our well-being that she stored them on a personal server in a downstairs bathroom.

For a normal person with a modicum of ethical concern, sense of shame, or patriotic duty, these crimes would have been more than sufficient to prompt withdrawal from an election for the country's highest office.  This type of honest self-reflection and private admission of guilt is alien to the Clintons, though, so what would have represented immovable obstacles to anyone else became just another set of political variables that had to be neutralized in her favor.
  
I can just imagine the conversation Hillary had with her most trusted advisers — not the ones with the official titles like Robby Mook and Brian Fallon, whose chief value lay in their expendable nature and the ease with which Hillary could roll them up into any unexpected scandal to be disposed with the trash at a future time of her convenience.  I mean the real group of confidants, the ones who have "the ends justify the means" tattooed on their souls and have gotten away with more crimes than we'll ever know.  If you're Sid Blumenthal or John Podesta or Cheryl Mills or Marc Elias or Lanny Davis and you know where some of the bodies are buried along the spectacular trail of Clinton corruption through the years, then the prospect of a massive pay-to-play scandal or criminal indictment for mishandling top-secret intelligence or engaging wittingly or unwittingly in espionage is just another bump on the long road of progressive relativism and Clinton nihilism.  If Clinton Cash and FBI investigators come knocking, you simply accuse all your political opponents of being the real grifters and foreign agents.

That's exactly what Team Hillary did.  They leveled allegations of criminal bribery at Jeb Bush; they questioned Marco Rubio's loyalty to the United States; but Donald Trump was the prize.  A man who had spent a lifetime in the exotic world of luxury real estate around the globe while mixing it up with all kinds of powerful figures in that often shady world was the ideal mark, and he also happened to be a political novice who the Democrats universally believed would lose in a landslide of historical dimensions for political lore long to come.  When Paul Manafort joined his team just before the kickoff to the general election and brought with him a lifetime of political baggage that included skullduggery around Russia's zone of interest, it must have seemed as if Christmas had come early for the Clinton team.  (Kind of makes you wonder how coincidental this unforced error really was.) 

And so, after a lifetime in the public eye, starring in a popular television show, and rubbing elbows with celebrities and politicians of all stripes, Donald Trump woke up one day to find himself being generally slandered (and libeled) as a Russian spy by the information merchants who control America's airwaves and print media.  That had to have made him laugh, considering that the press had spent most of his foray into politics demeaning him as a greedy capitalist playboy nationalist who selfishly placed America's interests before those of our common world.

Yes, before John Brennan devised a global espionage ring to frame President Trump as a national security risk and enable the FBI to open up counterintelligence investigations into his political associates; before Jim Comey and Andrew McCabe attested to false information with the FISA Court; before Robert Mueller put the screws to General Flynn in order to sink a lifetime defender of America for political purposes; before President Obama initiated changes to security classification that opened up scurrilous investigative records on President-Elect Trump to an exponentially greater number of bureaucrats with partisan motivations; before Susan Rice left an electronic CYA memorandum at 12:15 P.M. on Inauguration Day of 2017 noting that Sally Yates and James Clapper and John Brennan and Joe Biden and Jim Comey had all agreed in the Oval Office with President Obama to continue any investigations "by the book"; before Samantha Power unmasked hundreds of names picked up during the course of electronic surveillance that were deemed to somehow implicate the new president in wrongdoing; even before the Clinton operatives and Fusion GPS and Christopher Steele first started composing the fan fiction now known as "the Dossier" — before all of this and everything else we have been forced to endure for three long years, there was Hillary Clinton, doing what she and her people know best: accusing her political opponent of the very crimes she had committed herself. 

As awful as this orchestrated campaign against President Trump has been, it is absolutely maddening to realize that none of it would have happened had Hillary Clinton not engaged in one of the greatest pay-for-play operations in American history while placing our most guarded secrets (as well as the very lives of our soldiers and civilians) on a silver platter for those governments and adversaries who wish us the most harm in this world.  Three years of Russian hysteria happened only because of the deep corruption of Hillary Clinton.

This scheme of political projection and wicked treachery should go down as a final reminder that America survives today only because President Trump managed to prevail against the nearly insurmountable wave of our government's intelligence agencies, the justice system, media propagandists, and the combined wills of the Democrats and NeverTrump Republicans intending to swamp him
 
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The FBI, Impeachment, and The Question of Motive



Without having committed a crime nor broken any particular rules, an impeachment is underway. All this when the abuses of the FBI in the last election represent a form of interference that far eclipses anything foreign or domestic that has ever occurred in the history of the republic.

News arrived last week that emboldened both the president’s supporters and his opponents. The inspector general’s report on the FBI’s 2016 investigation of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign revealed significant mistakes and irregularities, which, in the words of the Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz, do not “vindicate anybody.” At nearly the same time, the House Judiciary Committee moved to approve articles of impeachment against President Trump.

The articles of impeachment arise from Trump’s July 25 phone call with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky. In the friendly phone call, Trump asked his Ukrainian counterpart to “get to the bottom of” his country’s role in the 2016 election; he also asked Ukraine to look into Hunter Biden, in connection with an aborted investigation of Burisma, a Ukrainian energy company for which the former vice president’s son once worked.

Ukraine fired the prosecutor on the case after it received pressure from Vice President Joe Biden, including a threat to withhold $1 billion in U.S. aid. Bidenbragged about it, in fact. Trump said the whole thing sounded bad to him; President Zelensky agreed; and there was a brief hold on the dispatch of additional military aid to Ukraine that is not mentioned in the call, but cited as improper in the impeachment articles.

In spite of the extensive abuses reported by the inspector general, former FBI director James Comey said the report was a vindication. In his words, “Horowitz’s report found that the investigation was opened and conducted according to the rules, finding no ‘evidence that political bias or improper motivation influenced [the] decision’ to start it or how to run it.”

A vital symmetry between the inspector general’s report on FBI abuses and the Ukraine scandal is that both involve actions that technically may be permitted—investigations or conditions on foreign aid—that assume a different cast depending on the subjective motive.


What Motivated the FBI? And What Motivated Trump?

The threshold for initiating and continuing an FBI investigation is low. It only requires “allegation or information” indicating possible criminal activity or threats to the national security. FISA warrants and the like receive further scrutiny, but they involve a lower threshold for a court-ordered wiretap in criminal cases. Even so, the use of nakedly partisan motives for criminal investigations and intrusive electronic surveillance is against FBI policy and an invasion of protected constitutional rights of free speech and free association.

As for the Ukraine call, there is no obvious standard for what a president can or cannot say in a phone call with a foreign leader, and it is not unusual for our government and foreign counterparts to cooperate on investigations, particularly when the conduct and participants span both countries. More generally, the president has an extremely wide berth in matters of foreign policy. This is why Jimmy Carter was able to give up the Panama Canal, Obama could pursue a military campaign in Libya without congressional authorization, and President Trump has the authority to pull U.S. forces from Syria. Both the FBI’s actions and the president’s actions involve areas in which they each have substantial discretion and authority.

In both cases, there is at least some plausible case to be made for improper motive. In fact, each involves the alleged misuse of government investigatory powers for partisan purposes.

But if those seeking impeachment are so sure that Trump’s motive in asking Ukraine to look into the Biden and Burisma connection was simply to “help his campaign,” how can anyone conceive of the use of FBI surveillance, confidential informants, and dishonest and pretextual use of security briefings against a rival political candidate as not having a partisan motive?

Isn’t the latter far more intrusive, far more egregious, and far more significant an intrusion than asking Ukraine to “look into it” regarding Hunter Biden? Isn’t help for a campaign far more direct and obvious after a candidate has clinched the nomination—Trump’s position in the summer of 2016—than in the case of Joe Biden, who is not yet a nominee and whose wrongdoing occurred during the previous administration, which was not disposed to investigate its own wrongdoing? And isn’t Joe Biden’s application of pressure on Ukraine while his son was earning millions serving on Burisma’s board far more tangible a predicate for some kind of investigation than are some remarks by a low level campaign advisor like George Papadopoulos—the event that began the intrusive investigations of the Trump Campaign and its associates?


When Does Motive Matter?

Generally speaking, motives do not make otherwise proper conduct criminal. The criminal law looks to “mental state” and not motive, per se. In other words, an act is deemed worse and more culpable based on the degree of volition, with gradations of increasing responsibility when an act is negligent, reckless, knowing, or intentional. But intentionally and, even, maliciously doing something one is permitted to do does not make the act criminal, any more than would an intentional act for a noble motive relieve the actor of criminal responsibility.

While we would like to imagine elected leaders are public spirited, we also expect ambition and partisanship, relying more on the separation of powers—including the independence of the courts and juries—than we do the patriotism and honesty among those who may have power to abuse. While merely partisan considerations may be deemed an abuse of power, it is hard to separate ideological considerations, personal political benefit, and other subjective considerations from what the FBI and the Department of Justice must do.

Was it an abuse of power when Obama asked the FBI to examine the Trayvon Martin case, a bone to his black voter base designed solely to shore up his reelection? How about when a wealthy president imposes a tax cut from which he personally benefits or dispatches federal aid to some disaster site in a swing state?

In all these cases, the president is ultimately the executive, his judgment is intermingled with personal interest as an unavoidable part of the job, and how that judgment is employed is not a scientific or even a legal question, but rather a political one, left to the judgment of voters.

The impeachment power is limited to “high crimes and misdemeanors,” not merely bad judgment. The Congress has discretion when interpreting these requirements, but this does not mean it can act purely on the basis of its will. It is bound by oath to those limits, and it must police itself.

The particular inclusion of “bribery” as one of the “high crimes and misdemeanors” permitting impeachments cannot include the great many actions by the president that both benefit the nation, while also benefiting him politically. Otherwise, it would impose no limit at all.

The line between personal and public benefit is always a bit murky, and thus impeachment where personal benefit is considered under the rubric of “bribery” should be limited to those situations where the benefit is purely personal, such as when an actual money bribe changes hands.

By way of example, this standard would likely vindicate Joe Biden’s actions in Ukraine. While he probably should have recused himself from Ukraine matters or cajoled his son into not taking a job with Burisma, if Joe Biden and the Obama Administration really believed the Ukrainian prosecutor was an obstacle to American policy in the region, strong-arming the Ukrainians by withholding aid would not thereby become a high crime or misdemeanor, even if it had the incidental benefit to Biden’s family member. Of course, if his son were secretly funneling money, this would qualify independently as bribery permitting impeachment.

The suggestion that Trump’s Ukraine phone call was simply for the low purpose of benefiting himself is weak sauce. Naturally, there was some personal concern from Trump, as Biden is his self-declared opponent, was in charge of Ukraine policy for the Obama Administration, and Ukraine cooperated with the Democratic National Committee to attempt to defeat Trump. But, like so much of what presidents do, Trump’s personal concerns cannot be neatly separated from legitimate concerns for the public, such as the public interest in uncovering the extent of the Obama administration’s corruption in Ukraine.

One unfortunate aspect of the inspector general’s report is its refusal to speculate about motive, instead citing a lack of “clear documentary” evidence of bias. In other words, the report found something unsurprising and irrelevant: none of the participants wrote or said, “We never would have done this, but for our bias.”

Clear evidence does show that partisan motives infected every aspect of the investigation. After all, the investigation was unusual—unprecedented, in fact. This alone suggestions ideological blinders. Normally, a concern for foreign interference in a campaign would be addressed with a defensive briefing; instead, here, the alleged interference was a lever through which multiple agents were tasked, confidential informants were deployed, and flimsy, opposition research (the Steele dossier) was presented to the FISA court to surveil a Trump campaign aide, Carter Page, even when substantial doubts about the dossier’s reliability had emerged and without bothering to tell the court that Carter Page was a trusted source of information to both the CIA and FBI.

We also know that various high level participants in the FBI’s investigation spoke openly and repeatedly of their disdain for Trump, even as they expressed doubts about the investigation itself. Lisa Page texted her lover, Peter Strzok, beseeching him that Trump is “not ever going to become president, right? Right?!” “No. No he won’t. We’ll stop it,” Strzok texted back. This was in August 2016.

In ordinary investigations, evidence of motive is chiefly useful for determining who undertook a criminal action or connecting circumstantial evidence to a particular person. The various possible motives—anger, hatred, jealousy, greed—do not serve to excuse a crime that is otherwise proven. In fact motive, is not critical to proving wrongdoing, nor an element of most offenses, which only require an answer to the narrower questions of act plus intent.

We are supposed to conclude that because this investigation may have had some possibility of proceeding in less charged circumstances, that it would have done so here, even though nothing like this has ever happened before. Proof of motive is rarely direct. We instead infer what people did and why from their expressed or inherent interests. We assume parents protect children, people with money problems want money, people that express race hatred might harm people of hated races, and, here, that partisan Democrats who thought Trump’s election would be a disaster would be more aggressive, more intrusive, more persistent, and more biased than they would have been against one of their ideological fellow travelers.


Motive Among the President and His Subordinates

When dealing with subordinate federal employees and agencies, their motives should always be to follow the rules, follow the laws, and follow the lawful directives of the elected president, regardless of whether a Democrat or Republican is president. Self-proclaimed resistance to this requirement of public service has been the chief source of abuse by the deep state after the election of President Trump.

On the other hand, when considering “high crimes and misdemeanors” that support impeachment, considerations of presidential motive should be limited to those cases that are connected to genuine bribery and purely personal motive, not the far larger number of cases of overlapping motives of personal and public interest.

Here the standards have been inverted. Subordinate members of the FBI whose motives were obvious and whose abuses well documented have been given a pass. The motives of the various participants, far from being public spirited, include a cover up of their own misdeeds—concealment of exculpatory material, avoidance of oversight, deviations from policy, and naked partisanship—by crudely projecting their own high crimes and misdemeanors onto President Trump.

Trump, on the other hand, acting well within the normal boundaries of presidential action, is being evaluated as if he were a GS-12. Without having committed a crime nor broken any particular rules, an impeachment is underway. All this when the abuses of the FBI in the last election represent a form of interference that far eclipses anything foreign or domestic that has ever occurred in the history of the republic.