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Trump 'to review' Mathew Golsteyn Afghan murder case
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-46587185
However, as Commander in Chief of the US armed forces, any intervention by Mr Trump could count as unlawful command influence, and might mean the case against Maj Golsteyn is thrown out. A Pentagon spokesperson said on Sunday that the allegations against the major are "a law enforcement matter". Just another example Trump thinking being POTUS has no limits... |
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no limits, CNN and saturday night live would be off. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Dec 16, 2018 08:58:54 AM A REAL scandal is the one sided coverage, hour by hour, of networks like NBC & Democrat spin machines like Saturday Night Live. It is all nothing less than unfair news coverage and Dem commercials. Should be tested in courts, can’t be legal? Only defame & belittle! Collusion? [Twitter for iPhone] Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
how many puppies did Trump eat today, where is that story?
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Wow another nice deflection Mr Objective |
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He is very capable of tweeting his foot into his mouth all by himself Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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As you have said before you can’t take him literally.... Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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evidence of the limits in trumps authority. just because i proved that you’re wrong, doesn’t mean it was a deflection. you are embarrassing yourself here. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Should I fear getting something wrong in a political argument on the internet? Will alliances fail, people go bankrupt and lives be disrupted or end due to my badly informed statement? Luckily I'm not president, my speech would be much more carefully considered if it had an impact beyond this small pond. |
Tone and tenor?
Sounds more like singing than it does a tweet. More evidence of corruption has been demonstrated due to tone and tenor. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Or, to use one of the favorite words of anti-Trumpers, its a lie. |
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You say you added "nothing" to his tweet. This makes a subtle impression that I said you added "words" to it. I didn't say that you added words, I said you "You seem to be trying very hard to stretch what he said into something he didn't say." In effect, you attached your twisted, unnecessary interpretation to his words. So, for sure, you added no content to his tweet. I never said you did. But your fake "interpretation" was "something." It was not, as you say, "nothing." And the "something" that you added to the conversation was a lie. |
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do you or do you not have thought on Trump influencing yet another criminal investigation? talking about cnn or SNL is a deflection.. so please your embarrassing yourself with your made up proof of your made up event... |
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(2) are they still on the air? |
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I brought up CNN and SNL. And if some nut is making the claim that Trump sees no limits to his authority, then pointing to the continued ability of those outlets to attack him, is not only not a deflection, it makes the statement that Trump is a dictator, look like the nonsense that it is. |
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Because it's wrong — and anti-Constitutional — for a president to threaten to use government to punish protected speech. Period. Even if the president's threats amount to nothing, individuals and companies fear the government's awesome power enough that they might decide poking fun at the president isn't worth the risk: When a president threatens censorship — and that's precisely what Trump is doing — the chances of self-censorship go up. The president is trying to bully a notable critic into silence: NBC and Saturday Night Live can probably take the pressure, but what about an individual or a publication that doesn't have access to the same powerful lawyers and deep pockets? The First Amendment sometimes feels fragile because it's so often used to defend unpopular speech. Who really wants to be on the side of Larry Flynt or Fred Phelps? The administration went after Jim Acosta a few weeks ago not just because White House officials dislike the CNN correspondent, but because they knew Acosta's occasional grandstanding can make other journalists uncomfortable — the administration wanted to see if it could divide the press corps into journalists more and less deserving of First Amendment protections. That's why Trump targets SNL now: If you're not a fan, maybe you want to shrug and wait for a more noble cause to come along. By then, though, it might be too late. Better to push back now instead of waiting for real damage to be done. So yes, the president's threat matters. It isn't the worst thing Trump tweeted this weekend: He also called his former lawyer a "rat" for cooperating with the government, and suggested he'd intervene in the case of a Green Beret accused of killing a prisoner suspected of terrorism. Taken together with the SNL threat, the tweets confirmed what we already know about Trump: He's lawless and petty, a narcissist with autocratic tendencies. Which means, for now, Alec Baldwin's ridiculous Trump wig might as well be a banner for freedom. May it ever fly proud and high." By Joel Mathis in the The Week |
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Jim, just about everything Trump has ever touched is now under investigation. Let that sink in. |
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WT actual F?
I find myself agreeing with Wayne and Pete on Two separate topics!! Quote:
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No speech should be banned ; ) |
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"Dec 16, 2018 08:58:54 AM A REAL scandal is the one sided coverage, hour by hour, of networks like NBC & Democrat spin machines like Saturday Night Live. It is all nothing less than unfair news coverage and Dem commercials. Should be tested in courts, can’t be legal? Only defame & belittle! Collusion? " His tweet didn't claim that any speech should be banned. He claimed that the hour by hour coverage was one sided and unfair defamation belittlement of him, and possibly collusion against him. He asked if the unfair one-sided coverage should be tested in the courts. If it could be legal--in effect does the First Amendment grant the Press the right to slant only in one direction in dereliction of the right granted to it to provide information necessary to maintain a free Republic, and if it should be tested in courts? He is most likely wrong to wonder if the media doesn't have that right (although the way courts "interpret" things one cannot be sure that his question has no merit). But he made no claim that any speech should be banned. He asked if it was fair or even legal for news coverage to be so biased. The implication being that negative reporting should be balanced with obvious positive things if the Press's right to free speech has any merit. And the right to speak is not a right that the Press or media has alone. The President, as well as the rest of us, have that right. His right to ask the question should not be "banned," and it certainly doesn't abridge the right of the media to be biased. |
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