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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TideGlider who wrote (200782)7/14/2017 4:57:06 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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New Bombshell Emails Show Huma Abedin Giving Special Favors to Clinton Foundation Donors From Hillary’s State Department

Jul 14th, 2017 3:48 pm by Cristina Laila
Conservative watchdog group, Judicial Watch released new Huma Abedin es Friday showing additional instances of Clinton Foundation donors receiving special ...



To: TideGlider who wrote (200782)7/14/2017 5:10:48 PM
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Indicators That Mark Zuckerberg Is Considering a Run for President
- Breitbart

breitbart.com

Mark Zuckerberg/Facebook
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has all but conquered the tech world, and based on his latest activities, it seems that he may have his sights set on the world of politics.
Over the course of the past year, Mark Zuckerberg, the CEO of the largest social media platform in the world, has slowly been moving his way into the political sphere. Zuckerberg initially began his move into politics by funding causes and political groups that he found noteworthy, but the 33-year-old billionaire’s recent actions have led many to believe that he may be stepping into the political sphere in an extremely active role in the future, possibly even running for president. Here are some of the indicators that Mark Zuckerberg may be running for president in the future.

1: Zuckerberg’s Friends Say He Plans to Run for Office in 2024

It was recently reported that Mark Zuckerberg’s own close friends believe that he plans to run for office in 2024, adding that he apparently quotes “Greek legends” to his employees and “wants to be emperor.” One insider who believes Zuckerberg may soon be moving into politics claimed, “He’s been incredibly careful about cultivating a specific type of persona over the past few years.”

Zuckerberg’s friends reportedly believe that the Facebook CEO is “naturally drawn to leadership” and allegedly once recited scenes from the film Troyto a room full of Facebook employees.

2: He Has Worked Closely with Obama and His Former Administration

Zuckerberg made headlines in 2011 when he held a Town Hall Q&A at the Facebook HQ in Palo Alto with then-President Barack Obama. The two appeared in public together again in 2016 at Stanford University for a White House entrepreneurship conference where they reportedly discussed business, globalization, and Brexit among many other topics. In January of 2017, Zuckerberg hired David Plouffe, a senior Obama advisor, to the Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative, a charitable organization founded by Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan in 2015.

Plouffe was the manager of Obama’s 2008 campaign and was hired to Zuckerberg’s charitable organization to lead policy and advocacy efforts. “I’m excited to work with David on this. He has great experience building movements as part of companies like Uber and as campaign manager for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign,” said Zuckerberg discussing the hiring of Plouffe.

3: Zuckerberg’s F8 Conference Keynote Held Many Political Overtones

During his keynote speech at the Facebook F8 Developer Conference, Zuckerberg discussed a number of hot topic political issues such as immigration, climate change, and globalization. “As I look around the world, I’m starting to see people and nations turning inward, against the idea of a connected world and a global community,” said Zuckerberg. “I hear voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as ‘others.’ I hear them calling for blocking free expression,( THIS FROM THE LITTLE PERVERT THAT BLOCKS FREE EXPRESSION IN CHINA AND PAKISTAN, HE MUST BE OUT OF HIS MIND!!! ) for slowing immigration, for reducing trade, and in some cases even for cutting access to the Internet.” Some believe that Zuckerberg’s criticism of “building walls” was a swipe at President Trump.

4: A PAC Is Urging Zuckerberg to Run – and Taking Donations

A Political Action Committee known as “Disrupt For America” is directly calling for Mark Zuckerberg to run for president and is taking donations to convince the CEO to do just that. The PAC’s website reads, “Disrupt For America is a progressive advocacy group focused on pragmatic, grassroots activism with an emphasis on social media, organized assembly, and open discourse and debate. The diversity and sheer scale of the grassroots resistance against Donald Trump’s presidency has been unprecedented and highlights a significant opportunity. But, we are not going to win by resisting without a clear purpose and a plan.”

A quote from Zuckerberg near the bottom of the page also states, “Progress does not move in a straight line.” The PAC reportedly committed to “convincing the American people to convince Mark Zuckerberg to consider a Presidential run in 2020, or at least join the conversation.” It even goes on to compare Zuckerberg to President Trump, describing him as “a wealthy, anti-establishment outsider unbeholden to special interests.”

The group states that regardless of how Zuckerberg may currently be viewed, “we believe that he represents a robust voice that would significantly augment the Democratic primary process, in addition to being a viable opponent to Donald Trump in 2020.”

5: Mark Zuckerberg’s All-American Tour

Perhaps the most telling evidence that Zuckerberg is likely to run for office is his recent cross-country trip where he vowed to visit all 50 states in the US. In each state, Zuckerberg paid visits to locals and posed in photo ops blatantly designed to make Zuckerberg look like a “normal down to earth guy.” All that was missing was the quintessential photo of him kissing a baby on the forehead. In Wisconsin, Zuckerberg posed atop a red tractor, pretending to farm the land.

Zuckerberg also made visits to Charleston, S.C. where he attended the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church,

Zuckerberg has visited a whole host of other businesses and community groups during his travels, reportedly keeping his movements under wraps and only giving business owners a few moments notice before appearing in order to avoid being mobbed by fans.

The secrecy surrounding Zuckerberg’s arrival is allegedly due to the public reaction that the CEO receives when his location is discovered. When it was leaked that he would be visiting the Kusanya Cafe in Chicago, a barista said that she had to find 100 extra chairs to accommodate the people that arrived to catch a glimpse of Zuckerberg.

A spokesperson for the Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative discussed Zuckerberg’s impromptu visits, saying the purpose of “these visits is to have the most honest and candid interactions and discussions as possible, without the additional attention that’s likely to come as a result of word getting out ahead of time.” Despite these supposedly “candid interactions,” those visited by Zuckerberg are reportedly warned by his team to keep details of his visits under lock and key.

Notably, Jimmy Dahman, a former presidential campaign field organizer for Hillary Clinton, appears to be working with Zuckerberg, contacting Dan Moore of Newton Falls, Ohio, about if he would be interested in hosting “a billionaire philanthropist from California” at his home. Moore agreed and five days later, Mark Zuckerberg arrived at Moore’s house and ate dinner with his family. Before leaving Zuckerberg reportedly told Moore, “If there are any news reporters that call you, just make sure you tell them I’m not running for president.”

Minnesota Public Radio’s Bob Collins discussed Zuckerberg’s denial, saying, “Most people who are running for president usually declare at this time of the campaign cycle that they’re not. And we dutifully report that they say they’re not, forcing you to choose between what they say and your lying eyes.”

Is all of this a marketing tactic from a billionaire CEO attempting to humanize himself in the eyes of his users, or is this Zuckerberg laying the ground for a future presidential campaign? It is currently unknown what the young billionaire will do, but as we draw closer to the next presidential election, it seems we’re sure to hear more from the Facebook founder in time.



To: TideGlider who wrote (200782)7/16/2017 4:10:12 AM
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Trump Derangement Syndrome: Yes, They Have All Gone Completely Insane

How long is your memory? For example, can you remember as far back as a month ago? Way back on June 15, the big, big news was that five sources, all anonymous, had leaked to the Washington Post that, at the end of a meeting with then-FBI Director Jim Comey, President Trump had cleared the room and then asked Comey to go easy in his investigation of short-term National Security Advisor Michael Flynn. Cries of "Obstruction of Justice!" rang out from every corner of elite Washington. The story completely dominated the news for multiple days. It fell of course to the Manhattan Contrarian to make the obvious point that the President holds the full prosecutorial discretion power of the government, and under direct grant of power in the Constitution he can order that anyone he wishes not be prosecuted at his complete whim, for any or no reason. Admittedly, I wasn't the only one who made that obvious point, although the ratio of the insane commenters to the sane ones was at least 10 to one. But the meme was so ridiculous that it was forgotten within a few days. By now it seems like ancient history -- although possibly subject to revival by Special Prosecutor Mueller. (If that happens, we'll really know that the world has gone irredeemably nuts.)

But what is it about humans that, when a few people lose their minds, thousands and millions more join in and mass hysteria ensues?
There have been dozens of examples in my lifetime. Philip Terzian, in the current issue of the Weekly Standard, helpfully reminds us of "The Great Day-Care Sexual-Abuse Panic" of the 1980s and 90s. If you aren't old enough to remember back that far, you may not even believe that this possibly could have occurred. The case that started it all came out of the McMartin pre-school in Manhattan Beach, California:

A generation of preschoolers had [allegedly] been subject to all manner of sexual degradation and physical abuse, including rape; small animals had been ritually sacrificed and children fed their blood; there had been field trips to local cemeteries to dig up corpses. Peggy McMartin Buckey was accused of “drilling” the limbs of students, and her 26-year-old son was alleged to have levitated inside the schoolhouse. In retrospect, of course, the details were not just lurid but ludicrous.

And in the wake of the McMartin case, dozens more such cases with remarkably similar allegations, involving hundreds of defendants, were brought around the country. I can remember cases from places as disparate as Malden, Massachusetts, Wenatchee, Washington, and Edenton, North Carolina. Reading articles about these situations at the time, I could only shake my head at the insanity, and wonder when -- if ever -- people would return to their senses. Over time, all or nearly all of the cases fell apart, and the defendants were exonerated -- some having served jail sentences in excess of 20 years.

The blunt fact is that the “satanic” day-care ritual-abuse cases of the 1980s and early ’90s were our contemporary version of the Salem witch trials of the 1690s; and since human nature tends to be immutable, they featured many of the same symptoms across the centuries: mass hysteria, impressionable and unreliable child-witnesses, prosecutorial zeal and abuse, a mob tendency to prey on the hapless and defenseless.

So dare I mention "Russia"? This one is right up there as perhaps the most pervasive mass hysterias of my lifetime. The only real rival is catastrophic climate change hysteria. After now about 8 months of non-stop "Russia collusion" stories and literally nothing emerging as evidence to support them, yesterday the majority of the top stories on RealClearPolitics were more of same.Donald Trump, Jr. met with a Russian operative in June 2016 hoping to get some dirt on Hillary Clinton! That just has to be a crime! How about TREASON!!!!! I can choose from among dozens of the completely unhinged, but for now I'll pick on Ruth Marcus, writing in the Washington Post on Tuesday, "The Donald Trump Jr. emails could hardly be more incriminating."

By explicitly linking the source of the information to the Russian government and by describing it as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump,” Goldstone made crystal clear that he was offering the campaign a chance to collude — yes, that word is appropriate here — with a foreign government to “incriminate Hillary” Clinton and help win the presidency. By reacting as he did, eagerly accepting the offer of this foreign aid, Trump Jr. made clear that he was a willing part of this incipient conspiracy — and yes, that word is appropriate here, too. “If it’s what you say I love it especially later in the summer,” he responded, within minutes of receiving the inquiry.

Hey, Ruth, can you bother to tell us what is the supposed crime?
I think that after too many years at the Post poor Ruth is under the impression that "conspiracy" is a crime without any underlying wrongdoing, at least as long as the perpetrator is a Republican. How about conspiracy to buy a vanilla ice cream cone at the DQ?

For a sane take on the situation, I recommend Eugene Volokh's post "Can it be a crime to do opposition research by asking foreigners for information?" To be fair to them, Eugene's site is affiliated with the Washington Post as well. Most important nugget:

Americans have the right to receive information even from speakers who are entirely abroad. See Lamont v. Postmaster General, 381 U.S. 301 (1965). Can Americans — whether political candidates or anyone else — really be barred from asking questions of foreigners, just because the answers might be especially important to voters?

The question answers itself. Eugene goes on to eviscerate arguments made by various deranged TDS sufferers about such information being a "thing of value" under the statute that restricts campaign contributions from foreigners. If you are interested in the subject, you might want to read the whole thing. But frankly, at this point I would recommend that you don't waste any more of your valuable time on this Trump/Russia hysteria.

Law professor Alan Dershowitz also weighed in at Newsmax on Tuesday, and then in an appearance on Neil Cavuto's program on Wednesday night, as reported in the Washington Times:

Mr. Dershowitz . . . said he doesn’t “see any crime at this point” in Mr. Trump Jr.’s behavior. “Even if the worst case scenario as far as we know now, is the Russians get in touch with Trump Jr. and say, ‘we have some dirt on Hillary Clinton, come we’ll give it to you’ and he goes and gets the information. That’s what the New York Times did with the Pentagon Papers, that’s what the Washington Post did and many other newspaper did with information with Snowden and Manning,” he told Newsmax Tuesday. “You are allowed legally to use material that was obtained illegally as long as you had nothing to do with the illegal nature of obtaining the information, so at the moment I see no legal jeopardy for Trump Jr.”

Alan, you are doing your best to keep your friends from making fools of themselves, and you're getting nowhere. Maybe you need a new group of friends.