Friday, December 30, 2022

Trump's Taxes Reveal 26 Times He 'Crossed the Line' Making Him Subject to Prosecution

 Lock him up already!

Chief Justice John Roberts Sees Climate Change As Some Minor Transient Problem

 What a fucking piece of shit asshole

Trump's Terroristic Threats Against the US

 Such an evil piece of shit asshole.

Republicans Think It’s OK to Take Food Away From Kids (Free School Lunches)

 Fucking evil assholes. 

Trump Wanted National Guard Troops to Lead Him into the Capitol on Jan 6th, and Declare Himself Emperor and Dictator of America.

 What an evil fucking asshole.


It is being reported that indeed Trump did want 10,000 NG troops to enter the Capitol. He wanted them to lead him in a procession into the Capitol, where he would announce and declare himself the emperor and dictator of America.

 Ben Meiselas, of the Meidas Network, read pages 533-534 of the Committee Report, about his intentions to send 10,000 NG troops into the Capitol. But they were not to be there to protect the Capitol or the Congress, they would be there to protect Trump and his supporters.

Meiselas read a memo from the acting Secretary of Defense, Christopher MIller, from a couple of days previous to the insurrection. In it, he out-lined what the NG troops were not to have, such as bullet-proof vests or bayonets. There was some opposition to the idea, but it does seem that Christopher Miller knew more about the plan than previously realized.

At the same time, the Governor of Maryland, Larry Hogan was attempting to get in touch with Miller but was unable to do so. Hogan was being asked by Steny Hoyer and Charles Shumer to send NG troops and were told by Hogan that he did not have the authority.

From the testimony and the documents, it does appear that Trump wanted 10,000 NG troops to enter the Capitol in a procession, to protect himself and his supporters.

Saturday, December 3, 2022

Bush Ignored Massive Number of 9/11 Warnings

 What an asshole

On April 29, 2004, President George W. Bush hosted one of the most unusual meetings to ever take place inside the Oval Office. The 10 members of the 9/11 Commission got to ask him and Vice President Dick Cheney any question they wanted about the September 11, 2001, attacks. The words that were spoken in that room remained secret for nearly two decades. Now, we can finally read what Bush said. 
Earlier this month, after more than 18 years, the government declassified a 31-page "memorandum for the record," which compiles notes that the commissioners took during the meeting. 
The document shows the commissioners giving Bush multiple chances to acknowledge the numerous documented warnings he'd received from his own government of an impending attack by Al Qaeda. For the most part, Bush failed to do so. Instead, he passed the buck. 
Perhaps the largest of Bush's evasions that day concerned his CIA director, George Tenet: "The threat was overseas — that was what George said." Bush's implication at the time is clear. He wanted the commission, and by extension the public, to think that no one could have anticipated Al Qaeda mounting a large-scale attack on US soil. But in fact, Tenet's CIA had warned Bush more than once that Al Qaeda could strike anywhere, at any time, and that all US citizens were potential targets. 
The most notorious warning that Bush received, but not the only one, was a CIA briefing headlined "Bin Ladin Determined to Strike in US." Very little of Bush's excuse-making and clumsy attempts to rewrite history found their way into the 9/11 Commission's report. 
Indeed, one of the commissioners, Richard Ben-Veniste, told Insider he still had questions today about what Bush knew, and when. "I could never square in my mind CIA Director Tenet's intense preoccupation with the Al Qaeda threat in the months leading up to 9/11, with his claim that he never briefed President Bush on the many clues the intelligence community had developed that bin Laden was planning to launch a 'spectacular' attack on the US homeland," Ben-Veniste said. 
The commission report's approach to this mystery is to make the apparent disconnect between CIA and the Oval Office sound like something out of a Greek tragedy: "No one working on these late [Al Qaeda] leads in the summer of 2001 connected them to the high level of threat reporting … no analytic work foresaw the lightning that could connect the thundercloud to the ground." 
What the new memo makes clear is that the White House's lack of urgency in facing down the domestic Qaeda threat wasn't all that complicated. Tenet, the record shows, did everything he could to get Bush to focus on Al Qaeda. Bush just wasn't interested.