nedboy7 Posted Monday at 01:02 AM Posted Monday at 01:02 AM 31 minutes ago, 4th&long said: The Trump administration will go down in history as one of the most corrupt administrations in history not just our the USA but the world. The stuff that had been done in the first month is laughable. But but the kids laptop bro!!!
4th&long Posted Monday at 01:08 AM Posted Monday at 01:08 AM 'Lies and distortions': New York Times offers unusually blunt assessment of Trump tactics https://flip.it/.m1Nu3
Doc Posted Monday at 03:33 AM Posted Monday at 03:33 AM 3 hours ago, nedboy7 said: I was against vax mandates and the vaccine. Not sure why I have to explain this to you you ***** moron. Do you even read other news sources to see the type of torture they are putting people thru? I have friends in high federal positions. The Trump administration is disgusting. Like you. ***** loser. My condolences to them. I hope they saved and invested well.
SectionC3 Posted Monday at 03:38 AM Posted Monday at 03:38 AM 4 minutes ago, Doc said: My condolences to them. I hope they saved and invested well. They all bought HCQ futures at the outset of the pandemic, so they're probably doing OK now.
Doc Posted Monday at 03:55 AM Posted Monday at 03:55 AM 2 minutes ago, SectionC3 said: They all bought HCQ futures at the outset of the pandemic, so they're probably doing OK now. If you meant they bought Sanofi at the outset of the pandemic, yeah, good move.
The Frankish Reich Posted Monday at 05:12 PM Author Posted Monday at 05:12 PM https://www.wsj.com/us-news/law/doj-slip-ups-show-challenges-of-defending-trumps-freewheeling-approach-6ce6a25e This was my job for a while - defending Executive Branch policies (Democratic and Republican) before judges. You start out by talking to the Agency lawyers to get the government's position. I need to know what I'm defending and on what basis. Here, the Trump Administration hasn't even thought it out. They just send out a DOJ lawyer to twist in the wind. WASHINGTON—A judge posed what he thought was a straightforward question: As the government laid off federal employees en masse, was it required to give advance notice to newly hired workers who were still in their probationary periods? “Your honor, I don’t have the answer to that precise question off the top of my head,” said Justice Department lawyer Abhishek Kambli, representing the Trump administration in a hearing last week. “OK, but that strikes me as a pretty important question,” said U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama, in Washington, D.C. It was the kind of uncomfortable exchange that has been increasingly familiar over the past month as government lawyers have scrambled to defend against scores of lawsuits spurred by President Trump’s blitz of executive actions. During fast-moving proceedings, DOJ lawyers at times have struggled on questions of law and fact about what Trump and his lieutenants are actually doing, drawing frustration and rebukes from judges across the country. In some cases, lawyers later submitted corrections to what they have told the courts.
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