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To: Brumar89 who wrote (1134732)5/14/2019 11:12:04 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1574637
 
The Corruption of the DOJ Grows
Talking Points Memo by Josh Marshall

We now have the fourth investigation charged with ‘investigating the investigators’ who began the Russia probe. Attorney General Bill Barr has tasked the US Attorney in Connecticut, John H. Durham, with conducting yet another probe. Most press reports will say this is the third. There’s the on-going Inspector General investigation and the investigation by Utah US Attorney John H. Huber. But in fact this is the second Inspector General’s investigation into this question. Inspector General Michael Horowitz wrenched the first from its initial brief to probe leaks and potential bias against Hillary Clinton into one focused on bias against President Trump.

On their face, each of these probes is being conducted by a respected federal prosecutor. Durham has been charged with conducting other national security related investigations in the past by Attorneys General of both parties. But as we’ve discussed bureaucrats tend to go looking for things their superiors want them to find especially when their original tasking makes clear what the superior is looking for. That has clearly been the case with each of these four probes.

It’s all corrupt.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (1134732)5/14/2019 11:21:48 AM
From: Brumar891 Recommendation

Recommended By
rdkflorida2

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What Would Thomas More Do?
The attack on David French once again sheds light on Christian hypocrisy.

by CHARLES SYKES
MAY 14, 2019

More than 60,000 people have signed a petition denouncing National Review’s David French for criticizing Franklin Graham’s moral surrender to Trumpism. “This character assassination by David French is unconscionable and should not go unchallenged,” declares the petition on the website of the American Family Association.

It is the latest shot fired in the cultural civil war being fought among Christians who are wrestling with the contradictions of the Trump era.

Along with Jerry Falwell Jr., Graham is perhaps the most prominent evangelical figure to embrace a purely transactional approach to politics in which moral values are subordinated to power.

French’s heresy was to point out (once again) the hypocrisy of Graham constantly defending Trump while simultaneously denouncing the morals of Democrats like South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Bill Clinton. “It’s hard to think of a single prominent American Christian who better illustrates the collapsing Evangelical public witness than Franklin Graham, Billy Graham’s son,” he wrote at National Review. “His commitment to the Christian character of American public officials seems to depend largely on their partisan political identity.”

The petition urges the faithful to stand behind Graham as “a godly man of impeccable integrity” and reject French’s “attack.” Students of theology, psychology, and politics alike will undoubtedly study the document for years as an artifact of our times.

Responding to the petition, David French’s wife, Nancy, wrote an op-ed piece inthe Washington Post, highlighting the moral inversion that had taken place within evangelical Christianity.Having habituated themselves to defending the “lesser of two evils,” she wrote, the rationalizers have over time morphed into “attacking good people who question the president.”

Indeed, good people pose a nagging problem for the rationalizers, because they are witnesses to the hypocrisy. They prick the conscience and so have to be denounced.


Which brings us to Thomas More, courtesy of the uber-Trumpian publicationAmerican Greatness.

Responding to both Frenches, Chris Buskirk last week offered up a turgid 2,600-word Trump-as-King-David manifesto, insisting that there was no problem with Christians bending the knee to Trump. The Right Reverend Buskirk plunders the Old Testament and history for examples of moral compromises in the service of less-than-ideal princes.

Was David disqualified from leading Israel because he murdered Uriah in order to take Bathsheba as his wife? Certainly not….

Did Joseph undermine his public witness as a prophet of God by serving Pharaoh even as he held the Israelites in captivity? What about Daniel, who served the fantastically pagan Nebuchadnezzar? Or Esther, who married the murderous, libertine emperor Xerxes? Again, the answer is plainly no.


[ The prophet Nathan condemned David's crime against Uriah. "You are the man," Nathan rebuked the King to his face. 2nd Samuel 12. David would not have repented had he not.


John the Baptist rebuked Herod Antipas for taking his brother's wife and other sins. Luke 3. ]

This sort of thing has become boilerplate among Trumpist Christians, but in his zeal to persuade Christians to lay down their principles in the service of bad kings, Buskirk makes an interesting turn.

He cites Henry VIII as an example of a king that Christians could serve in good conscience.

Henry VIII was impetuous, vengeful, and adulterous. He was also a great king who secured England’s finances and her role as a great European power.

He was also the king who beheaded St. Thomas More, for refusing to surrender his moral principles.

Perhaps inadvertently, Buskirk has raised an interesting question: What would Thomas More do now?

We know what, in fact, he did: Thomas More did not think that Making England Great Again was more important than upholding the law. He did not decide that Henry VIII’s judicial appointments trumped his defiance of the church. He did not believe that power was more important than defending his faith.

And More did not go along with the collective surrender of the church to the imperious whims of the monarch. He understood the price of the bargain he was being asked to make. In Robert Bolt’s play, A Man for All Seasons, More says to a 15th-century version of Matt Schlapp: “It profits a man nothing to give his soul for the whole world, but for Wales?”

All of this seems timely, especially with the publication of the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s new book, On Faith, which deals at some length with More’s conscience and his ultimate martyrdom. (I discuss this on today’s Bulwarkpodcast with Christopher Scalia, the justice’s son and co-editor of the new book.)

Scalia so admired Thomas More that he wore a replica of his hat to President Obama’s second inauguration, and he spoke frequently about the man he described as “one of the great men of his age: lawyer, scholar, humanist, philosopher, statesman — a towering figure not just in his own country of England but throughout Renaissance Europe.”

Today, More is best remembered for standing up against royal power. But in one of Scalia’s best-known speeches, the justice pointed out that to understand the “deep significance of More’s martyrdom,” we need to “appreciate that the reason he died was, in the view of almost everyone at the time, a silly one.”

Henry VIII wanted a divorce, but More believed that only the pope could dissolve the union. It was a position on which he could easily have compromised; and almost everyone else caved to Henry’s demands. Scalia quoted Hilaire Belloc’s account:

Most of the great bodies—all the bishops except Fisher—had yielded. They had not yielded with great reluctance but as a matter of course. Here and there had been protests, and two particular monastic bodies had burst, as it were, into flame. But that was exceptional. To the ordinary man of the day, anyone, especially a highly placed official, who stood out against the King’s policy was a crank.

Scalia noted that Bolt’s play “puts that point nicely.”

When More learns that the Convocation of Bishops has voted unanimously (except for John Fisher of Rochester) to adhere to the King’s demands that they acknowledge his divorce despite the Pope, More decides that he must resign the chancellorship, and asks his wife Alice to help him remove his chain of office. She says: “Sun and moon, Master More, you’re taken for a wise man! Is this wisdom—to betray your ability, abandon practice, forget your station and your duty to your kin and behave like a printed book!” And later along the road, his friend the Duke of Norfolk says: “You’re behaving like a fool. You’re behaving like a crank. You’re not behaving like a gentleman.” “[I]t’s disproportionate! . . . [W]e’ve all given in! Why must you stand out?”

Sound at all familiar?

Thomas More put the integrity of his faith ahead of place, prestige, and the greatness of the king. Unlike his colleagues, Thomas More did not make a bargain with his soul.

The Franklin Grahams of his time made a different choice. And today, who remembers any of them?

thebulwark.com



To: Brumar89 who wrote (1134732)5/14/2019 7:44:31 PM
From: longnshort4 Recommendations

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Broken_Clock
FJB
isopatch
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Whistleblower drops Mueller BOMBSHELL (“it was ALL a set-up”)AUGUST 28, 2018

LINKEDINTWITTER

A former Department of Defense analyst-turned-whistleblower Adam Lovinger came forward Monday with disturbing new details on the FBI’s investigation into Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and it’s connection to the Hillary Clinton campaign.

What he said is disturbing — and it all links back to the probe of special counsel Robert Mueller.

Sponsored: Christian Americans beware…

Lovinger told investigative journalist Sara A. Carter the investigation into Trump’s presidential campaign, named Operation Crossfire Hurricane, was “all a set-up” by a paid FBI informant with deep ties to top Russian intelligence agents. That investigation later was used as justification for Mueller’s current probe, which Trump has often dismissed as a partisan “witch hunt.”

Lovinger’s attorney, Sean Bigley, said his client raised concerns that paid FBI informant Stefan Halper — then a Cambridge University professor — had been paid $1 million in taxpayer funded cash to write-up Defense Department foreign policy reports and spy on the Trump campaign.

Lovinger also noticed Halper’s deep political ties to both Russia and the Clinton family and brought the information to his superiors. He claims that decision cost him everything.

In retaliation for questioning the Russian-Trump narrative, Lovinger says he was stripped of his security clearance and pushed out of all meaningful investigations. Bigley suspects that it was Hillary Clinton’s deep influence at the Department of Justice that got Lovinger was punished.

Sponsored:

“When Mr. Lovinger raised concerns about DoD’s misuse of Stefan Halper in 2016, he did so without any political designs or knowledge of Mr. Halper’s spying activities,” Bigley said, as reported by Carter. “Instead, Mr. Lovinger simply did what all Americans should expect of our civil servants: he reported violations of law and a gross waste of public funds to his superiors.”

Government whistleblowers often face retaliation from their superiors, Bigley said, but the blowback on Lovinger was overwhelming.

“[W]e were puzzled by the unprecedented ferocity of efforts to discredit Mr. Lovinger, including leaks from DoD of false and defamatory information to the press. Our assumption was that the other contractor about whom Mr. Lovinger explicitly raised concerns – a close confidante of Hillary Clinton – was the reason for the sustained assault on Mr. Lovinger, and that certainly may have played a role,” Bigley told Carter.

“Mr. Lovinger unwittingly shined a spotlight on the deep state’s secret weapon — Stefan Halper — and threatened to expose the truth about the Trump-Russia collusion narrative than being plotted: that it was all a set-up,” he said.

URGENT: FDA Ban [sponsored]

Lovinger had his security clearance revoked in May 2017. He was officially suspended, without pay, in March 2018. Bigley says the government has “refused to turn over a single page of its purported evidence of Lovinger’s wrongdoing.”

Conservative watchdog group Judicial Watch has filed a lawsuit on behalf of Lovinger.

Their goal, according to Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton, is to uncover the files on Lovinger that are being withheld — including internal memos from his superiors that may indicate he was targeted for political reasons.

“Mr. Lovinger was targeted because he blew the whistle on Stefan Halper and a Clinton crony getting suspicious Defense contracts,” said Fitton. “It is disturbing that the Defense Department may now be implicated in Spygate targeting of President Trump.”



To: Brumar89 who wrote (1134732)5/26/2019 4:14:41 PM
From: RetiredNow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574637
 
Trump Strikes Back

Authored by James Howard Kunstler via Kunstler.com,

Not long ago, few Americans of the thinking persuasion might have imagined that such a well-engineered republic, with its exquisite checks and balances, sturdy institutions, and time-tested traditions would end up as so much smoldering goop in a national dumpster fire, but such is the sad state-of-the-union moving into the fateful summer of 2019. The castle of the permanent bureaucracy is about to be torched by an uprising of deplorable peasants led by a Golden Golem made furious by relentless litigation. It’s Game of Thrones meets the Thermidorian Reaction with a Weimar-flavored cherry on top — really one for the ages!



There’s perhaps a lot to dislike about Donald J. Trump, US President No. 45.Despite all the grooming and tailoring, there’s little savoir faire there. He tweets not like a mellifluous songbird, but in snorts like a rooting aardvark. His every predilection is an affront to the refined Washington establishment: his dark business history, his beloved ormolu trappings, his Mickey-D cheeseburgers, the mystifying hair-doo.

Even so, the bad faith of his antagonists exceeds even Mr. Trump’s defects and vices. The plot they concocted to get rid of him failed. And, yes, it was a plot, even a coup. And they fucked it up magnificently, leaving a paper trail as wide as Interstate-95. Now all that paper is about to fall over the District of Columbia like radioactive ash, turning many current and former denizens of rogue agencies into the walking dead as they embark on the dismal journey between the grand juries and the federal prisons.

Hence, the desperate rage of the impeachment faction, in direct proportion to their secret shameful knowledge that the entire RussiaGate melodrama was, in fact, a seditious subterfuge between the Hillary Clinton campaign and a great many key figures in government up-to-and-including former president Barack Obama, who could not have failed to be clued-in on all the action. Even before the declassification order, the true narrative of events has been plainly understood: that the US Intel “community” trafficked in fictitious malarkey supplied by Mrs. Clinton to illegally “meddle” in the 2016 election.



Most of the facts are already documented. Only a few details remain to be confirmed: for instance, whether international man-of-mystery and entrapment artist Josef Mifsud was in the employ of the CIA, and/or Britain’s MI6, and/or Mrs. Clinton’s Fusion GPS contractor (or Christopher Steele’s Orbis Business Intelligence company, a subcontractor to both Fusion GPS and the FBI). Questions will now be asked — though not by The New York Times.

The evidence already public indicates that Robert Mueller must have known as early as the date of his appointment (and likely before) that the predicating evidence for his inquiry was false. After all, his soon-to-be lead prosecutor, Andrew Weissmann, was informed of that in no uncertain terms by his DOJ colleague, Deputy Attorney General Bruce Ohr, in 2016. Justice may seek to know why Mr. Mueller did not inform the target of his inquiry that this was so. The answer to that may be that Mr. Mueller’s true mission was to disable Mr. Trump as long as possible while setting an obstruction of justice trap — which also failed tactically.

Notice that Mr. Mueller declined to testify before the House Judiciary Committee last week. Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) was a fool to invite him. Did he not know that minority members of his committee get to ask questions too?



In an interesting turn of the screw last week, polling showed that a majority of those asked were in favor of investigations into the origin of the RussiaGate story. The FBI, being an agency under the direct supervision of the Attorney General, will be hosed out for sure. The CIA, on the other hand, has a sordid history of acting as a sovereign state within the state — hence the derivation of the Deep State. They are renowned for protecting their own. Remember, the Senate Minority Leader, Mr. Schumer, snidely told the incoming President Trump at the get-go that the Intel community “has six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.” I guess we’ll finally get to see about that because the CIA’s former director, the wicked Mr. Brennan, is grand jury bound. I suspect he will not be protected by his former colleagues. His downfall may presage a more thorough cleanup, and perhaps a major reorganization, of this monstrous agency.

The indictment of Julian Assange adds a big wrinkle to these upcoming proceedings. Apart for what it means to First Amendment protection for a free press (no small matter), Mr. Assange is the one person who actually knows who handed over the “hacked” DNC emails to Wikileaks. Perhaps getting the answer to that question is the real reason that the DOJ is throwing the book at him. The trial of Mr. Assange is sure to be a humdinger.

I’m convinced, personally, that all this melodrama will play out against the background of a cratering global economy, tanking financial markets, and epic disruption of the established international order. Consider laying in some supplies.