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Politics : A Real American President: Donald Trump -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maple MAGA who wrote (185844)2/7/2020 7:11:37 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Peter Strzok Responds to President Trump’s Criticism at Impeachment Acquittal Speech
February 6, 2020, 8:51 pm by Kristinn Taylor


Strzok spoke out via Twitter after his attorney Aitan Goelman commented. Goelman said, “Angered by the disclosures of yet more instances of his betrayal of our national security in the service of his own political advantage, President Trump raged and threatened those public servants tasked with investigating or testifying about his serial misconduct…Peter Strzok, a patriotic career counterintelligence agent whose conduct in the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election has been vindicated by two independent IG investigations, today found himself targeted by his President in yet another unhinged attack….”



To: Maple MAGA who wrote (185844)2/7/2020 8:01:53 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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IT IS THE RELIGION. THIS GUY IS WRONG...

Wanting to kill us all is madness, not religion

| Spectator USA
Rod Liddle

spectator.us

Europe Rod Liddle World

If we are serious that these attacks have nothing to do with Islam then let us apply some consistency to this apparent conviction




Sudesh Amman was singularly unsuccessful in his wish to kill kafirs, as he put it, and thereby find himself surrounded by the hoor al ayn — beautiful handmaidens who’ll do anything you want, frankly — in the afterlife. He had perhaps not followed the instructions in the book he had about how to stab people. Two were injured by the madman on Streatham High Road in south London; both, mercifully, should live.

However, Amman was shot dead by plain-clothes policemen before he could even scream out the old ‘Allahu Akbar’ thing. The cops were already there because Amman was known to them — known very well to them. I suppose, under British law, they were required to wait until he’d tried to stab somebody before they shot him. That is perhaps the first law that I would revisit when it comes to jihadi terrorists. I’d find it preferable if we dealt with them when they emerged from their homes. It would save a lot of time. I wonder how many policemen were tracking Amman? Bear in mind that they have at least another 3,000 known jihadis to keep an eye on and you have an indication of the enormous cost imposed on the taxpayer.

Amman was well-known to the security services because he had just been released from prison for terrorist offenses. He had been released, automatically, early — and it is this fact which seems to have caused most outrage. The government is now thinking of ceasing the automatic release of terrorists halfway through their sentences, mindful that some more of them are due for release this year. I am not sure that we are much better off if we simply let the likes of Amman wait another 14 months before enjoying a brief stabbing spree. It seems to me to be missing the point somewhat.



More has emerged about the stabber. He had apparently urged his girlfriend to decapitate his father- and mother-in-law — well, OK, we’ve all been there. He had expressed a wish to kill the ‘filthy kafirs’ and while in prison had voiced a desire to kill an MP. His mum, meanwhile, a lady called Haleema Faraz Khan, insisted that her offspring was a ‘nice polite boy’ who had been radicalized in Belmarsh prison. Given that he was sent to prison for possession of Isis material and the aforementioned book about how to stab people, you may think Mrs Khan a little wide of the mark, certainly on the ‘nice’ bit, although we cannot be certain that he did not wish his victims a cheery ‘good afternoon’ before he plunged the knife in.

Amman is the latest case of a terrorist released from prison, undergoing a spectacularly unsuccessful deradicalization program and then wandering off to murder, or try to murder, kafirs. Usman Khan, who killed two people near London Bridge in November, is perhaps the most infamous. Khan was actually engaged in a deradicalization conference when he decided to have a break and murder a few kafirs.

Have we not grasped that these programs are not terribly effective? Neither the ‘hard’ nor ‘soft’ programs, the latter of which attempt to divert their subjects into developing agreeable hobbies, such as ping-pong or basketry. Nor, pace Mrs Khan, is prison working terribly well. There is no doubt that many are radicalized in such places as Belmarsh. We are not helped by the fact that many imams we allow to minister to these maniacs are followers of the Deobandi sect, which is strictly opposed to integration.

We are also a little hamstrung by our liberalism, as ever. Ian Acheson, who led the independent review of Islamic extremism in our prisons, is opposed to the parole board assessing the threat value of prisoners about to be released and commented: ‘Cultural sensitivity among [prison] staff towards Muslim prisoners has extended beyond the basic requirements of faith observance and could inhibit the effective confrontation of extremist views.’

You would guess that’s about right. But there is another point to be made here. We insist, whenever such terrorist incidents occur, that the attack was ‘nothing to do with Islam’. And yet we are not consistent in this belief. The way in which we treat the perpetrators later always contains a genuflection toward the suggestion that these people are in some way enemy combatants on account of their faith. They are afforded imams, they are quartered with other Muslims, they are sent on deradicalization programs where Muslim community elders address their violent, er, shortcomings.

Why do any of this? If we are serious that these attacks have nothing to do with Islam then let us apply some consistency to this apparent conviction. If somebody wishes to kill as many people as possible because they do not believe precisely what that person believes, and further holds that their reward for doing so will be an endless succession of hoor al ayn, they are clearly mad and should be sectioned, incarcerated permanently as a consequence of their derangement. That is what we would do to someone possessed of similar narcissistic delusions who did not dignify them by recourse to the Qur’an. They are all simply psychopaths, not simple criminals, and should be treated as such.

Wanting to murder us all is surely a conviction rooted in insanity — and given that we have decided the likes of Amman are insane, we can hold them indefinitely and not let them out to be trailed across the country by plain-clothes policemen, waiting for them to stab someone. It would be hard for anyone to oppose such an approach, seeing as it also tidily removes Islam, and thus the wider and blameless Muslim population, from the equation.

This article was originally published in The Spectator’s UK magazine. Subscribe to the US edition here.



To: Maple MAGA who wrote (185844)2/7/2020 8:05:00 AM
From: FJB3 Recommendations

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Forget Moving On–Senate Must Probe Schiff, Ciaramella

realclearpolitics.com

Forget Moving On | RealClearPolitics
By Betsy McCaughey



The Democrats want impeachment to disgrace President Donald Trump "for life" and tilt the 2020 election. Not if Senator Lindsey Graham has his way. Graham is proposing post-impeachment investigations by the Senate to "get to the bottom" of the Democrats' impeachment hoax. That will pin the disgrace where it belongs -- on the party that dragged the nation through an unwarranted ordeal.

Meanwhile, Vice President Pence is urging the country to "acquit and move on." The Washington Post reports many Republican Senators feel the same.

Not so fast. It's not time to move on. These Senate investigations will be essential both to uncover House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff's intrigue in engineering the whistleblower complaint and to expose the solid reasons Trump had for asking the president of Ukraine to help the U.S. investigate the Bidens.

Graham said it's "important" to bring the whistleblower in for questioning to see "if the whistleblower was working with people on Schiff's staff that wanted to take Trump down."

What has already come to light is that on July 26, one day after Trump's controversial call with the Ukrainian president, Schiff hired a friend of the alleged whistleblower to join his staff. Shortly afterward, Schiff's staff met with the whistleblower and guided him on how to file a complaint.

Media outlets have identified the whistleblower as Eric Ciaramella. He doesn't deny it.

Fox News' Laura Ingraham reports that she obtained a series of State Department emails showing Ciaramella met with Ukrainian prosecutors at the White House in January 2016, when he served on the National Security Council as a Ukraine expert. The prosecutors were concerned about Hunter Biden's lucrative board position on the corrupt energy company Burisma, which was a target of an investigation.

Ciaramella isn't an unbiased informant like whistleblowers should be. He was aware of the Bidens' dealings in Ukraine in 2016 and now he has a leading part in the Democrats' playbook to protect them.

Graham's investigation also needs to examine why intelligence community inspector general Michael Atkinson rated the suspect whistleblower complaint "credible" and sent it to Congress -- the trigger required for Schiff to launch an impeachment investigation.

Whistleblower regulations say that "secondhand or unsubstantiated assertions" are not sufficient, but that's all Ciaramella could provide. He wasn't on the July 25 call. Atkinson testified to the intelligence community behind closed doors, and probably offered answers. But Schiff refused to release Atkinson's testimony, even to the Senators during the trial. A stunning concealment.

Schiff shuts down any questioning about the whistleblower. Don't be fooled. That's Schiff protecting himself. No law shields whistleblowers from a congressional inquiry.

Weeks ago, Senate Finance Committee staff interviewed an IRS whistleblower who says he heard secondhand that senior Treasury officials meddled in the IRS audit of the president or vice president's tax returns.

That IRS whistleblower also lacked firsthand knowledge of misdeeds. Yet House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal, a Democrat, used that whistleblower complaint to make his case for the release of Trump's back taxes. Concocting phony whistleblower complaints is the Democrats' new weapon of choice. That's why Graham is right to insist the whistleblower who launched impeachment be grilled in front of the Senate.

The post-impeachment inquiry also needs to dig into the Biden family's corrupt Ukraine dealings -- precisely what Trump asked Ukraine for help doing. Democrats claim allegations of Joe Biden's wrongdoing have been "discredited." Not true.

On Monday's "Today" show, he lamely tried to defend his son. But the issue is not just Hunter Biden's cash haul. Biden himself, as vice president, handed out millions in taxpayer dollars in Ukraine, including a $20 million loan to a longtime campaign donor to open a luxury car dealership there.

Graham insists: "I am going to bring in State Department officials and ask them why didn't you do something about the obvious conflict of interests Joe Biden had? Joe Biden's effort to combat corruption in Ukraine became a joke."

What isn't a joke is putting the nation through impeachment to cover it all up.