notobtuse wrote: » If Trump didn't register to vote until he was 41, then I guess you are correct. But that's hard to believe. Most of us who care about how the government works register to vote when we fist can. For me that was 18. The voting age was lowered to 18 from 21 in 1971. If Trump registered to vote when he first could that would be at age 21.
notobtuse wrote: » Yes, there should be sympathy for Trump. The Inspector General of the Department of Justice, Michael Horowitz just issued report on Andrew McCabe, the disgraced former deputy director of the FBI regarding his part in the 2016 election.https://static01.nyt.com/files/2018/us/politics/20180413a-doj-oig-mccabe-report.pdf Bottom line… Andrew McCabe leaked information to the media about an ongoing investigation because he wanted to help Hillary Clinton and harm Donald Trump. He then lied repeatedly about his behavior both under oath and in unsworn conversation with superiors. He should be prosecuted. Horowitz will be following up with reports on other FBI partisan activities in the 2016 presidential election. Maybe even collusion with the State Department, mishandling of the Clinton email investigation, pay-to-play at the Clinton Foundation, and who knows what else? I’m predicting this might turn out to be the largest political scandal in US. History. Think about it… A concerted effort by operatives in the Department of Justice, the FBI, and other intelligence agencies to influence the course of a presidential election and then, when that didn’t work... to sabotage the people’s choice.
aloyisious wrote: » RIP Barbara Bush.... It's probably too soon to mention this in relation to the lady's funeral but I'm expecting there to be a chance that Don will be on the invite list for protocol reasons. It might be a chance for Don & the GOP leadership to talk about their differences face to face, maybe arrange future meetings behind the scenes.
jobbridge4life wrote: » First of all... wikipedia.
robinph wrote: » Unless it's a "quiet family funeral" then I'd expect all former presidents and first ladies would be in attendance as well as the current one. It's only one step down from the funeral of the head of state level event
notobtuse wrote: » Yes, there should be sympathy for Trump. The Inspector General of the Department of Justice, Michael Horowitz just issued report on Andrew McCabe, the disgraced former deputy director of the FBI regarding his part in the 2016 election.https://static01.nyt.com/files/2018/us/politics/20180413a-doj-oig-mccabe-report.pdfBottom line… Andrew McCabe leaked information to the media about an ongoing investigation because he wanted to help Hillary Clinton and harm Donald Trump. He then lied repeatedly about his behavior both under oath and in unsworn conversation with superiors. He should be prosecuted.
jooksavage wrote: » That's the thing - how much worse is it going to get over the next 2-3 years? We can all look forward to the mid-terms with hope but the chances are, Trump will still finish out his term. I've wondered for a while if comments like the Megyn Kelly thing, and the worse stuff that came later ("Grab em' by the...", impression of Serge Kovaleski, his defaming of the Kahns) have actually been something of a scandal vaccine for Trump - each new scandal is like a booster shot, making his base ever more immune, and the rest of the world ever more numb to further outrages.
Blowfish wrote: » If you are going to call for someone to be prosecuted based on a report, you should at least have the decency to read it first. What you've said in bold is complete nonsense and absolutely not what the report says. If anything, it's the complete opposite, the leak would have harmed Clinton as it revealed the existence of the investigation into the Clinton Foundation, which wasn't publicly known about at the time. Of course that wouldn't fit the 'MAGA DEEP STATE CONSPIRE AGAINST TRUMP' nonsense narrative though so it'll be ignored.
Leroy42 wrote: » Yes, that was my reading of the report as well. There is no doubt that McCabe is in big trouble but from the report (or at least my reading of it) it seems that he released info detrimental to HC (whether it actually had a negative impact is harder to judge but it was not meant as a positive). Also, we need to recall that Trump is very much in favour of leaks. HE asked the Russians to hack into and leak the 33k HC e-mails. He called Wikileaks "amazing" during the campaign. So, it is hard to imagine that Trump fired McCabe over these leaks, since he was originally in favour of them. It gives him a convenient cover but it doesn't make sense. McCabe must feel pretty hard done by that he fought so hard to get Trump elected (or at least not HC) and then get fired soon after. But to claim that this report gives any credibility to Trump or the claims that there is a deep state conspiracy against him.
everlast75 wrote: » Btw there is an excellent podcast this week on Trumpcast regarding Cohen and Mueller's strategy with Trump
Water John wrote: » Absolutely no doubt, Mueller has taken out, 'insurance'.
jooksavage wrote: » As O'Brien puts it, Mueller is playing 3D chess. The Trump team are playing bingo.
amandstu wrote: » Did Trump back down from a face to face interview with him(because he was terrified**)? *I think he would intimidate me even if I had nothing to hide.
everlast75 wrote: » Finally - Trump has tweeted regarding Ms. Clifford's case! Avenatti is playing a storm(y). Has Trump walked himself into a civil case, which can be taken while he is sitting. Avenatti says he has..https://twitter.com/MichaelAvenatti/status/986553722846285824?s=19
mcmoustache wrote: » Here's Trump's tweet.https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/986547093610299392 There are a lot of rumblings that this is a member of Trump's security. From seeing what Avenatti has been doing, I wouldn't be surprised if they already knew who this person was before the sketch.
Leroy42 wrote: » As Trump never knew about that how can he be so sure that Cohen didn't go further?