LEMZIMUS_RAMSEY
New member
Ahhh Trumperica...
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
DoUwant2go2Heaven;c-9922722 said:2stepz_ahead;c-9919807 said:honestly....living outside the states.
America is in tremendous trouble.
i ask that you begin to look into your family history to try to get another passport....or dual citizenship.
America is fukked on so many levels
1 day and in 1 hour my friend. Amen.
Like Water;c-9929645 said:blackgod813;c-9929444 said:Alan being real an people are shocked when white people do that....he is not a racist
Stfu, faggot.
blackgod813;c-9930639 said:Grow up u think im let u label alan...when i study him
all original;c-9930711 said:blackgod813;c-9930639 said:Grow up u think im let u label alan...when i study him
You caping hard as a muthafucka
![]()
texas409;c-9930390 said:DoUwant2go2Heaven;c-9922722 said:2stepz_ahead;c-9919807 said:honestly....living outside the states.
America is in tremendous trouble.
i ask that you begin to look into your family history to try to get another passport....or dual citizenship.
America is fukked on so many levels
1 day and in 1 hour my friend. Amen.
@DoUwant2go2Heaven
Explain my brother
Report: Mueller Subpoenas Manafort’s Former Ukraine PR Colleagues
Special counsel Robert Mueller has issued grand jury subpoenas compelling testimony from public relations executives who worked with former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort on a campaign promoting a pro-Russian Ukrainian political party, NBC News reported Friday.
Several unname people with direct knowledge of the matter told NBC that Mueller’s team has asked for documents and testimony from firms who assisted Manafort’s lobbying campaign, which ran from 2012 to 2014. Manafort retroactively registered as a foreign agent for his work on behalf of Ukraine’s Party of Regions and the country’s deposed president, Viktor Yanukovych.
Manafort has emerged in recent weeks as a linchpin in Mueller’s probe into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election, potential collusion between Russian officials and the Trump campaign, and the financial dealings of various Trump associates.
FBI agents raided a home he owns in Alexandria, Virginia last month, and he is under federal scrutiny for his work for the Party of Regions, his offshore banking transactions, and mounting questions about whether he used his complex web of real estate dealings to launder money from Eastern Europe.
Manafort also attended a pivotal June 2016 sit-down with Donald Trump, Jr., President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, and several Russian operatives, one of whom claimed to information that would hurt Hillary Clinton as part of a Kremlin effort to help Trump’s campaign.
mc317;c-9959003 said:
GOP Representative Puts Forward Proposal To Kill Mueller Probe
Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) has put forward a provision that would make deep cuts to resources committed to special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into President Donald Trump’s campaign and its ties to Russian officials, Politico reported.
The amendment is one of hundreds filed as part of the government spending package the House is set to review when it returns from recess next week.
The proposal would end funding for the investigation within six months of passage and would prohibit the probe from touching any event that occurred before June 2015, when Trump launched his campaign.
“Congress should use its spending power to clarify the scope and limit the duration of this investigation,” he said in a statement to Politico, calling the investigation a “fishing expedition.”
The move comes just a day after Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), head Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told USA Today that the committee should have “two to three times” its current resources for the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Mueller haunts the West Wing
Steve Bannon provoked lots of chatter for telling Charlie Rose on "60 Minutes" that President Trump's firing of FBI Director James Comey may have been the worst mistake in "modern political history."
What's intriguing is the reason he said it: the belief of some close White House allies that special counsel Bob Mueller, whose appointment was triggered by Comey's ouster, could use events surrounding the firing to make an obstruction of justice case against Trump.
There's a good reason that Vice President Pence has hired a lawyer, Bannon freaked out about the decision, and Mueller plans to interview a slew of current and former West Wing aides: They were with Trump during those frantic days, and know what he was saying and what was on his mind.
White House aides with legal exposure to these events have quickly reached four conclusions, according to conversations with Jonathan Swan and me:
- Mueller is burrowing in hard on the obstruction of justice angle.
- The "angry, meandering" draft White House justification for firing Comey — which was never released, but obtained by Mueller — could be used as evidence of Trump's unvarnished thinking when venting to staff.
- Legal fees, with white-collar attorneys charging $1,000 an hour, get cripplingly expensive pretty quick. Watch for outside legal defense funds to pop up quickly.
- The investigation's financial dimensions are worrisome. The focus on Michael Cohen, a Trump lawyer and confidant whose business dealings are intertwined with the president's, has been particularly troubling for those in Trump's close orbit. Cohen dealt with some colorful characters. And when plans for the Trump Tower in Moscow are fully picked apart, other questionable Russian characters may be drawn in.
Republicans close to the White House say every sign by Mueller — from his hiring of Mafia and money-laundering experts to his aggressive pursuit of witnesses and evidence — is that he's going for the kill.
- The Wall Street Journal reports on the front page today that outside Trump lawyers "earlier this summer concluded that Jared Kushner should step down ... because of possible legal complications ... and aired concerns about him to the president." Kushner has since defended himself on Capitol Hill.
Be smart: Trump allies fret that the White House is ill-prepared for the public showdown with Mueller that will eventually come, and should be making legal, political and constitutional arguments for the president's right to fire Comey. Statements by Trump lawyers tend to rattle, rather than reassure, White House allies.
- Trump associates tell me Trump mused about firing Mueller. But now, one associate said, the damage would be as horrendous as "firing the Pope."
NYT’s Ken Vogel: WH Staff Worried that Mueller Has Colleagues ‘Wearing a Wire’
Yesterday, Vogel surreptitiously encountered two senior Trump Lawyers at a D.C. steakhouse “loudly” discussing apparent divisions on Team Trump over the best way to proceed with the Russia investigation and filed a juicy report in today’s NY Times.
Vogel appeared on CNN this morning with host Poppy Harlow who asked the DC based reporter to discuss the buried “nugget” that White House staffers are so concerned about Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation that some staffers may be “wearing a wire.”
The NY Times politics reporter didn’t discuss the specifics of the “wearing a wire” report so much, but he did add that the reported paranoia surrounding alleged listening devices suggests that ongoing deliberations with in the Trump administration have become so fraught that “there is suspicion about which sides people are on.”
Reports: Mueller’s Team Interviewed Rod Rosenstein About Comey Firing
Special counsel Robert Mueller’s team interviewed Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein about the firing of James Comey as FBI director over the summer, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday night, citing people familiar with the Mueller probe.
CNN later confirmed that Mueller’s office has interviewed Rosenstein as part of its Russia probe. The interview took place in either June or July, according to the Wall Street Journal. Mueller’s team has been looking into whether President Donald Trump attempted to obstruct justice by firing Comey.
Rosenstein sat for an interview for an investigation he technically oversees as the deputy attorney general.Asked about this, Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior suggested that there is still no reason for Rosenstein to recuse himself from the probe.
“As the deputy attorney general has said numerous times, if there comes a time when he needs to recuse, he will. However, nothing has changed,” Prior told the Journal.
Rosenstein discussed with Trump his concerns about Comey in May, and promptly wrote a memo outlining the reasons for Comey’s firing at Trump’s direction, as has been previously reported.
In his interview with Mueller’s team, Rosenstein said that Trump at the time acknowledged that firing Comey would not end the Russia probe and that the decision could create problems for the president, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.