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Pressure

#PanthersPosse
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To be honest, this applies across the world.
Take Brexit for example, London voted overwhelmingly against Brexit but the rural areas voted for Brexit. So it's really about applying pressure to the demographic that will succumb.
Not to say the folks aren't misinformed and some are dumb as rocks, but it isn't just an America problem.
I agree with you here. It isn't just an American problem.

In some ways it hits at the popularity of Trump to rural and less educated whites in America. By that I mean his, "going with my gut" leadership style. It very often flies in the face of facts and is highly emotional. So when low information voters and low intelligence voters side with someone like that it's because they're just taking a gamble on the premise of, his gut and my gut are in sync and he's successful so it's worth taking the chance.
 

jj23

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I agree with you here. It isn't just an American problem.

In some ways it hits at the popularity of Trump to rural and less educated whites in America. By that I mean his, "going with my gut" leadership style. It very often flies in the face of facts and is highly emotional. So when low information voters and low intelligence voters side with someone like that it's because they're just taking a gamble on the premise of, his gut and my gut are in sync and he's successful so it's worth taking the chance.

Live life off guts syncs breh
:mjlol:
 

Orbital-Fetus

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people talking about don jr. being in canada to avoid press coverage due to possible indictments.
he may have been there to deal with the chinese CFO being arrested.

i still think that him and the rest of trump's kids along with kushner are the walking dead.

i hope that the slow grinding wheels of justice are putting out high grade shyt.
 

Sohh_lifted

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people talking about don jr. being in canada to avoid press coverage due to possible indictments.
he may have been there to deal with the chinese CFO being arrested.

i still think that him and the rest of trump's kids along with kushner are the walking dead.

i hope that the slow grinding wheels of justice are putting out high grade shyt.

I hope so, or this would be the one time Avenatti has been wrong....I think he said hed be indicted before new years.
 

Blackfyre

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181227-butina-makeover-tease_jojada


@thedailybeast
Maria Butina’s "Red Sparrow" makeover has been revealed on Russian TV https://trib.al/zGAF2yK
8:27 AM - Dec 27, 2018
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/outl...-foreign-powers-decades-before-michael-flynn/

The national security adviser who colluded with foreign powers — decades before Michael Flynn
New documents reveal that Richard Nixon’s 1968 campaign colluded with a foreign government far more than historians thought.
Shane O’SullivanDecember 26
The Fix’s Aaron Blake breaks down what the sentencing delay for former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn means. (JM Rieger/The Washington Post)

The delayed sentencing of former national security adviser Michael Flynn — for lying to investigators about “sensitive matters” discussed with the Russian ambassador to the United States during the Trump presidential transition — leaves unanswered questions about alleged collusion between Flynn and the Russians during the 2016 campaign.

It also evokes parallels with another former national security adviser, Richard Allen. Allen played a leading role in the Anna Chennault affair, a secret plan formed by Richard Nixon’s campaign to collude with the South Vietnamese government during the 1968 presidential campaign and sabotage Vietnam peace talks in Paris to ensure a Nixon victory.

The Chinese-born widow of a U.S. Air Force general, Chennault was the Nixon campaign’s conduit to the government in Saigon during the 1968 campaign through her friendship with Bui Diem, the South Vietnamese ambassador in Washington and Saigon’s representative at the peace talks.

Newly discovered documents show that, as foreign-policy coordinator to the Nixon campaign, Allen was deeply involved with Chennault’s election interference and secret meetings with the South Vietnamese ambassador, which began five months earlier than historians previously thought. President Lyndon B. Johnson discovered Nixon’s double-dealing in the final days of the campaign, but he didn’t go public with what he knew, and the Chennault affair was never officially investigated. Allen denied any involvement, and although Nixon chose Henry Kissinger as national security adviser, Allen later assumed the role in the Reagan White House.

Though most historians trace the beginning of the Nixon campaign’s collusion with the South Vietnamese to a secret meeting with Bui Diem in July 1968, previously unpublished calendar entries from Chennault’s personal papers show an earlier meeting, in February that year, just two weeks after Nixon announced his candidacy in New Hampshire. This previously undiscovered meeting means the collusion, involving senior political and foreign-policy staffers, was part of the campaign from the start, transforming our understanding of the Chennault affair and its role in Nixon’s victory.

According to handwritten entries in her personal calendar, Chennault introduced Diem to leading figures in the Nixon campaign on Feb. 16 at Nixon’s apartment in New York, and “met John Mitchell [for the] first time.”

Mitchell was Nixon’s campaign manager, and the entries note that foreign-policy adviser Allen was also there, along with Nixon’s longtime secretary Rose Mary Woods and close friend Robert Hill, a former ambassador to Mexico. Woods and Mitchell were Chennault’s neighbors in the new Watergate East apartment complex in Washington.

On June 1, Allen officially joined the Nixon campaign as foreign-policy coordinator, where he was the point person for contact with Chennault. Three weeks later, Chennault wrote to Nixon, suggesting he meet her “close friend” Bui Diem. Four days later, she wrote again, offering to arrange a meeting with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu on a forthcoming visit to Washington.

“No! No!” is scribbled next to this underlined passage in Allen’s copy of the Chennault letter, linked to a handwritten note “to RN,” shorthand for Nixon. “Allen recommends this not be done for any reason and under no circumstances. Proposal dangerous in the extreme and injurious to our [Vietnam] position — i.e. to US nat. interests.” Next to Chennault’s conclusion — “There is so much going on in Southeast Asia and so few of us really know the truth” — Allen scribbled “A.C. included.”

While a meeting with Thieu was deemed too risky, Allen did discuss a “possible meeting with South Vietnamese Ambassador” with Chennault in early July and summarized their conversation in a memo to Nixon: “Mrs. Chennault has apparently asked [Diem] if he would talk to DC [Nixon]. I explained schedule tight, but possible to check on available time. Meeting would have to be absolute top secret, etc. Initiative is ours — if DC can see him, I am to contact Mrs. Chennault, she will arrange. …This would be a good opportunity to get filled in on events in Paris and other developments.”

Referring to the words “Top secret,” Nixon scribbled: “Should be but I don’t see how — with the S.S. [Secret Service]. If it can be [secret], RN would like to see — if not, could Allen see for RN?”

In 1975, Allen told Nixon speechwriter William Safire that “he thought about it a lot but decided a meeting would be a mistake.” In the aftermath of Watergate, Allen’s denial was perhaps understandable, but Chennault and Diem’s memoirs from the 1980s confirmed that the meeting did take place.

Chennault’s calendar for July 12, 1968, reads: “N.Y. to see dikk Nixon with Amb. Biu [sic] Diem 2:00 PM.” In her memoir, Chennault claims Nixon told Bui Diem she was to be “the sole representative between the Vietnamese government and the Nixon campaign. …Please rely on her from now on as the only contact between myself and your government. If you have any message for me, please give it to Anna and she will relay it to me.”

From then on, Chennault grew closer to Mitchell. “At the height of the campaign, I was on the phone with Mitchell at least once a day,” she later wrote, “much of the conversation consisting of messages I had been asked to relay to him by various people both within and outside the campaign.” She told author Anthony Summers that “in the weeks that followed … Nixon and Mitchell …told her to inform Saigon that were Nixon to become president, South Vietnam would get ‘a better deal.’ …They worked out this deal to win the campaign,” she said.

Nixon’s July meeting with Chennault, Diem and Mitchell evokes parallels with the infamous Trump Tower meeting of June 2016, at which Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, Donald Trump Jr. and Trump campaign chief Paul Manafort met a Russian delegation.

Chennault’s contact with senior figures in the Nixon campaign continued right up until the election. While researching my book, I recently discovered a tantalizing noteon Chennault, handwritten on Allen’s campaign stationery and dated “Saturday — early a.m. before election” — meaning Saturday morning, Nov. 2, 1968, three days before the election.

That same Saturday, an FBI wiretap on the South Vietnamese Embassy picked up a call from Chennault to Diem to advise “she had received a message from her boss (not further identified), which her boss wanted her to give personally to the ambassador. … ’Hold on, we are gonna win. … Please tell your boss to hold on.’”

Allen’s handwritten notes indicate that Chennault had been frantically trying to contact Mitchell through his assistant and Ambassador Hill in New Hampshire since Thursday morning. It was now the Saturday morning before the election, and she was trying to get Allen to help. Within hours, “her boss” (probably Mitchell) would give her the message for Diem. Allen’s notes appear to be the missing link between Chennault’s efforts to contact Mitchell and her infamous message to Diem. They suggest that Allen helped put her in touch with Mitchell, who gave her the message for the South Vietnamese.

Allen has consistently distorted the historical record to minimize his role in the Chennault affair, insisting that Chennault was given no encouragement. But recent disclosures in the notes of H.R. Haldeman and now in the personal papers of Allen, Chennault and Hill, confirm that the Nixon campaign was actively supporting Chennault’s efforts and that she was in close contact with Allen, Hill and Mitchell throughout the campaign.

In the final eight days of the 1968 campaign, thanks to Vietnamese cables intercepted by the NSA and loose talk on Wall Street, Johnson discovered what Nixon was up to and ordered the wiretap on the South Vietnamese Embassy and FBI physical surveillance of Chennault. But Johnson and his Cabinet ultimately decided they couldn’t inject intelligence from classified sources into an election campaign. Allen, Hill and Mitchell were never questioned about the Chennault affair, and historians had to wait until “the ‘X’ envelope” containing Johnson’s file on Chennault was unsealed in 1994 to learn what Johnson knew at the time.

Johnson national security adviser Walt Rostow deposited the sealed file on Chennault at the LBJ Library at the height of the Senate Watergate hearings in 1973. In a covering note, Rostow concluded that the key link between the Chennault affair and Watergate was that in 1968, “they got away with it. Despite considerable press commentary after the election, the matter was never investigated fully,” emboldening the Nixon campaign to approve ever more ambitious schemes in 1972, which would lead to Nixon’s resignation.

In a pre-sentencing memorandum, special counsel Robert S. Mueller III described Michael Flynn’s assistance during 19 interviews with Justice Department attorneys as “substantial.” We still don’t know what this will tell us about the Trump campaign’s possible coordination with the Russian government during the 2016 election, but truth will arrive quicker than the painstaking archival research of the Chennault affair, which 50 years later is still revealing its secrets.

By exposing wrongdoing in 2016, the Mueller investigation can help prevent a repeat in 2020. Nixon was caught in 1968, but as it was not made public, he did not learn his lesson and paid the price with resignation six years later, after winning reelection in 1972.
 

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Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker Incorrectly Claims Academic All-American Honors
im-44443

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker played football at the University of Iowa in the 1990s.
Matthew Whitaker, the acting U.S. Attorney General, has incorrectly claimed on his résumé and in government documents to have been named an Academic All-American while playing football at the University of Iowa, according to the documents and the organization that awards that honor.

Mr. Whitaker, who was a tight end on the Iowa team from 1990 to 1992, claimed to have been an Academic All-American in his biography on his former law firm’s website and on a résumé sent in 2014 to the chief executive of a now-closed patent-marketing firm, for which he sat on the advisory board. The résumé was included in documents released last month by the Federal Trade Commission.

Mr. Whitaker made the same claim in a 2010 application for an Iowa judgeship
. A Justice Department press release, issued in 2009 when Mr. Whitaker left his post as U.S. Attorney in Iowa, said he had been “an academic All-American football player.”

To be considered for Academic All-American, a student-athlete must have at least a 3.3 cumulative grade point average and must be a starter or important reserve on his or her team.

Mr. Whitaker’s name doesn’t appear in the list of Academic All-Americans on the website of the organization that bestows the annual honor, the College Sports Information Directors of America. Another University of Iowa football player is on that list for 1992, the year that Mr. Whitaker has said he received the honor.

Barb Kowal, a spokeswoman for the awarding organization, also known as CoSIDA, said the group has no record that Mr. Whitaker was ever an Academic All-American.

After checking with the University of Iowa, Ms. Kowal said that it appears that Mr. Whitaker was given a lower-level honor, selected to an All-District honor in one of eight regions around the U.S. Those selected in the regions are put on the national ballot, she said. From there, a small number of student-athletes from each sport are voted to be given the coveted Academic All-American status every year.

Kerri Kupac, a Justice Department spokeswoman, said Mr. Whitaker relied on a 1993 University of Iowa football media guide, which listed him as a “GTE District VII academic All-American.” (GTE was the contest sponsor at that time.)

She referred further questions to Steve Roe, an assistant athletic director at the University of Iowa, who said: “if there is confusion at all, part of it could be how we listed it in our media guide.”

CoSIDA’s Ms. Kowal, in an email, said “being named an Academic All-District is PART of the CoSIDA Academic All-America program, but does not make you an Academic All-America honoree. You must be placed on the national ballot and then voted onto the Academic All-America team to gain that honor.

Ms. Kowal said the correct term for Mr. Whitaker’s honor is “1992 GTE District VII Academic All-District selection.” She said CoSIDA was less formally organized in the 1990s and “we know that people over time use terms interchangeably and innocently.”

Mr. Whitaker did win several other academic awards while at Iowa, including three Academic All-Big Ten awards, according to the 2018 University of Iowa media guide. He went on to earn business and law degrees from the university.


Questions about Mr. Whitaker’s claims to have been an Academic All-American were raised in a Wikipedkia op-ed, published Dec. 24 by a user named Smallbones.

Mr. Whitaker was named acting attorney general by President Trump in early November, after the ouster of Jeff Sessions from that post.

It is possible the Academic All-American matter would have arisen during independent vetting from the Senate, if Mr. Whitaker had gone through the confirmation process. In his previous position as chief of staff to Mr. Sessions, Mr. Whitaker didn’t require Senate confirmation.

Mr. Trump has chosen William Barr, a former attorney general, to replace Mr. Sessions but Mr. Barr has yet to be formally nominated or come before the Senate for confirmation hearings.
 
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