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Here, you "absolutely can't envision even the idea" of someone who supposedly has done corrupt things being interested in fulfilling his Presidential duty to make sure that our money is not being spent on maintaining corruption in another country. It is "an insight," as you put it, into your "psyche . . .not that we needed more at this point " SAD. |
On the day the House of Representatives impeached Bill Clinton, his approval rating hit its presidential peak, 73%
Big differences between Clinton impeachment and this one. Clinton at this point was publicly contrite and partisans supporting him mostly argued that what he did was wrong, just not impeachable. This president is on the attack and his partisans deny facts and any wrongdoing. Clinton lied about having an affair. Floridaman both admitted to and publicly asked multiple foreign governments to interfere in our elections. They are not the same thing and shouldn’t be treated as such. One was improper and embarrassing. The other was a threat to our democracy. |
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"Dec. 6, 2018 — At the White House annual Hannukah party, Parnas and Fruman hold a private meeting with President Trump and Giuliani, where Trump tasks Parnas and Fruman to pressure the Ukrainian government to investigate the Bidens, according to associates Parnas told.."
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We went from a Republican "I'm not a crook" president to a "I'm a crook, so what?" Trumplican president.
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Last week, prosecutors asked U.S. District Judge Paul Oetken in Manhattan to revoke Parnas' bail. They said he had concealed information about his finances, including a $1 million payment he had received from an account in Russia in September. The account into which the payment was deposited was in the name of Parnas' wife, Svetlana Parnas, government and defense lawyers said. On Tuesday, U.S. Attorney Rebekah Donaleski said that the source of the payment was Firtash's lawyer. She said it was not plausible the payment was a loan to Parnas's wife, as he had said. |
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🤡❄️🤡 Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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I realize that this verbiage doe not comport with your psyche. And I realize that you cannot possibly conceive that your self-conceived pristine psyche can have been led astray and corrupted by mere run of the mill, self aggrandizing, politicians. It might be a SAD thing, but for the larger reality that neither you nor I really matter, except to those few who we love or hate. |
Just watch the House
At this rate, by the end of this pointless debate, some Republican is going come to the podium with a giant dildo representing Trump’s penis and give their speech with it in their mouth to make sure that the president is particularly impressed by their devotion. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Your psyche seems to be in a morally depraved, self-inflicted shambles. |
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It’s time Americans say “You’re Fired” to Floridaman. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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There's always this weird, barely-repressed homosexuality thing going on with MAGA trolls like you. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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evidence of Biden corruption there, that’s asking a foreign power to interfere with our elections? Using that logic, isn’t it also asking a foreign power to interfere in our elections, when Obama asked a Russian official to postpone missile talks until after his 2012 re election? We all know that conversation, we all know exactly what it meant, Obama didn’t want to have to answer to voters what he was planning on doing with Russia and missiles. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
I can't come close to Floridaman's actions and words.
If Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell succeeds in his public promise to ensure Trump’s acquittal regardless of the facts, the law, and the survival of our republic, we as Americans need to be prepared for a new normal, colored by a few de facto amendments to the U.S. Constitution: When Electoral College votes are tallied, we can no longer be sure that the final count represents the will of the people, as we will have condoned the possibility of elections rigged by incumbents using their official powers to threaten foreign governments into interfering on their behalf. If the president calls out troops to squelch a peaceful protest, deports American citizens because they were born in another country, or directs that certain people be arrested or imprisoned because of their political or religious views, we cannot turn to the U.S. Congress for consequences and accountability. Only the federal courts will remain as a branch with oversight over the executive, and even that recourse assumes that the president continues to honor the legitimacy of the judicial branch as a check on the presidency. If the president employs the U.S. military abroad, we cannot be sure that he is doing it to serve the interests of the United States instead of his personal interests or those of a personal “ally,” such as Russian president Vladimir Putin. We must accept that our service members who take an oath to defend the Constitution could die defending a would-be monarch or his foreign ally whose interests conflict with those of the United States. If the president taps a private lawyer, lobbyist, or corporation to undertake work as a substitute for official channels, and if that person or entity takes actions that harm Americans while serving the president’s personal interests, we will have no recourse through the Constitution, federal statutes imposing oversight on federal employees, or the Senate’s advice and consent authority for presidential appointees. We will have sanctioned a shadow government detached from legal oversight and electoral accountability, and there will be nowhere to turn within the confines of the law and the separation of powers if things go awry (which they will). For federal employees, keeping their jobs and avoiding public humiliation and potential ruin will require abject loyalty to the man in office rather than to the rule of law. The same goes for our military. If you think this is all hyperbole, read the report for yourself. |
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But actually if you look into it you'll find that both countries were in an election cycle and agreed to have the discussions continue. These things do take years even without the added pressure of elections and who knew ----------- would be so hard. You better tell Floridaman that you think it's an impeachable offense, cause he just told China that he can't cut a deal to end his trade war till after the election, though as anyone knows that could change at any minute. |
“the survival of our republic.”
despite the fact that you couldn’t name a single core part of our republic, which is in danger thanks to Trump. No hyperbole there, nope. “president calls out troops to squelch peaceful protests.” When did he do anything like that? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Pete, you can’t win. You’re trying to juggle too many dishes in the air. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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So there is no action taken by Trump that cannot be considered an influence on the next election. Saying that something Trump does is asking for interference in the next election is superfluous verbiage. It's a political talking point, which is concocted exactly to influence the next election, as are all political talking points. The question is, was the action in itself illegal, not whether it would interfere with the next election. Was it illegal for Trump to ask Ukraine, with which we have a treaty covering what is asked, to investigate the corruption that has been a feature of its government, and to look into American citizens that have been a part of that corruption? |
TRUMP ON UKRAINE
2016: no aid unless Ukraine agrees to peace with Putin 2017: no aid unless Poroshenko takes Manafort case from NABU 2018: no aid unless Poroshenko agrees not to work with Mueller 2019: no aid until Zelensky agrees to Clinton/Crowdstrike & Biden/Burisma probes Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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He knows Floridaman can throw him to the bear. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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You post article after article, opinion after opinion, conjecture after conjecture, hearsay after hearsay, all manner of second hand testimony as if they were the truth. But direct disclosure from the actual source you dismiss as a lie. This whole impeachment thing, the Russian "collusion" thing, the obstruction of justice thing were all driven by the same piling on of conjectures driven by inconclusive circumstantial evidence as well as many so called "mistakes" (all against Trump and no "mistakes" in his favor) as well as withholding exculpatory evidence and actual falsifying of a document. It all has been a bunch of manufactured smoke with no actual fire. And the so-called obstruction of Congress bit is total nonsense. Executive privilege has not been decided as unconstitutional. If the House wanted to challenge that in SCOTUS they could. But to assume (there's that assumption, conjecture, thing again) that the President asserting his rights is obstruction is turning the law and the Constitution on its head. The whole notion of separation of powers is exactly to create a tension between the branches of the federal government which prevents one from overpowering the other. |
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most pathetic impeachment ever but it's really what you'd expect from this bunch of democraps it will get much worse for them before it gets better :biglaugh: |
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