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Tuesday, September 22, 2020

They hate Trump so much they come from other countries to kill him




Who is Pascale Ferrier, the woman accused of sending ricin to Trump?



The Canadian woman charged with sending a ricin-laced letter to President Trump apparently tweeted a hashtag supportive of killing the commander-in-chief less than two weeks ago.

She might as well have Liberal Lezbo stamped on her forehead.


There... that's better.



Pascale Ferrier, of Quebec, was arrested Sunday at the border crossing between Fort Erie, Ontario, and Buffalo, New York, after allegedly mailing a letter addressed to Trump containing the highly toxic substance, according to CBC News.

She was carrying a gun at the time of her arrest at the Peace Bridge crossing, CNN said.

An account appearing to belong to Ferrier, 53, tweeted in response to a since-deleted post on Sept. 9: “I just read this tweet. I agree… Nobody did anything… It’s time to change! #killtrump.”

She also allegedly tweeted the same day to someone, “I have a new name for Trump: ‘the ugly tyrant clown.'”

The account bears the name Pascale Ferrier and lists Laval, Quebec, as the location. In her bio, Ferrier describes herself as a “techno-creative Nomad.”

Ferrier, who had been living in the US last year, was deported to Canada after authorities found she overstayed her six-month visa and had committed a crime while in America, the New York Times reported, citing a senior intelligence official.

Court records show that in March 2019, she was arrested in Texas on tampering with a government record charges. But the Times said she was also busted for possession of an unlicensed weapon and resisting arrest. She was found to be carrying a fake driver’s license, the official told the outlet.

The tampering with a government record charge was dismissed that May after she spent 20 days in jail — which is when officials uncovered her visa issue.Enlarge ImagePascale FerrierFacebook

A Facebook page under the name Pascale Ferrier describes her as self-employed, and sources told CTV News that she worked as a computer programmer.

Meanwhile, a Facebook business page called La Techno-Creative Nomade, run by that same Ferrier profile, posted in French about being in Texas in June 2019 and being “disappointed” that items were made in places like China and Mexico.

“If I’m in USA, I want to buy ‘made in USA,'” a translated version of the post said.

The poison-tainted letter addressed to Trump was detected at a government facility that screens mail addressed to the White House and the president. Two tests were done to confirm the presence of ricin, which has no known antidote.

Ferrier is also suspected of sending other ricin-filled letters to police in Texas.

“We believe a total of six letters were sent: one to the White House and five to Texas,” Cpl. Charles Poirier, spokesman for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police’s Quebec division, told CBC News.

RCMP officers were searching a condominium in Saint-Hubert on Monday but would not say how the residence was linked to Ferrier.

Ferrier is due to appear in federal court in Buffalo Tuesday afternoon.








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Maybe not a far stretch




Her thoughts on Trump becoming president:


“I don’t want to think about that possibility, but if it should be, then everything is up for grabs.”


She predicted the next president — “whoever she will be will have a few appointments to make to the Supreme Court”.











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Monday, September 21, 2020

Please forward this to all the 'LeBron's' out there

 










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Joe Biden mistakenly says 200 million people have died from COVID-19 in US




If that's the case you probably wouldn't be reading this.


This is the 'cream of the crop'...the best they could come up with... an old man with Dementia?

 Let's do the math. How many gaffes does it take 25, 50, 75, to = Dementia?
Video 585



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Joe Biden said during a campaign speech in Philadelphia that about 200 million people have died of the coronavirus in the US — or nearly two-thirds of the population – though the number is just shy of 200,000.

“If Donald Trump has his way, the complications from COVID-19, which are well beyond what they should be — it’s estimated that 200 million people have died — probably by the time I finish this talk,” the Democratic presidential nominee said Sunday, according to Fox News.

The self-proclaimed “gaffe machine” made a similar comment when he added several extra zeroes to the nation’s coronavirus death toll during a campaign stop in Pennsylvania in June.

“Now we have over 120 million dead from COVID,” the former veep said at the time before correcting himself to say “120,000,” which was not captured by the pool cameraman.

On Sunday, Biden took longer to correct his error when he said more than three minutes later: “Like I said, as I speak we’re probably passing 200,000 deaths lost to this virus.”

President Trump’s reelection campaign has called Biden “very confused,” and that “he’s not playing with a full deck, folks.”

“This is after he previously claimed 150 million Americans died from guns,” the Trump War Room said recently, referring to Biden’s bungling of statistics about how many Americans had been killed by gun violence since 2007 during a February debate with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

As of early Monday, the US death toll from the coronavirus stands at 199,512. The total number of reported cases in the country is about 6.8 million, according to the latest figures.






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Nancy Pelosi won't rule out impeachment to block a Trump Supreme Court nominee




So how does this work...


"Elections have consequences...". Sound familiar? I remember hearing that somewhere...



House Speaker Nancy Pelosi won't rule out impeachment proceedings to block a Trump Supreme Court nominee from replacing the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

On Sunday, Pelosi appeared on ABC's "This Week," to speak with George Stephanopoulos about Ginsburg and the Supreme Court nomination process.

When asked what tools Pelosi and House Democrats would employ to stop a Supreme Court nomination, she said "we have our options."

Though she doesn't have a vote in the Senate process for confirming Supreme Court nominations, Pelosi's comments represent an escalation of the judicial wars that will only intensify on Capitol Hill going forward.

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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday wouldn't rule out impeachment proceedings to prevent President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee from being confirmed to replace the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

On ABC's "This Week," George Stephanopoulos described a possible scenario in which a Trump nominee could be pushed through a lame-duck session after the November 3 election even if Democratic nominee Joe Biden won the presidency and Democrats captured control of the US Senate. He then asked Pelosi if she would move to impeach Trump or Attorney General William Barr to halt the nomination process.

"Well, we have our options," she said. "We have arrows in our quiver that I'm not about to discuss right now, but the fact is we have a big challenge in our country. This president has threatened to not even accept the results of the election with statements that he and his henchmen have made."

Stephanopoulos pressed Pelosi, asking again if she still wasn't ruling anything out.

"We have a responsibility," she said. "We've taken an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. We have a responsibility to meet the needs of the American people."

As speaker of the House of Representatives, Pelosi doesn't have a vote on the Senate process for confirming Supreme Court nominations, but her comments represent an escalation of the judicial wars that will only intensify on Capitol Hill.

Ginsburg, who served as an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court for 27 years, died on Friday at the age of 87 due to complications from metastatic pancreatic cancer. On the same day, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky released a statement saying that the Senate would hold a vote on a Trump's pick to replace Ginsburg. McConnell's swift announcement infuriated Democrats who are still incensed about him blocking then-President Barack Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Judge Merrick Garland, from receiving hearings or a confirmation vote in 2016.



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