Jump to content

Foxx

Community Member
  • Posts

    11,545
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Foxx

  1. https://twitter.com/EpochTimes/status/1259889778989957121 you can zoom and manipulate this with ease. INFOGRAPHIC: Timeline of FBI’s FISA Abuse in Trump Campaign Investigation
  2. from the files of, 'some ***** you just can't make up' or, alternatively, 'reality is stranger than fiction', comes the following... FLASHBACK: Barack Obama Pardoned a Former General Who Lied to the FBI ... “The news over the last 24 hours I think has been somewhat downplayed — about the Justice Department dropping charges against Michael Flynn,” Obama said. “And the fact that there is no precedent that anybody can find for someone who has been charged with perjury just getting off scot-free. That’s the kind of stuff where you begin to get worried that basic — not just institutional norms — but our basic understanding of rule of law is at risk. And when you start moving in those directions, it can accelerate pretty quickly as we’ve seen in other places.” But, in 2017, just days before leaving office, Barack Obama pardoned retired Marine Corps general James E. Cartwright, who pleaded guilty to charges of lying to the FBI. Cartwright served as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Obama, and was “a key member of Mr. Obama’s national security team in his first term and earned a reputation as the president’s favorite general,” according to the New York Times. Cartwright had leaked classified information regarding Iran’s nuclear program to the media and lied to FBI officials investigating those leaks. He faced up to two years in prison before Obama pardoned him....
  3. i'll take door #3 and leave my phone at home. if i need one, i'll just use yours.
  4. Universe sure has its ways with irony. resolution number 6666...
  5. of course they did... https://twitter.com/ChuckRossDC/status/1259872835666939904
  6. should be interesting to say the least. https://twitter.com/jsolomonReports/status/1259841958538854406
  7. that didn't take long, lol, thanks.
  8. more on California being the test ground for draconian measures or bunk?
  9. you don't put sanctions on another country the day before the last day of your presidency and put that on the next administration. if you had even an ounce of decency, you let the next one make that decision as it is they who will be dealing with the ramifications. has there ever been a situation like this previously? i would be seriously surprised if there were.
  10. if voting changed anything, it would be illegal.
  11. you're an idiot.
  12. +1 to what DR and BG have said. i would just like to point out that it will be a good day when Grassley retakes the Senate Judiciary Committee's chair in the next iteration of the Senate. providing the Repub's keep control, that is.
  13. Hmm. Like most stories on this virus, it’s hard to be sure what’s going on. ... Fusion Ken?? hmmm ...
  14. the logical thought occurs... were the Russian sanctions a ruse by the Obamanation as a spring board to facilitate the Russian Collusion narrative?
  15. COVID-19 patient arrested after leaving fairgrounds quarantine, court records show ... According to an arrest affidavit, a 39-year-old man was taken to the Nashville Fairgrounds on Monday and placed under quarantine by the Metro Nashville Public Health Department because he tested positive for the coronavirus. Health officials told the man he could not leave until he was cleared, but on Thursday he jumped a fence and headed north on Nolensville Road, the affidavit states. He was stopped and arrested by Metro Nashville Parks police by a city cemetery nearly two miles from where he had been quarantined. Metro Parks has charged the man with a single count of escape from a penal institution, a class A misdemeanor. The statute that defines this crime makes no mention of it being used to enforce quarantine orders. When asked about the legal authority to make this arrest, the Metro Health Department cited a different section of law that classifies violating quarantine as a class B misdemeanor, which is a less serious offense. Brian Todd, spokesman for the Metro Health Department, said that law empowers police to arrest anyone who violates an infectious disease quarantine. The laws are not specific to residents of homeless shelters and could also be used to arrest someone who violates a Metro Health order to remain in quarantine at their home or a hospital. The arrest highlights the difference between people merely advised to remain at home and those who are ordered into quarantine. Residents across Nashville have been instructed by the mayor to remain at home as much as possible, but those who venture outside don’t face arrest. However, residents who test positive for coronavirus can be ordered into quarantine, which police can enforce. ...
  16. https://twitter.com/jokesonus4sure/status/1259225959007281152
  17. Turbo-charging The Great Depression and Great Repression ... It is no accident that we are seeing a broad range of enhanced police-state arrangements being put into place during the “COVID Pandemic.” Police-state arrangements are multiplying, often out of sight and with zero scrutiny. New police-state arrangements include stepping up the number of police departments in dozens of U.S. cities using more drones to “protect public health”—usually without telling anyone. A dystopian atmosphere has even emerged in some places. We are also seeing big tech companies like Apple launching “tracing apps” so as to “find infected people” and “improve public health.” Such apps will gather, store, and misuse gigantic quantities of private information, creating much anguish and many headaches for people in a variety of ways. State “digital checkpoints” have also conveniently emerged during the “COVID Pandemic.” Some states are now setting up arrangements that require those driving into their state to stop at some place close to the state border and complete some sort of digital personal inventory and questionnaire before being permitted to enter the state. Putting aside the many embarrassing logistical and technical problems that have emerged with these poorly-conceived antisocial arrangements, this is nonetheless an effective way to gather extensive private and personal information—and it is probably unconstitutional; certainly not something Americans are used to or should get used to. Perhaps worse, several mayors of major cities have publicly, casually, and openly called on people to snitch on each other in the name of “improving public heath.” Snitching all of a sudden has been cynically turned into a virtue, even a heroic act. But is such an approach a progressive, responsible, and ethical way to build a modern society that honors the dignity and personality of people? How is sowing distrust, animosity, and fear between neighbors helpful and acceptable? Is this how unity and mutual support are built? ...
  18. https://twitter.com/jsolomonReports/status/1259197710328102912
  19. +1 it's kinda funny how all those liberal hacks that have been giving DR ***** of late are nowhere to be found these days. because they know DR has been right all the way and their overlords are unable to craft a new narrative at this time (though i'm sure one will be forthcoming).
  20. Seattle to shut 20 miles of streets to most vehicles SEATTLE (AP) — Almost 20 miles (32 kilometers) of Seattle streets will permanently close to most vehicles by the end of May, Mayor Jenny Durkan said Thursday. The streets had been closed temporarily to provide more space for people to walk and bike at a safe distance during the coronavirus pandemic, The Seattle Times reported... ... Residents, delivery drivers, garbage and recycling workers and emergency response vehicles can continue to use the streets.
  21. of course, the inverse is also the same people... https://twitter.com/EmeraldRobinson/status/1258893111541075968
  22. https://twitter.com/JonathanTurley/status/1259098950650548224 https://twitter.com/JonathanTurley/status/1259100430849753089
×
×
  • Create New...