Visit Counter

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Dianne Feinstein still hasn't seen evidence of collusion



Ever since Trump took the oath of office Democrats have been spewing Russian Collusion. 
As it turns out it was Hillary, not Trump.

But the bloodhounds at CNN are still sniffing the trail...

Watch Trapper desperately question/interrogate Feinstein... searching, begging, pleading, for any tidbit of dirt to help his crusade of destroying the Trump presidency. His one-sided non-journalistic skills are clearly evident and I imagine he feels right at home at the fake news station CNN. 


Please, Dianne, throw him a bone.

Video 378


Another case in point!

Watch Feinstein stick a pin in Blitzer's balloon leaving him almost speechless only to say the investigation is ongoing... so he still has hope.




Video 379





Share/Bookmark

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

‘He grabbed my thigh, saying "I like all of that right there"': Journalist claims she was sexually harassed by Rev Jesse Jackson






*A female journalist on Tuesday accused the Rev Jesse Jackson of groping her thighs during a picture-taking session 


*Danielle Young, a writer for The Root, penned an article in which she alleges that Jackson touched her inappropriately while also making a crude sexual remark


*‘As I walked within arm’s reach of him, Jackson reached out a hand and grabbed my thigh, saying, “I like all of that right there!”'


*Jackson then 'gave my thigh a tight squeeze,' she writes


*Although Rev Jackson does not recall the meeting, he profoundly and sincerely regrets any pain Ms. Young may have experienced,’ Jackson's rep said

--------------------------------------


Jackson a married "Reverend" already has a mistress and one love child (that we know of). I guess that wasn't enough... he needed to expand the congregation.
Bet if Jesse wasn't a man of the cloth he could have made it in Hollywood.



Anyone remember when Rev Jackson was counseling Bill about his affairs?





Like Timothy Leary preaching to Charlie Sheen about drug use. 


-----------------------------




A female journalist on Tuesday accused the Rev Jesse Jackson of groping her.

Danielle Young, a writer for the online site The Root, penned an article in which she alleges that Jackson touched her inappropriately while also making a crude sexual remark during an encounter in Chicago three years ago.

‘I walked toward Jackson, smiling, and he smiled back at me,’ Young wrote.

‘His eyes scanned my entire body. All of a sudden, I felt naked in my sweater and jeans.

‘As I walked within arm’s reach of him, Jackson reached out a hand and grabbed my thigh, saying, “I like all of that right there!” and gave my thigh a tight squeeze.’

The article includes a number of photographs of the encounter. Although there is no picture of Jackson touching Young’s thighs, the civil rights leader is seen hugging and embracing Young.




Young wrote that even though she is seen smiling and laughing in the photos, it was simply a defense mechanism. ‘I did what most women in an uncomfortable position do: I giggled,’ Young wrote

‘I was shocked, to say the least,’ she wrote.

‘Even though Jackson had had his hand reached out, I had no idea that he would touch me in a sexual way.’

Young claimed that the incident was witnessed by people who were there.

'A few of my co-workers saw Jackson’s hand grip my thigh as it was happening, and they laughed harder than I did,' she wrote. 




‘I admired this man who marched alongside the Rev Martin Luther King Jr, a man who represented our ability to overcome, a man who is really…just a man,' she wrote

'Their laughter didn’t feel like the same type of nervous laughter I had when my thigh was in his hand. 

'Theirs was as if they had just heard the best joke ever. It was almost an encouragement of Jackson’s behavior. 

'I’m not blaming them; I’m just curious as to why most of them thought what happened was more funny than alarming. That’s concerning.'





Share/Bookmark

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

James Comey officially joins Twitter, ditches 'secret' handle





The former FBI director finally changed his @FormerBu Twitter handle on Monday to @Comey and said he is “glad to be part of the Twitterverse” — officially. (Reuters)



James Comey is no longer Reinhold Niebuhr on Twitter.

The former FBI director finally changed his @FormerBu Twitter handle on Monday to @Comey and said he is “glad to be part of the Twitterverse” — officially.

“Here’s my new handle. Glad to be part of the Twitterverse. Grateful to Reinhold for the cover these last few years,” Comey tweeted Monday morning.

The account included a blue “verified” check mark and a headshot of Comey. He also changed the cover photo to an image of his new book, “A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership.”

Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership?

...Lies are the only 'trait' that would pertain to Comey.

To make the account even more official, the Twitter bio stated: “Formerly @FormerBu, past FBI Director, current husband, and father, writing and speaking about ethical leadership, taller and funnier in person.”






Share/Bookmark

Friday, November 3, 2017

Sexual Harassment... analyzed














Share/Bookmark

U.S. Army's Bergdahl spared prison time for deserting




This is a travesty!!! 

In the annals of injustice, this will go down with the infamous Clinton emails, OJ, and Casey Anthony. 
Sgt Andrew Tahmooressi spent more time in a Mexican jail for making a wrong turn! Truly unbelievable.

 The article below mentions soldiers who were injured looking for Bergdahl. 

What about those who died?

Was this story a lie?









Must have shown up for the verdict decked out in pink panties and got the Chelsea Manning treatment. 

-----------------------------------





FORT BRAGG, N.C., Nov 3 (Reuters) - U.S. Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl on Friday was spared prison time for endangering fellow troops when he deserted his post in Afghanistan in 2009, but a military judge ordered he should be dishonorably discharged from the service.

Bergdahl was captured by the Taliban and spent five years under brutal captivity by the insurgent group. He had faced up to life in prison after pleading guilty to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy.

The 31-year-old Idaho native trembled in a military courtroom at Fort Bragg in North Carolina as he waited to hear his punishment.

Army Colonel Jeffery Nance delivered the sentence in a hearing that lasted just two minutes, and did not comment on his decision. He also recommended Bergdahl be demoted to private.

Bergdahl and lawyers in the case had no immediate comment.

Prosecutors had asked Nance to send Bergdahl to prison for 14 years for the hardships and injuries endured by service members who searched for the soldier after he left his combat outpost in Paktika province in June 2009 without permission.

Defense lawyers had said Bergdahl, who experts testified has several mental health conditions, should not go to prison.

Bergdahl's case made him a polarizing figure. He drew withering criticism from political leaders in Washington and fellow soldiers, both for the dangerous efforts to find him and the 2014 Taliban prisoner swap brokered by the Democratic Obama administration that secured his release.

During his successful campaign for the presidency last year, Republican Donald Trump called Bergdahl "a no-good traitor who should have been executed."

Nance, acting on a defense motion, ruled that Trump's comments had not influenced him nor affected Bergdahl's chances of a fair sentence, but said he would consider them a mitigating factor.

Defense attorneys argued at Bergdahl's sentencing hearing that he was a young, hardworking soldier who did not understand the full consequences of his actions when he deserted.

Bergdahl, who has said he wanted to report problems in his unit, apologized in court this week for the suffering he caused his comrades and admitted he had made "a horrible mistake."

Prosecutors, however, said Bergdahl knew his disappearance would trigger an alarm in the war zone.

Prosecutors acknowledged that Bergdahl suffered during his years as a prisoner of the Taliban, but argued that did not diminish the pain of fellow service members who were injured during the futile hunt for him.








Share/Bookmark