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Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Do what I say not what I do




Barry loves gun control and gun free zones…


except when it comes to his nice cozy family.

 Easy to say when you have armed guards watching your kids every move.






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Monday, October 5, 2015

Our government is riddled with corruption






It's hard to tell the good guys from the bad anymore. You name the agency and I bet there are more people working there who are corrupt then not. The IRS scandal. What was the end result? Nothing. The FBI investigating the IRS scandal? Ditto. Now Chaffetz was targeted by the SS. Will Clancy get fired? You can bet the house he won't. The most you could hope for is… he wants to spend more time with his family.. and even that looks improbable.

This is the trickle down leadership coming from an unscrupulous WH. 
In charge of everything responsible for nothing.

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Secret Service chief knew about Jason Chaffetz leak earlier than initially reported




(CNN)The director of the Secret Service said Friday he first heard rumors about employees of his agency circulating unflattering information about a top Republican lawmaker earlier than he initially reported.

Director Joe Clancy said in a statement he was first aware of the "speculative rumor" of members of his agency discussing Rep. Jason Chaffetz's records on March 25. Previously, Clancy said he first heard about the information from the media April 1.

Clancy said when he first heard the information it was "not credible and was not attributed to a source of information or indicative of any action." 


An investigation released Wednesday by the Department of Homeland Security found that a top official at the agency encouraged colleagues via email to release records on Chaffetz contained "some information that he might find embarrassing needs to get out."

The Daily Beast shortly thereafter reported that Chaffetz had been rejected in 2003 by the agency he now oversees as a committee chairman.

Clancy said he didn't learn until later that Secret Service employees had accessed the private records of Chaffetz, and leaked that he applied unsuccessfully for a job at the agency.

"I feel it is extremely important to be as accurate as possible regarding my knowledge of this matter and I have personally spoken to Chairman Chaffetz to advise him of the additional information that I provided to the Inspector General," Clancy said.






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A personal assessment of Donald Trump





On a tip from Phil McCafferty





By Stephen Meister 9/27/15



Despite Donald Trump's meteoric rise to the top of
the Republican presidential polls, the GOP
establishment continues to bash its leading candidate.
Apparently "party-cide" is contagious: The Democratic
establishment continues to ride the sinking Clinton
campaign like the string quartet on the deck of the
Titanic — the majority of Americans know she's a liar
and don't trust her. It's a fight to the death all
right, only each party's pointing a gun at its own
head.


GOP establishment favorite Jeb Bush is hemorrhaging
voters too. CBS News/YouGov shows Bush coming in a
pathetic eighth place in New Hampshire and doing only
marginally better in Iowa, where he now places fifth.


As an attorney who's worked for Trump (I have not
represented him for the past year and a half) — and
many years ago, against him — his success on the
campaign trail comes as no surprise: Trump's a man of
exceptional tenacity and guts, insightful intuitions,
clear purposes, an intelligence that's expressed
forcefully and directly, always without regard to
political correctness, and a world class negotiator.
Trump intuitively understands what troubles Americans
and boldly states their concerns; I guarantee he'll
never be an appeaser of foreign governments; there'll
be no Neville Chamberlains or hapless apprentices for
domestic or foreign policy, in his administration — if
you're not doing your job, you'll be fired.


Coming off President Obama's massive failures, most
recently his hugely dangerous appeasement of Iran (and
funding of the terrorist regime), Americans hunger for
Trump's common sense approach, especially when coupled
with his incorruptibility: Trump doesn't need donors
(let alone a foundation to function as money
generating, influence-peddling machine), and when he
says politicians are forever hitting him up for money,
I can tell you he's not exaggerating.


All this has allowed Trump to tap into a geyser of
American distrust and disgust over liberal policies,
including out-of-control spending, immigration
amnesty, and national defense (or better said the lack
thereof), and over establishment Republicans who,
despite being in control of the House of
Representatives, have done nothing to stop America's
fall. The voters see the wreckage Europe has suffered
from decades of socialist policies and porous borders
and they don't want that to happen to America.


With an anchor baby born every 93 seconds, the
Heartland isn't content to allow America to suffer the
fate of Europe by granting millions of illegals
amnesty; Americans signed onto a melting pot, not pot
luck — and believe we're supposed to live alongside
the immigrants we let in, not those who break in.


Pundits on both sides of the aisle are panicking over
Trump. First, they said he'd never declare he's
running, that it was all a publicity stunt; then, when
Trump did declare, they said he'd never file the
financial disclosures; then, after he filed, they said
his remarks on immigration would be his undoing (yet
those remarks only galvanized his base); and then they
said he'd get crushed in the polls after the first
debate. That's 0 for 5.


Doubling down on their badly wrong predictions, and
realizing the debates won't bring him down, panicking
neo-con pundits now claim Trump's unfavorability
ratings will be his undoing. But polls show that's
Hillary's problem, not Donald's.


And, according to Survey USA, Trump is garnering
substantial portions of the black and Latino votes,
25-31 percent. That's something neither Romney nor any
other Republican nominee in recent memory has been
able to do.


Here's some free advice, Donald (your favorite kind):
Instead of the GOP asking you to pledge to support the
eventual GOP nominee, you should demand that the GOP
pledge to support you if you become that nominee.


In a match up against Sanders, Clinton or Biden, the
GOP is better off with Trump, whose business
experience, successes and star power can overpower an
aging socialist, a corrupt dynastic politician, or the
vice president of the most pathetic administration in
modern history.






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Anyone smell another Executive Order?




Obama Condemns 'Routine' of Mass Shootings, Says U.S. Has Become Numb


This puts me in mind of when Barry decreed amnesty for millions and said this.



'Scripture tells us that we shall not oppress a stranger'


But scripture doesn't apply to this little girl... 


a stranger to the world and millions like her who are routinely oppressed... killed for their body parts and sold on the black market.

Yes you have to love the holier-than-thou approach coming from the "Christian" who's mentor was this guy.



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The president delivered remarks from the White House after a gunman opened fire at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore.


WASHINGTON — President Obama's rage about gun massacres, building for years, spilled out Thursday night as he acknowledged his own powerlessness to prevent another tragedy and pleaded with voters to force change themselves.

"So tonight, as those of us who are lucky enough to hug our kids a little closer are thinking about the families who aren't so fortunate," the president said in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room, named for a man severely wounded by a would-be assassin's bullet, "I'd ask the American people to think about how they can get our government to change these laws, and to save these lives and let these people grow up."

Mr. Obama admitted that he was unable to do anything to prevent such tragedies by himself. 

This is the tipoff. He said the same thing about declaring amnesty...at least a dozen times.


And he did little to try to hide the anger and frustration that have deepened as he returns again and again to the White House lectern in the wake of a deadly mass shooting.

Mr. Obama took a veiled swipe at the National Rifle Association, which has successfully fought most limits on gun use and manufacture and has pushed through legislation in many states making gun ownership far easier. "And I would particularly ask America's gun owners who are using those guns properly, safely, to hunt for sport, for protecting their families, to think about whether your views are being properly represented by the organization that suggests it is speaking for you," he said.

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The entire focus on a background check is criminal history. So you could be a complete wacko nut job but as long as your criminal record is clean you'll get a gun. Therein lies the problem. I certainly see not giving criminals guns. But isn't giving guns to crazy people even worse? Why not run a check on their mental stability? In almost every one of these mass shootings it had little to do with criminality and everything to do with lunacy.









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Friday, October 2, 2015

Netanyahu Holds Epic Staring Contest With the UN





On a tip from Ed Kilbane





You got to see this!

The worthless fu--- are looking for a rock to crawl under.

Video 160










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