RUSSIA/РОССИЯ THREAD—ASSANGE CHRGD W/ SPYING—DJT IMPEACHED TWICE-US TREASURY SANCTS KILIMNIK AS RUSSIAN AGNT

Blackfyre

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Doesn't he have the Sky merger still going on as it is?
Yeah, that's still on going last time I checked.

Not sure if the following story was posted earlier, don't recall seeing it:

Trump judge nominee, 36, who has never tried a case, wins approval of Senate panel
Brett J. Talley, President Trump’s nominee to be a federal judge in Alabama, has never tried a case, was unanimously rated “not qualified” by the American Bar Assn.’s judicial rating committee, has practiced law for only three years and, as a blogger last year, displayed a degree of partisanship unusual for a judicial nominee, denouncing “Hillary Rotten Clinton” and pledging support for the National Rifle Assn.

On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee, on a party-line vote, approved him for a lifetime appointment to the federal bench.

Talley, 36, is part of what Trump has called the "untold story" of his success in filling the courts with young conservatives.

“The judge story is an untold story. Nobody wants to talk about it,” Trump said last month, standing alongside Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) in the White House Rose Garden. “But when you think of it, Mitch and I were saying, that has consequences 40 years out, depending on the age of the judge — but 40 years out.”

Civil rights groups and liberal advocates see the matter differently. They denounced Thursday’s vote, calling it “laughable” that none of the committee Republicans objected to confirming a lawyer with as little experience as Talley to preside over federal trials.

"He's practiced law for less than three years and never argued a motion, let alone brought a case. This is the least amount of experience I've seen in a judicial nominee," said Kristine Lucius, executive vice president of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights.

The group was one of several on the left that urged the Judiciary Committee to reject Talley because of his lack of qualifications and because of doubts over whether he had the "temperament and ability to approach cases with the fairness and open-mindedness necessary to serve as a federal judge."
The Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee:
Chairman Senator Chuck Grassley (R - IA)
Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R - UT)
Senator Lindsey Graham (R - SC)
Senator John Cornyn (R - TX)
Senator Michael S. Lee (R - UT)
Senator Ted Cruz (R - TX)
Senator Ben Sasse (R - NE)
Senator Jeff Flake (R - AZ)
Senator Mike Crapo (R - ID)
Senator Thom Tillis (R - NC)
Senator John Kennedy (R - LA)
 
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@4d 6f 6e 65 79 can you post some of the Twitter posts highlighting the far right lunatics trump and the GOP are putting on the judiciary. A 36 yo who graduated from law school 3yrs ago, who has never tried a case in his life and was a blogger just last year has just been made a federal judge for life. This guy was pledging allegiance to the NRA and calling Hillary names on his blog. Maybe when the naive and impressionable Bernie or busters and the both-siders on this forum see what not voting for the good candidate can do, they may change their ways.

Edit: I see @Blackfyre_Berserker has posted about that guy.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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I think it's important to remember that that Trump may have a point when it comes to the merger. Apparently the antitrust Regulators may want the Monopoly including CNN to be left out of the deal

He may have the wrong reasons to be on the right side of this deal. Let's follow this closely.
 

dtownreppin214

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@4d 6f 6e 65 79 can you post some of the Twitter posts highlighting the far right lunatics trump and the GOP are putting on the judiciary. A 36 yo who graduated from law school 3yrs ago, who has never tried a case in his life and was a blogger just last year has just been made a federal judge for life. This guy was pledging allegiance to the NRA and calling Hillary names on his blog. Maybe when the naive and impressionable Bernie or busters and the both-siders on this forum see what not voting for the good candidate can do, they may change their ways.

Edit: I see @Blackfyre_Berserker has posted about that guy.
That sob McConnell is the cause of this.

Trump and McConnell have succeeded in pushing judicial nominees through the Senate because the Republicans have voted in lockstep since taking control of the chamber in 2014.

When Trump took office in January, there were more than 100 vacant seats on the federal courts, thanks to an unprecedented slowdown engineered by McConnell during the final two years of President Obama’s term. The Senate under GOP control approved only 22 judges in that two-year period, the lowest total since 1951-52 in the last year of President Truman’s term. By contrast, the Senate under Democratic control approved 68 judges in the last two years of George W. Bush’s presidency.

The best known vacancy was on the Supreme Court. After Justice Antonin Scalia died in February 2016, McConnell refused to permit a hearing for Judge Merrick Garland, President Obama’s nominee. Trump filled the seat earlier this year with Justice Neil M. Gorsuch.

The Alliance for Justice, which tracks judicial nominees, said Trump’s team is off to a fast start, particularly when compared with Obama’s first year. By November 2009, Obama had made 27 judicial nominations, including Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Trump has nominated 59 people to the federal courts, including Justice Gorsuch. That’s also a contrast with Trump’s pace in filling executive branch jobs, where he has lagged far behind the pace of previous administrations.
 

Black Panther

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Y'all ever peeped this NYTimes article from this past May?

Top Russian Officials Discussed How to Influence Trump Aides Last Summer

New York Times said:
WASHINGTON — American spies collected information last summer revealing that senior Russian intelligence and political officials were discussing how to exert influence over Donald J. Trump through his advisers, according to three current and former American officials familiar with the intelligence.

The conversations focused on Paul Manafort, the Trump campaign chairman at the time, and Michael T. Flynn, a retired general who was advising Mr. Trump, the officials said. Both men had indirect ties to Russian officials, who appeared confident that each could be used to help shape Mr. Trump’s opinions on Russia.

New York Times said:
Some Russians boasted about how well they knew Mr. Flynn. Others discussed leveraging their ties to Viktor F. Yanukovych, the deposed president of Ukraine living in exile in Russia, who at one time had worked closely with Mr. Manafort.

New York Times said:
[Brennan] said he saw intelligence suggesting that Russia wanted to use Trump campaign officials, wittingly or not, to help in that effort. He spoke vaguely about contacts between Trump associates and Russian officials, without giving names, saying they “raised questions in my mind about whether Russia was able to gain the cooperation of those individuals.”

Scary how recent developments give this story a lot of context, huh? :bpohh:

Flynn is next. :demonic:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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:ALERTRED::ALERTRED:

Looks like I was wrong. Kushner literally wanted to blow up CNNs operations







Snag in Media Merger Stirs Tensions Over Trump-CNN Feud
Uncertainty around AT&T deal arises after long stretch of hostility between network, administration
Amol SharmaNov. 10, 2017 5:52 p.m. ET
BN-WB903_389yq_OR_20171110142804.jpg

CNN and the Trump camp have sparred over what the administration says is unfair treatment of the president. Photo: carlo allegri/Reuters

By
Amol Sharma
Early this year, President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and aide, Jared Kushner, met a top executive at CNN parent Time WarnerInc. TWX 4.08% and raised concerns about the network’s coverage of the presidential election.

Mr. Kushner told the executive, Gary Ginsberg, that CNN should fire 20% of its staff because they were so wrong in their analysis of the election and how it would turn out, people familiar with the matter say.

A White House official said Mr. Kushner didn’t intend the comment to be taken seriously, and was simply trying to make a point. Inside Time Warner, it wasn’t taken lightly.


Now, as the government has raised concerns in its review of Time Warner’s pending sale to AT&T Inc., T 0.65% people within the companies and on Wall Street are speculating that the Trump administration’s feelings about the network could be influencing the deal.

The government has denied politics is playing a role in its examination of the merger, and AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson said Thursday he has no reason to suspect that is a factor.

But Mr. Stephenson expressed some doubt at a meeting Monday, when AT&T executives visited the Justice Department. Mr. Trump’s recently confirmed antitrust chief, Makan Delrahim, raised the prospect that the companies would have to sell either Turner, parent of CNN and other cable networks, or the DirecTV satellite unit, people familiar with the talks said.

Mr. Stephenson responded by asking whether the notion of a Turner divestiture was really just a demand to sell CNN, people close to the companies said. He asked what problem that would solve.

People familiar with the government’s thinking on the meeting dispute this characterization of events.

For well over a year, CNN and the Trump camp have been at loggerheads over what the administration says is unfair treatment of the president. Representatives from the two sides have come together multiple times to try to de-escalate the feud, but ultimately those meetings produced only brief lulls before hostilities flared up again, say people familiar with the matter.

Mr. Trump was on good terms with the network early on in his campaign, calling into its shows regularly. When Corey Lewandowski was the campaign manager, he would call to complain, but CNN found the situation generally manageable, people familiar with the relationship say.

After Mr. Lewandowski was fired by Mr. Trump in June 2016, Mr. Kushner took on a greater role. On behalf of the campaign, he began lodging regular complaints with CNN executives. The turning point was a speech by Mr. Trump in New York on June 22 about everything from the economy to Hillary Clinton’s Wall Street speeches, people familiar with the matter say.

Mr. Kushner was irate at the fact-checking CNN did and called CNN President Jeff Zucker, the people say. He said campaign officials wouldn’t appear on CNN because of their view that the coverage was unfair and the fact-checking was poor. Mr. Zucker defended the reporting and didn’t take kindly to the threat, the people say.

Trump campaign officials complained that the makeup of CNN’s expert panels were tilted against them, that even the Republicans weren’t really pro-Trump, the people say. CNN came to its own conclusion that it needed to actively recruit more contributors sympathetic to Mr. Trump, they say.

In July 2016, Mr. Trump himself called Mr. Ginsberg to express his frustration at the coverage, according to a person familiar with the call. Mr. Ginsberg said the network was being fair, highlighted the new contributors who had been hired, and read a list of seven of them, the person said.

Later that month, as the campaign’s boycott of CNN was going into full swing, Messrs. Zucker and Kushner met to try to resolve the issue. Mr. Zucker told Mr. Kushner that the campaign’s posture of freezing CNN out of major interviews made no sense, because the network was the best avenue to reach independents, whose support Mr. Trump would need, people familiar with the discussion say. Mr. Kushner vowed to focus on local TV and online avenues to reach voters, and argued the campaign didn’t need CNN, a White House official said. The rapprochement failed.

Relations continued to deteriorate and the Trump campaign expressed frustration at coverage of the Republican National Convention, when CNN showed polls that said its audience approved of Mr. Trump’s speech, while several panelists were criticizing it, the people familiar with the matter said.

By the end of the campaign, Mr. Trump had ratcheted up his criticism significantly in public, labeling CNN “fake news” in tweets and speeches. When the AT&T deal was announced late in the campaign, Mr. Trump said, “AT&T is buying Time Warner, and thus CNN, a deal we will not approve in my administration because it’s too much concentration of power in the hands of too few.”

Things didn’t improve after the election. When Mr. Kushner made his remark about cutting 20% of CNN staff, Mr. Ginsberg told him there was no scenario under which Time Warner would do that, one of the people familiar with the matter said.

In September, the companies thought they were on the verge of getting Justice Department approval, with conditions that appeared mostly in line with similar deals, people close to the companies say. But last month, after Mr. Delrahim was confirmed, the government pushed more forcefully for structural changes, not just promises of adhering to certain behavior, they say.

Some Justice Department officials have been frustrated with what they viewed as a campaign by the companies to create a sense of inevitability around the deal’s approval, according to people familiar with their thinking. The Justice Department was considering a possible challenge to the deal before Mr. Delrahim was confirmed to lead the antitrust division, they say.

When it approved Comcast Corp.’sacquisition of NBCUniversal in 2011, the Justice department imposed “behavioral” requirements such as making NBCUniversal content available to rivals. People familiar with the government’s current deliberations say some in the Justice Department believe those sorts of conditions were ineffective, and shouldn’t be repeated this time with AT&T.

Mr. Stephenson, speaking at a conference Thursday, said he was never told the price of getting a deal done was CNN, and that he won’t sell it. He said the company is prepared to take the fight to court.

“I have never been instructed by the White House on this or any other transaction under review by the antitrust division,” Mr. Delrahim said.

Even if the deal closes, concerns about CNN’s independence could linger, as some staffers still aren’t sure what kind of steward AT&T would be. The telecom company has repeatedly vowed to protect CNN’s editorial independence.

If AT&T wanted to make a change in leadership at CNN, it would be in position to do so at the end of 2018, when Mr. Zucker’s contract expires, people familiar with the matter say. In a statement to Vanity Fair last month, AT&T said, “As it relates to CNN, it’s clearly a great organization, they are having a great year, and Jeff Zucker is doing a terrific job.”

A few months ago, AT&T executive John Stankey, who would be charged with running the Time Warner media assets if the deal goes through, asked to visit CNN’s newsroom and get a better sense of the editorial operations, said a person familiar with the matter. The request was an unusual one for CNN, where visits from corporate executives at Time Warner are rare.

Mr. Zucker declined, feeling that the optics of an AT&T executive making the rounds wouldn’t be good before the merger closes, people familiar with the matter say.

The fate of the merger and Mr. Zucker are hot topics within the network. “It’s been the looming question,” one staffer said.

—Drew FitzGerald, Brent Kendall and Joe Flint contributed to this article.

Write to Amol Sharma at amol.sharma@wsj.com






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