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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: James Seagrove who wrote (1037535)11/9/2017 1:19:08 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575497
 
I don't know what would be on his phone. Hopefully, he doesn't have a buddy with similar feelings and plans.

But we need to be able to get into the phones of the next 911 type attackers and wannabe 911 attackers. But you want to protect their privacy far beyond what the Constitution calls for, apparently, or else you wouldn't have spoken up.

Precedents matter.

The 4th amendment doesn't establish an absolute right to freedom from search and seizure. The "unreasonable" word is in there because there ARE reasonable situations where it's called for.



To: James Seagrove who wrote (1037535)11/9/2017 1:34:13 PM
From: Brumar89  Respond to of 1575497
 
Trump business opens online store for Trump merchandise

The President of the United States wants YOU to buy his merchandise. Christmas is coming and if you're a loyal American you will buy everyone on your lists lots of Chinese made junk with the Trump name on it.



Bernard Condon and Jeff Horwitz, Associated Press
Associated PressNovember 8, 2017

NEW YORK (AP) -- The company owned by President Donald Trump opened an online store on Wednesday to sell its branded apparel, golf gear and gifts to capitalize on the Trump family name.

The online Trump Store was featured on the Trump Organization website but otherwise launched with little fanfare. It features hats, bags, shirts and other items similar to ones you could buy at the company's golf resorts and hotels, but it also includes new items.

Many products appear manufactured abroad. The website's inventory includes items described as "Decorated in the USA," not "Made in the USA," including "Charlie the Beagle," a 12-inch stuffed dog with a blue ribbon with the Trump name on it.

The website says the dog was inspired by Eric and Lara Trump's own beagle, Charlie. It costs $35.

The dog appears similar to a 12-inch stuffed dog available from a website called Everything Branded. That dog is called "Buddy," and doesn't have a ribbon. It costs $7.61.

Trump has been criticized for not divesting his business, in particular his Washington hotel patronized by foreign diplomats and lobbyists, and for publicizing his golf clubs with his frequent trips to them.

Kathleen Clark, a government ethics lawyer who has been critical of the president, said she was not alarmed.

"Compared with all the other things he's done ... this is not in the top 20," said Clark, a professor at Washington University School of Law in St. Louis. She added, though, that it "breaks the norm of behavior for American politicians."

Among dozens of Trump-branded items were a plastic coin bank shaped like bars of gold bullion, a "Trump Tall Latte Mug," and red baseball cap with an embroidered American flag on the side.

Unlike the "Make America Great Again" hats famous during the campaign, this hat simply says, "Trump."

A teddy bear sporting a black knit sweater with "Trump" embroidered on it will cost you $30. A strikingly similar one from Harrods is a third cheaper — just $20.32 — but it's wearing a polo shirt, and the name across the chest is the British department store, not the president's.

Amanda Miller, a Trump Organization spokeswoman, said the idea for the online store had been in the works for a while. She described it as a way to get goods in the hands of visitors to the company's many properties who want a reminder or souvenir.

"We realized that there was a void by not having an online presence," Miller said. "We listened to the feedback coming from our customers who were visiting Trump properties and wanted to take a piece of their experience home with them."

The new store comes as the Trump Organization has tried to take advantage of its famous name with two new hotel chains.

Under the leadership of Trump's sons, Eric and Donald Jr., the company launched a chain called Scion aimed at young business travelers. The other is called American Idea, which aims for "flea-market chic," with Americana items that show pride of place.

The rollouts have been slow. The only hotel deal to proceed to construction, a 95-room project in Cleveland, Mississippi, was initially slated for completion this year but has been pushed back to 2018.

finance.yahoo.com



To: James Seagrove who wrote (1037535)11/9/2017 1:51:07 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575497
 
Roger Stone sent out a 1,600-word statement asking for donations for his legal defense fund. Calls Mueller a "deep state executioner” and “deep state vigilante” and says his legal fees have reached $457,000.

The President's allies need YOU to donate now to pay their legal fees. The evil Hillary loving, antifa member, deep stater, Mueller, is plotting to bankrupt them before locking them up. Your money is NEEDED now. Roger Stone bravely communicated with Russian intelligence during the campaign ... Remember, treason in the cause of Trump! is a virtue.


Former Trump advisers are getting buried in legal fees — and at least one wants help from Trump's re-election campaign

Natasha Bertrand

Roger Stone in Trump Tower Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone issued a new plea for help paying his legal bills resulting from the Russia investigation, which he claims now exceed $450,000. Many of the president's former advisers are facing sky-high legal fees as a result of the probe, which is focused on Moscow's election interference and whether any of his associates colluded with Russia.

A new talking point, meanwhile, has emerged among those opposed to Mueller's probe: that he is trying to stage a "coup d'etat" against Trump.

Longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone blasted out a 1,600-word statement this week asking for help paying the nearly $460,000 worth of legal fees he has incurred since landing in the crosshairs of the federal and congressional Russia investigations.

In the emailed statement, Stone attacked special counsel Robert Mueller as a "deep state vigilante" and "deep state executioner" who "is busy casting about for anything he can latch onto."

Stone, whose contact with Russia-linked hacker Guccifer 2.0 and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange during the election have come under scrutiny has part of the Russia probes, said it cost him $400,000 in legal fees to prepare for his testimony before the House Intelligence Committee last month.

Stone is also a " person of interest" for Senate investigators, committee chairman Richard Burr said in September. But they have not yet sent Stone a formal invitation to testify.

Many of the president's former advisers are facing sky-high legal fees as a result of the investigation, which is focused on whether his campaign colluded with Moscow to undermine Hillary Clinton during the election.

Trump campaign national-security official JD Gordon told Business Insider that while Trump's re-election campaign and the Republican National Committee are "taking care" of the president and his son, Don Jr., and Don Jr "the rest of us who aren't billionaires must fend for ourselves."

FEC filings showed that the Trump campaign spent more than $1.1 million on legal fees between July-October of this year.

"In my case, representing the campaign to speak to a group of over 50 foreign ambassadors during the RNC in Cleveland, combined with ensuring our campaign's national security policies were reflected in the GOP platform the week prior, have led to nearly 5-figure personal legal bills," Gordon said.

Congressional investigators probing potential collusion between the campaign and Russia have questioned Gordon about why he agitated for an amendment to the GOP's draft policy on Ukraine to be watered down last July.

The original amendment, which proposed that the GOP commit to sending "lethal weapons" to the Ukrainian army to fend off Russian aggression, was ultimately softened to say "provide appropriate assistance" before it was included in the party's official platform.

"It sure would be nice if the re-election campaign could reimburse these costs since all of my actions were in accordance with official campaign duties," Gordon said. "Though on the positive side, I have transitioned to a pro bono effort for holding individuals accountable for federal crimes such as cyberstalking, on-line harrassment and defamation."

Michael Glassner, who has been leading the Trump campaign’s reelection efforts, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Another early Trump campaign adviser, Michael Caputo, told reporters recently that he had to take $30,000 out of his children's college fund to pay for lawyers that can charge as much as $1,000 per hour. Democratic Rep. Jackie Speier mentioned Caputo's past work in Russia and his Ukrainian wife while questioning former FBI Director James Comey about the Russia probe in March.

The family of former national security adviser Michael Flynn, meanwhile, set up a defense fund for the retired general in September to pay for legal fees that could top $1 million. Mueller has reportedly gathered enough evidence against Flynn and his son, Michael Flynn Jr., to bring charges against them related to their work lobbying on behalf of Turkish government interests during the campaign.

"I am not a wealthy man, by any means," Stone said in his emailed appeal. "Such a crushing expense, with nothing to show for it except my vindication against a juggernaut of political dirty tricks and lies, threatens to destroy me and my family financially- all because I fought to elect Donald Trump. All because the deep state partisans know I will continue fighting for his agenda."

Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, who is chummy with Stone, introduced legislation last week pressuring Mueller to resign. Speaking from the House floor on Tuesday night, Gaetz claimed that “we are in the midst of a coup d’etat in the United States."

Stone seemed to echo Gaetz in his email: "I am certain Special Counsel Mueller and his chummy side-kick, fired-FBI Director Jimmy Comey, intend to try to remove our President, in collusion with Democrats, many of whom are openly plotting a literal coup d’etat against the President of the United States."

businessinsider