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Saturday, July 9, 2016

Clintonesque defined



Clintonesque:



Using language as a tool of deceit, clever obfuscation, using language to avoid candor and truthfulness, intending to confuse by clouding an issue.

Usage: His answer was so Clintonesque that it was laughable.


Here's a fine example.

Video 257


Notice how she deflects blame to everybody else but herself while simultaneously distorting lying about what Comey actually said. An encore performance with Blitzer, telling more lies, to cover the original deception. 

Wonder if Blitzer swallowed any of her bullshit?





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Friday, July 8, 2016

At least 5 Dallas police officers killed, 6 more wounded in protest shooting; Obama calls attack 'vicious'





Yes, the cops are not innocent 100% of the time which prompted this incident. 

But for Barry to call this a vicious attack after fanning the flames of racism, thugs transformed into martyrs before all the facts are known, beginning with, "If I had a son his name would be Trayvon" is a travesty. What you see here is not a vicious attack but the culmination of Barry and his sidekick Al inciting a race war in America. Barry has effectively transported America back to Rosa Parks and the Montgomery bus boycott.


Al pulling another Tawana



Hands up don’t shoot was totally debunked by the forensic evidence. How many of the so-called “witnesses” who claimed Brown was on his knees when shot were prosecuted for giving false testimony?





If I was a cop, "You want protection? Fuck you buy a gun. I quit!"





Every 2 hours someone is shot in Chicago and no one gives a shit because it's black on black crime. 

Which proves one thing resoundingly...Black Lives Matter ONLY when they're shot by a white guy.


On a side note remember this?


It didn't.


Dallas took this lying bitch off the front page.




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Five Dallas police officers were killed and at least six more injured in a coordinated sniper attack during an anti-police brutality protest Thursday, an explosion of violence that President Obama declared a "vicious, calculated and despicable attack on law enforcement."

Obama, speaking from at a NATO summit in Poland, said America is "horrified" over the shootings and asked all Americans to pray for the fallen officers and their families.

"There's no possible justification for these kinds of attacks or any violence against law enforcement," Obama said, hours after a pre-attack speech in which he cited two racially charged police shootings earlier in the week and called for an end to bias in law enforcement.

Dallas Police Chief David Brown said it appeaars four rifle-toting suspects were working together, "triangulating at different positions" as protesters marched through the streets of Dallas. The protest was one of several around the country, prompted by police shootings of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota.

Three suspects were in custody and another who had holed up in a parking garage killed himself. Brown said late Thursday police do not know if all of the shooters had been accounted for. One woman was taken into custody near the garage and two men were being questioned after police pursued their vehicle away from the crime scene.

The suspect who killed himself had claimed that explosives had been set around the city, and much of downtown Dallas was locked down while police searched before determining there were no bombs. He died after first barricading himself in at the El Centro Community College parking garage, firing at police and warning the "the end is coming," according to KDFW-TV.

Brown offered no possible motive or identities for the suspects, but a news conference was scheduled for Friday morning.

One of the cops killed was identified as Dallas Areat Rapid Transit Police Officer Brent Thompson, 43. He is the first DART officer to be killed in the line of duty. The others were picked off as the stood guard during the protest.

Thompson is the first officer to be killed in the line of duty since DART formed a police department in 1989, spokesman Morgan Lyons said.

"Our hearts are broken," DART spokesperson Morgan Lyons said in a statement. "This is something that touches every part of our organization. We have received countless expressions of support and sympathy from around the world through the evening. We are grateful for every message."

Three other DART officers were wounded, but they are expected to recover, Lyons said.

Brown said multiple shooters positioned themselves in two parking garages in downtown Dallas and "planned to injure and kill as many law enforcement officers as they could."

A Dallas police source estimated to Fox News that at least 60 rounds were fired over a "large kill zone." The source added that the shooting would have required considerable planning.

"It's a heartbreaking moment for the city of Dallas," Mayor Mike Rawlings said. "I ask everybody focus on one thing right now, and that is Dallas police officers, their families, those that are deceased [and] those that are in the hospital fighting for their lives."

Witness Carlos Harris told the Dallas Morning News the gunfire was "strategic. It was tap-tap-pause. Tap-tap-pause."

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott released a statement saying he has directed the Texas Department of Public Safety director to offer "whatever assistance the City of Dallas needs at this time."

"In times like this we must remember -- and emphasize -- the importance of uniting as Americans," Abbott said.

The protesters had gathered after a Minnesota officer on Wednesday fatally shot Philando Castile while he was in a car with a woman and a child in a St. Paul suburb. The aftermath of the shooting was purportedly live streamed in a widely shared Facebook video.

A day earlier, Alton Sterling was shot in Louisiana after being pinned to the pavement by two white officers. That, too, was captured on a cellphone video.

Other protests across the U.S. on Thursday were peaceful. In midtown Manhattan, protesters first gathered in Union Square Park. In Minnesota, where Castile was shot, hundreds of protesters marched in the rain from a vigil to the governor's official residence. Protesters also marched in Atlanta, Chicago and Philadelphia.

Anti-police protests have roiled the nation in each of the last two summers following controversial police shootings, including the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and last Aprils death of Fraddie Gray while in custody of Baltimore police.

Although a Department of Justice investigation cleared the police officer who shot Brown, and of the six Baltimore police officers charged in Gray's death, two have been acquitted, one's case was declared a mistrial and three more face trial.

The attack made Thursday the deadliest day for law officers since Sept. 11, 2001, when 72 officers died, according to the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. 






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Thursday, July 7, 2016

Comey testimony






This one floored me. Mulvaney asked Comey, “If she did the same thing as POTUS as she did as SOS would there be any charges?” Comey said no.

WOW...that opens up a whole new possibility. Why go small potatoes and get hacked by Guccifer when you can go direct to the horses mouth?


BTW...Comey said Killary used the same server used by Bill in their basement. Why would Bill need a server since he claims he only sent two emails in his entire life?






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What a f-ing shock!




Today "The Fix"went full circle.

U.S. attorney general closes Clinton email probe, says no charges






WASHINGTON, July 6 (Reuters) - The investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of private email while secretary of state is closed, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said on Wednesday, removing a legal cloud that threatened the presumptive Democratic nominee's presidential bid.

Lynch said she accepted the Federal Bureau of Investigation's recommendations that no charges be brought in the probe, as Republicans made clear they would not let Clinton's email headaches fade away easily.

"I received and accepted their unanimous recommendation that the thorough, year-long investigation be closed and that no charges be brought against any individuals within the scope of the investigation," Lynch said in a statement.

With the Nov. 8 U.S. presidential and congressional elections beginning to heat up, Republicans called on the administration to make public key documents in the Clinton email case.

Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee for president, speaking at a campaign rally in Cincinnati, Ohio, accused Clinton, his likely Democratic opponent, of bribing Lynch to decide not to press charges.

He was referring to reports, including in the New York Times this week, that Clinton, if elected president, might ask Lynch to stay on as attorney general.

"She said she's going to reappoint the attorney general and the attorney general is waiting to make a determination as to whether or not she's guilty. And boy was that a fast determination, wow," Trump said, adding, "That's bribery folks."

© AP Photo/Cliff Owen In this June 14, 2016 file photo, Attorney General Loretta Lynch speaks in Washington. On Capitol Hill, Representative Steve Scalise, the No. 3 House of Representatives Republican, reacted to Lynch's announcement by proclaiming: "Secretary Clinton broke the law and lied about it."

Senior Senate Republicans insisted that the FBI's investigation be made available to the public, including a transcript of the more than three hours Clinton spent last Saturday in an interview conducted by the agency.

Shortly before Lynch's announcement, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told reporters, "I think the next step...is to compare what Hillary Clinton said to the FBI with what Hillary Clinton's been saying to all of us over the last couple of years during this controversy."

In a blistering attack on Clinton, John Cornyn of Texas, the second-ranking Senate Republican, said on the Senate floor: "The bottom line is Secretary Clinton actively sought out ways to hide her actions as much as possible" by using a private email account while heading the State Department. "And in so doing, she put our country at risk" by leaving those emails vulnerable to computer hackers.

Democrats have questioned Republicans' motives and accused them of squandering taxpayer dollars with lengthy investigations that have failed to uncover illegal activities.

"Republicans are in such desperate shape because of Trump (that) they would seize upon anything" to divert attention, said Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid.

And Senator Patrick Leahy, the senior Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in a statement following Lynch's announcement: "This investigation is closed and that should be the end of this matter."

On Tuesday, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director James Comey said Clinton, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, had been "extremely careless" in her use of a private email server while she was secretary of state, but he recommended no criminal charges be filed in the case.

Comey, who was deputy attorney general during the George W. Bush administration before becoming FBI director in 2013, is scheduled to testify on Thursday before a House committee, where Republicans and Democrats are expected to press him on his findings in the Clinton case.

Lynch said she met on Wednesday afternoon with Comey and the career prosecutors and agents who had investigated whether Clinton broke the law as result of email servers kept in her Chappaqua, New York, home. One question is whether she mishandled classified information.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican, said on Wednesday it appeared Clinton received preferential treatment from the FBI.

Asked whether a special prosecutor should be named to investigate the matter, Ryan said the House would not "foreclose any options."

But Ryan did say that because of her messy handling of emails while serving as secretary of state, Clinton should be denied access to classified information during the campaign.

Presidential candidates normally get such briefings once they are formally nominated. McConnell, Ryan's Senate counterpart, stopped short of calling for such action.

Clinton's campaign was anxious to move on after Comey's announcement, saying in a statement on Tuesday it was pleased with the FBI decision.







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The Rule of Law



On a tip from Ed Kilbane



Rule of Law

Up until 7/4/2016

The rule of law is the legal principle that law should govern a nation, as opposed to being governed by arbitrary decisions of individual government officials. It primarily refers to the influence and authority of law within society, particularly as a constraint upon behavior, including behavior of government officials.









“The Rule of Law was officially burned and buried on live television by the Director of the FBI. You therefore no longer have any moral requirement to adhere to the same; your entire analysis must now rest on whether you are sufficiently afraid of being shot – and nothing more. 

America, as envisioned and fought for by its founders, died at 11:00 AM ET, 7/5/2016, 240 years and one day from birth to death.”


When everyone in the world knows Killary Clinton is guilty as hell and the powers that be let her walk...

Welcome to Venezamerica!







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