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


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/23/2018 9:36:45 AM
From: tonto5 Recommendations

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Very logical position...you are the generator of emissions...sue yourselves if you believe an action is required...



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/23/2018 2:14:55 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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DID OBONZO GIVE IRAN $150 BILLION TO WAGE WAR ON THE US? MAYBE A SPECIAL COUNSEL IS IN ORDER FOR THIS OVERT COLLUSION AGAINST US...
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Feds Charge Iranians for Hacking 144 US Universities

The hackers allegedly targeted 100,000 professors' email accounts, managing to compromise 8,000 of them.


By Michael Kan
March 23, 2018 1:39PM EST

Federal investigators have charged nine Iranians for stealing troves of academic and intellectual property data from 144 universities and dozens of private companies in the US.

"The defendants stole research that cost those universities $3.4 billion to procure and maintain," US deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein said in a Friday press conference.

The nine suspects nabbed over 31 terabytes of data and fed it back to the Iranian military, according to the Department of Justice. Employing the hackers was the Mabna Institute, an Iranian government contractor founded by two of the suspects, Rosenstein said. The goal of the institute was to help Iranian universities gain access to scientific research.

In total, 320 universities across 22 countries were attacked. The suspects also breached 47 private companies, along with government offices like the US Department of Labor and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

pcmag.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/23/2018 6:28:40 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck2 Recommendations

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Another lying lawyer..gee thanks Ken for pointing that out



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/24/2018 10:57:44 AM
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Luis Gutiérrez Ordered to Repay Federal Gov't Over Misuse of Funds 8 beacon



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/24/2018 1:45:24 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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  Respond to of 224668
 
YOU WANT TO BE A SHITHOLE COUNTRY? THIS IS HOW: More Racist Rhetoric From South Africa: Whites ‘Must Leave Everything;’ ‘Not calling for the slaughter of white people‚ at least for now.’

This sort of sentiment dominated Zimbabwe for decades as it went from breadbasket to, well, shithole. Over a decade ago, Nick Kristof reported that Zimbabweans were nostalgic for the old days of Rhodesia:



The hungry children and the families dying of AIDS here are gut-wrenching, but somehow what I find even more depressing is this: Many, many ordinary black Zimbabweans wish that they could get back the white racist government that oppressed them in the 1970’s.

“If we had the chance to go back to white rule, we’d do it,” said Solomon Dube, a peasant whose child was crying with hunger when I arrived in his village. “Life was easier then, and at least you could get food and a job.”

Mr. Dube acknowledged that the white regime of Ian Smith was awful. But now he worries that his 3-year-old son will die of starvation, and he would rather put up with any indignity than witness that.

An elderly peasant in another village, Makupila Muzamba, said that hunger today is worse than ever before in his seven decades or so, and said: “I want the white man’s government to come back. Even if whites were oppressing us, we could get jobs and things were cheap compared to today.”

His wife, Mugombo Mudenda, remembered that as a younger woman she used to eat meat, drink tea, use sugar and buy soap. But now she cannot even afford corn gruel. “I miss the days of white rule,” she said.

Nearly every peasant I’ve spoken to in Zimbabwe echoed those thoughts.


You’d think that Zimbabwe would be a cautionary example for South Africa, but it seems to be more of a how-to guide. And hey, the political insiders got rich.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/24/2018 2:40:06 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck  Respond to of 224668
 
Ken did you sell?!!! Drug stocks dive as Trump says he's considering suing drugmakers over opioid crisis

cnbc.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/24/2018 7:16:15 PM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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A look back at Tony Podesta's 'art' collection. Tell me this is normal stuff to have in your house. I would call the cops if I went into someone's house and saw this... But he is an ELITE DC INSIDER, and this normal swamp perverts. Can you imagine having a dinner party with naked kids on the wall. WTF!!!




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/24/2018 7:28:24 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/24/2018 7:31:11 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/25/2018 3:19:27 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck2 Recommendations

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Ken are you stupid, ignorant or complicit? CARBON DIOXIDE IS MOSTLY OXYGEN, PEOPLE: Deceptive Language Ruins Earth Hour

dailycaller.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/25/2018 3:33:20 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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Total Political War


- American Greatness
Matthew J. Peterson
amgreatness.com

The election of President Trump made it clear that America is not engaged in politics as usual. We are in the midst of a political war.

If this wasn’t evident to some observers before, the furor this week over the consulting firm Cambridge Analytica and Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ firing of FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe should have driven it home. These are not ordinary political times.


Regardless of their partisan leanings, those earnestly seeking to grasp what is happening understand that President Trump is, as Venkatesh Rao says, “more consequence than cause” of the underlying conflict. Perhaps he is a consequence of the fact that “[t]he fault line in American politics is no longer Republican vs. Democrat nor conservative vs. liberal but establishment vs. anti-establishment,” as William Lind put it at the American Conservative.

What we mean when we say “establishment” versus “anti-establishment” is the question of the hour, but as Jordan Greenhall declared, “while 2016 still formally looked like politics, what is really going on here is a revolutionary war.”

War is confusing. In the fog of battle it is not clear what might be happening or even who and where one’s friends and enemies are. While this is especially so in the midst of a revolutionary war, there is agreement among keen observers as to what the revolution is against.

Eight years ago, Claremont Institute Senior Fellow Angelo Codevilla called it the “ Ruling Class,” a popular thesis which he turned into a book ( The Ruling Class) and used deftly to explain the 2016 election and its aftermath. Michael Anton, in perhaps the most significant essay of the election, called it the “Davoisie oligarchy,” or the “Davos class” and recently coined the word the “oligogues” to describe the majority of elites in their camp that flatter and support them.

On our rulers, widely disparate thinkers agree. In 2012, Joel Kotkin called these same elites the Clerisy, which he says minister to the Oligarchs. In 2014, Kotkin published a book, The New Class Conflict, which aptly applies to explain the 2016 election and beyond. Jordan Greenhall calls it the “ Blue Church.” The influential “Dark Enlightenment” thinker Curtis “Mencius Moldbug” Yarvin, calls it “ the Cathedral.”

Regardless of its name, the ruling class attempts at present to reinforce, daily, morality tales of justice and injustice surrounding a single battlefront.

The political and media establishments relentlessly promote a tale in which Donald Trump became president of the United States by colluding with a foreign government and the inappropriate use of digital media.

President Trump and his supporters say this narrative is fictional.

These positions are irreconcilable.

As Trump’s opponents will readily tell you, at stake is not a normal matter of policy but the legitimacy of the Trump presidency itself and its power to set policy. There is, however, another side to that coin. Also at stake, in a way it has not been for nearly a century, is the legitimacy of the administrative state itself—at the moment most prominently represented by the FBI. Further, given its long time collusion with and partisanship on behalf of the administrative state, the legitimacy of the old media as a whole hangs in the balance of the outcome of our revolutionary cold war.

Weekly events like the McCabe firing and reports about Cambridge Analytica prompt only a doubling down on all sides. Trump’s administration is “all in,” defending its political life. Most of the political establishments and most established media outlets are “all in,” in defense of various interpretations of the status quo that would allow them to hold their respective positions.

For some time now, the political stage has been inexorably set for a collision course on the matter of collusion and digital media.

Make no mistake: the process is now indeed inexorable. In this digital age of “leaks,” if the truth is that Trump colluded with the Kremlin, it is hard to imagine that it will not eventually out. If the truth is that the political establishment and the deep state, aided and abetted by a zealous media, colluded against Trump, it is hard to imagine it will not eventually out, if it has not already.

But the truth does not always win wars, be they about rhetoric or geography. Geographic wars are won by means of physical maneuver and violence. Rhetorical wars are won by means of strategic communication and persuasion. And what is at stake is nothing less than the means of communication and therefore persuasion in America.

There is a tightly controlled communications technology that has profoundly and purposefully influenced and manipulated American society, behavior, cultural self-understanding, and politics without most people realizing its deeper effects for decades: it’s called television. The medium, as Marshall McLuhan taught us, is the message: ultimately, digital rhetoric is never going to be able to be controlled the same way elite society was able to control discourse and cultural self-understanding in the era of TV. Until figures like Mark Zuckerberg can find the courage to tell the establishment to go to hell, however, it will seek to find a way.

At first, the oligogues cheered and gloated when the co-founder of Facebook or the CEO of Google and the top minds in tech worked directly for and with President Obama and candidate Clinton. But when the message fails, the messenger blames the medium. Since President Trump’s win media establishmentarians have begun to turn viciously—and ungratefully—against the larger digital corporations, putting increasingly intense and grossly unfair cultural, political, and legal pressure on them to control speech and fall in line with “Blue Church” dogma and politics.

Meanwhile, almost every opportunity the mainstream media has had to moderate or qualify themselves in relation to the Russian collusion narrative has been rejected in favor of all-out attacks.

They had better be right.


Like most American cultural and civic institutions, the old media is already distrusted by historic numbers of Americans, but has not yet been dealt a knockout blow. If it turns out that there was no collusion, CNN has become the Ivy League version of InfoWars.

Trump has already begun to wrest the #fakenews spear—hand-forged for use against him by titans like Obama, Clinton, CNN, and the New York Times—from their hands. The question is whether he’s able to drive it right through their beating hearts over the next year on the matter of collusion. Their hands are wrapped around his so tightly it looks—and, if he is right, will continue to look—as if we are witnessing a kind of old media seppuku.

It is the fact that they are waging total war against an active opponent in the White House that makes this a potential last stand: regardless of the usual obfuscation in the aftermath, if it turns out old media is wrong about Russian collusion and digital media, its collapse will be complete. It will diminish over the next few years, to be re-processed and subsumed forever into a new digital landscape.

For most Americans, the results will be deeply unsettling, but mesmerizing: like watching the old family car catch fire, crackle, and melt as it goes up in smoke.

In the meantime, it would be wise for Silicon Valley to hedge its bets. Thoughtful observers ought to recognize the frenzied desperation and shrieking hysteria coming from the side with the most to lose. Methinks they protest too much.

Blame President Trump all you want. He didn’t actively work for decades to create a “post-truth” era. Our educational and cultural leaders did.
He didn’t “weaponize” communications technology or the federal government. His predecessors did. He didn’t destabilize democracy. That happened under the long and increasingly decadent watch of our ruling class, which is now irrationally blinded by rage that their house is on fire.

President Trump didn’t start the fire. The fire summoned him.


Impeach him tomorrow, and it will rage on. Install an establishmentarian from either party in his place, and the fires will only burn brighter and more dangerously than they did before.

Let those with ears to hear and minds to apprehend begin to think longer term about new modes and orders of rhetoric, and new coalitions of power. Take some advice from Generation Z: “Let the past die.”



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/25/2018 3:39:30 PM
From: rayrohn7 Recommendations

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 11:08:28 AM
From: FJB  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224668
 
OUR FBI IS MORE CORRUPT THAN YOU COULD EVER HAVE IMAGINED
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BREAKING:



Plus: “Noor Salman’s lawyers say FBI hid these key facts until now out of embarrassment: it was due to FBI’s close relationship w/Mateen’s father that they didn’t arrest Mateen when they investigated him in 2013. Also, prosecution of Noor intended to protect real accomplice: FBI’s asset.

Can’t anyone at the Bureau do their damn job?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 11:20:27 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 11:35:47 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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WHY CAN'T LIBTARDS CLEAN UP AFTER THEMSELVES. WHO DUMPS THEIR TRASH IN PUBLIC PLACES. AND THEY WANT TO BE IN CHARGE OF THE UTOPIA!??!





To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 11:44:34 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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STORMY ’60 MINUTES’ CHAT = AL CAPONE’S VAULT

FLASHBACK: Media Deemed Clinton-Lewinsky Nothing More Than Consensual Sex...

NYT THEN: 'Publicly humiliating anyone for consensual adultery is draconian, and wrong'...


CROWLEY: Do voters care? Not really...


'Depressing' interview...




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 4:32:55 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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“Comey & Muller Knew” About Pulse Massacre, “The Media Is Ignoring It, This Is The Biggest Story Today!”
March 26, 2018, 12:06 pm by Lucian Wintrich

It was just revealed that Seddique Mateen, father of the gunman who slaughtered 49 people in the Pulse nightclub attack, was an FBI informant for 11 years.

On Saturday, Assistant US Attorney Sara Sweeney sent the defense an email stating Seddique Mateen was a confidential FBI informant from 2005 through 2016; the email also revealed the elder Mateen is currently being investigated for transferring sums of money to Turkey and Afghanistan. These transfers came just a week before the deadly attack at Pulse nightclub.

Via CNN:

The revelation threatens to upend the case against Salman, the wife of Omar Mateen who is on trial for charges related to the mass shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida in June 2016. Salman’s defense attorneys say the failure to disclose this information earlier violated her due process rights, and they argue that they would have taken a different legal strategy if they had known about this earlier.
Salman faces charges of providing material support to a foreign terrorist organization and obstruction for justice, as prosecutors say she knew about the coming massacre. She has pleaded not guilty to the charges, and her defense team has cast her as a victim rather than an accomplice.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 9:06:58 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 9:37:41 PM
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American Who Escaped Al Qaeda Captivity Says Obama FBI, Under Robert Mueller and James Comey, Betrayed Him

By Catherine Herridge, Pamela K. Browne, Cyd Upson | Fox News

Former hostage: FBI sacrificed my safety to track terrorists


EXCLUSIVE – After he escaped from Al Qaeda in Syria, American photojournalist Matt Schrier investigated his own kidnapping and uncovered what he describes as a pattern of "betrayal" by FBI agents handling his case.

Schrier is now asking hard questions of former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who now leads the special counsel Russia probe, and former FBI Director James Comey who was fired by President Trump in May 2017.

"Not every FBI agent is bad. Some are very good people," Schrier told Fox News. "But the ones that are bad need to be weeded out. And the ones who let them be bad, and who turn their head, need to be exposed."

In an exclusive cable interview that first aired Monday on "The Story" with Martha MacCallum, Schrier went in depth, sharing emails, financial records and formal letters of complaint, which backed up allegations that after he was taken hostage in 2012, the FBI monitored his accounts as Al Qaeda terrorists used his money to buy at least a dozen computers and tablets.

While he was tortured and held by al Nusra, the brutal Al Qaeda franchise in Syria, Schrier claimed the FBI put intelligence gathering ahead of his personal security, hoping to track the computers and tablets to learn more about Al Qaeda recruits and future plots. After his harrowing escape, Schrier started demanding answers from the FBI, which at the time of his kidnapping was led by Mueller.

Photojournalist Matt Schrier, seen before his abduction in 2012.

Since his return to the U.S. in mid-2013, Schrier shared documents with Fox News and expalined, "I faxed-- I emailed them, probably between my mother and my father and me, between 50 and 100 complaints."

Comey took over from Mueller in September 2013, and Schrier said the stonewalling continued. "I was emailing him questions. I was forwarding him all these emails. I was demanding answers from him," Schrier said. "And I never got anything back."

Schrier said he has been unable to obtain credit cards or open new bank accounts because Al Qaeda stole his identify and passwords. Unable to get a lease for an apartment, Schrier said his FBI case manager suggested he temporarily live in a New York City homeless shelter.

"I just got clean clothes without bed bugs. I don't want to go through a situation where I have to deal with lice and bed bugs again. Like, no thank you."

The publisher for Comey's upcoming book, A Higher Loyalty, did not immediately respond to Fox News' questions. The Office of the Special Counsel referred Fox News to the FBI. The FBI did not dispute Schrier's account. An FBI spokesperson said the bureau could neither respond to specific questions nor make the agent assigned to Schrier's case available for an interview.

"The FBI's investigation into the kidnapping of Matthew Schrier remains open, therefore, we are not able to discuss investigative details surrounding this case. The FBI works closely with our federal partners not only to ensure that the U.S. Government does all that it can to safely recover Americans taken hostage overseas but to also assist victims who have been defrauded or further abused by a hostage-taker," the spokesperson said.

Schrier said the stonewalling continued after James Comey, seen here, took over the FBI. (AP, File)

A leading group that helps America hostages and their families, Hostage US, confirmed 2012 and 2013 represented a dark period.

"By the U.S. government's own admission, there were many problems relating to their engagement with families around this time, mixed messages from different parts of government," Hostage US CEO Rachel Briggs told Fox News. "President Obama ordered a review of the U.S. government's handling of hostages' cases in late 2014, which... led to a range of policy and procedural changes. The review came about largely because families themselves were vocal in their criticisms, and they should take the credit for the changes they brought about."

Briggs cited a new Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell -- a cross-government unit focused on hostage cases, as well as a Hostage Response Group at the National Security Council.

--------------------------------------------------------

Schrier's story began in 2012 when, as a freelance photographer, he traveled to Syria. One of the most dangerous places on the planet for journalists to operate, Schrier said he wanted to witness history.

"I love military history and I'm not really the type who wants to photograph handshakes. So I thought it would be a great experience witnessing history, photographing history, bringing it back," Schrier explained.

Robert Mueller, seen here, served as FBI director at the time Schrier was kidnapped. (AP, File)

On New Year's Eve of 2012, instead of crossing back into Turkey, Schrier was kidnapped by the Al Qaeda franchise known as al Nusra. "ISIS pushed them out, but at that time, they were number one," Schrier said. "They were the guys you did not want to be held by."

Schrier spent the next seven months held in six prisons across Syria where he was routinely tortured and starved. "They caught me trying to escape a month and six days in, so they put a tire around my knees and they lock it in place by sliding a bar in the crook between the tire and your knee -- the back of your knees. And they flip you over so your feet are in the air and you're handcuffed... And they take a cable... about as thick as nightstick, and they whack your feet."

Six weeks after his disappearance, records reviewed by Fox News showed 10 computers were purchased using his accounts, after Schrier said his Al Qaeda kidnappers threatened him. "They sat me down in the office in a circle with the emir, three Canadians and another guy. And they put a piece of paper in front of me and said, basically, 'Write down all the passwords for every account you have, from Facebook to your credit cards to your bank accounts, we want your social security number.'"

At least two tablets were shipped to a Canadian address. Fox News called phone numbers listed under the name and address but there was no response. A February 2017 email reviewed by Fox News from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police suggested a criminal case was being built, but there was no public evidence charges were pursued.

By February 2013, Schrier said the terrorists had everything to steal his identity. "They bought laptops, they bought tablets, they bought boots, you know, things to fight with. They practically rebuilt a Mercedes with parts. I mean, all sorts of stuff... They bought a Kama Sutra guide. They bought sunglasses, cologne."

At the same time, Schrier claimed the FBI was monitoring the transactions, and the bureau's point person for his family, agent Lindsey Perotti, misled his mother. Six months into his captivity, the FBI agent wrote Schrier's mother, "Everything at this point seems to indicate he is the one using his phone, credit card, and bank account." Despite working as a freelance war photographer, Schrier had not posted any new work.

"I'd been kept in the dark for extremely long periods of times, I'm infested with bedbugs," Schrier said. "Yet, according to the FBI, I'm speaking to people on my cellphone, I'm buying laptops and cologne and boots and sunglasses, maybe going into Turkey once in a while to get away from things, you know, just like all jihadis do, you know. 'Cause Southern Turkey's like the Hamptons, you know?"

Matt Schrier, left, in Azaz, Syria.

Schrier, from New York, hid the fact he was Jewish from his captors because he said it meant certain death.

Two intelligence officers, one current, the other former, told Fox News that Schrier's theory -- that the FBI was tracking Al Qaeda's online activity with his accounts, as well as the computer purchases -- suggested it was part of a larger operation.

"So they're monitoring my financial records straight off the bat. They're letting them steal this money. Why are they letting them steal the money, what's the angle? Well, what are they buying? They're buying laptops and tablets. If they intercept them, they do their little spy thing and then they deliver them right into the hands of Al Qaeda and they create, basically, a dream come true for the intelligence community, a way to infiltrate the enemy like never before, without them even knowing it," Schrier said.

He claimed the FBI's priority was running an intelligence operation and not an investigation to secure his release. Pressed by Fox News to back up the serious allegation, Schrier said, "Beyond a reasonable doubt, I have all the evidence, I have made one attempt after another to have this investigated so that the people responsible can be held accountable, nobody will return my calls, nobody will investigate this, despite all the evidence."

Halfway through his captivity, by April 2013, there was a conversation between FBI agent Perotti and a government official familiar with the case.

"He's like, 'Do you think that he joined them? Like, what's going on?' She's like, 'No, no, no. We're pretty sure he didn't join 'em based on his financial records.' Boom, she slipped. She admitted she was monitoring my financial records as of early April," Schrier said.

A government official backed up the account to Fox News.

Schrier said "bad" FBI agents "need to be weeded out. And the ones who let them be bad, and who turn their head, need to be exposed."

Nearly five years after a harrowing escape, Schrier documented his story in a new book, "The Dawn Prayer."

The 39-year-old Schrier said he remained angry at how the FBI handled his case. "You know, what I needed help with was reestablishing a life for myself, which means a new social security number and rebuilding my credit."

Schrier emphasized that he still couldn't get a credit card though he was able eventuallly to recover more than $16,000 in stolen funds through PayPal and Citibank, but it took months. "You have the Witness Protection Program, you give new social security numbers to murderers and pimps and drug dealers. I'm a witness too and I didn't do any of that stuff. 'No -- can't help you.'"

After he returned, Schrier described a debrief for the FBI and CIA. The CIA had no comment for Fox News.

"I gave them more information than probably 50 informants could've given 'em. And that's when I went from feeling like, 'All right, I don't deserve anything,' to, 'You know what, yeah, yeah I deserve some things. I deserve a new social security number, I deserve decent health care, I deserve to be treated with respect.' I didn't ask for anything. I gave them Skype names, I gave them more than anyone in my situation has ever given them. I can say that definitively. And what I got in return was lies, betrayal, nothing," Schrier said.

An FBI spokesperson added, "The FBI offers assistance to victims to aid them in rebuilding their lives. We continue to work with our interagency and international law enforcement partners to gather intelligence as well as assess the possibility of bringing charges against those who victimized Mr. Schrier."

Catherine Herridge is an award-winning Chief Intelligence correspondent for FOX News Channel (FNC) based in Washington, D.C. She covers intelligence, the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security. Herridge joined FNC in 1996 as a London-based correspondent.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 10:12:17 PM
From: DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck3 Recommendations

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To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/26/2018 10:14:05 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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RESEARCH: AMNESTY FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS WOULD COST U.S. TAXPAYERS $2 TRILLION



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/27/2018 10:58:01 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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'Sweden was once the country of vikings and blondes...' NOW DISGUSTING



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/28/2018 12:07:37 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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FBI Raids Home of Clinton Global Initiative Member Nancy Salzman



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/28/2018 12:23:55 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Sweden reports highest number of murders in fifteen years


ISIS beheading videos increasingly popular among migrant school children in Germany



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/28/2018 11:52:10 AM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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Muslim Grooming Gang Guilty of Drugging and Gang Raping Underage Girls in 'Shag Wagon' Van

breitbart.com

Thames Valley Police

Seven men have been found guilty of grooming and raping underage girls aged 13 to 17, plying them with drink and drugs and abusing them at sex “parties” and in a van known as the “shag wagon”.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/28/2018 2:10:30 PM
From: FJB2 Recommendations

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‘March for Our Lives’ Leaders Deny They Want to Repeal Second Amendment - DEMONRAT POLLING SHOWS RUNNING ON REPEALING THE CONSTITUTION IS NOT VERY POPULAR, EVEN AMONG COMMIE MILLENNIALS.


Leaders of the “March for Our Lives” anti-gun protest movement scrambled Tuesday to distance themselves from an op-ed in the New York Times by former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens calling for the Second Amendment to be repealed.

…Study: Only 10% of Protesters Were Teens…

…Fake News: CNN’s Cuomo Says ‘No One Calling for 2nd Amendment Repeal’ — After fmr SCOTUS Justice Does… in NY Times!



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/28/2018 3:47:41 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

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DOJ Opens Investigation Into FISA Abuse, FBI Contacts With Confidential Source - BOOM!


dailycaller.com

Department of Justice inspector general Michael Horowitz opened an investigation Wednesday into possible FISA abuses by the Justice Department and FBI officials and the nature of contacts between the FBI and a confidential source.


“The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) will initiate a review that will examine the Justice Department’s and the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s (FBI) compliance with legal requirements, and with applicable DOJ and FBI policies and procedures, in applications filed with the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) relating to a certain U.S. person,” DOJ spokesman John Lavinsky said in a statement accompanying the announcement.

Lavinsky explained that “as part of this examination, the OIG also will review information that was known to the DOJ and the FBI at the time the applications were filed from or about an alleged FBI confidential source.”

Lavinsky noted that the investigation was prompted by requests from several members of Congress and Attorney General Jeff Sessions. House Republicans recently released a memo claiming widespread abuse of the FISA process on the part of the DOJ and FBI in order to obtain a surveillance warrant on former Trump campaign associate Carter Page.

The memo found that the FBI and the DOJ did not disclose the political origins of the Steele dossier in its FISA application and revealed previously undisclosed testimony from former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe that an investigation into Page would not have occurred without Steele’s dossie



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (208037)3/28/2018 8:39:17 PM
From: FJB5 Recommendations

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