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Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Are ObamaLeaks an impeachable offense



Prelude to the story:


Personally, I think Axlerod is involved in this up to his eyeballs! This was just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to WH leaks. As much as I would love to see this occur (impeachment) the chances of this happening are slim and none. You could take the cast of Watergate move them to 2013, under a similar premise, swap out Nixon insert Obama and a resignation would have never taken place. Whomever controls the media controls the mind of America.

Remember when Feinstein feigned outrage and said, "I'm going to get to the bottom of this?" Well... to be fair she did hit a new low.




Thank God we had Holder investigate. 
Anyone ever hear what the results were?




Story by
Marc A. Thiessen


Imagine if The Post broke a story about the biggest scandal of the Obama-era — and Washington responded with a collective yawn? 

That's precisely what happened recently when The Post reported on its front page that senior Obama administration officials were being investigated by the FBI and Justice Department for the leak last summer that the president had personally ordered cyberattacks on the Iranian nuclear program using a computer virus developed with Israel called Stuxnet. 

The Post quotes a source who says that FBI agents and prosecutors are pursuing "everybody — at pretty high levels." The paper further reports that investigators "have conducted extensive analysis of the e-mail accounts and phone records of current and former government officials" and that some have been confronted "with evidence of contact with journalists."

This is big. And former senior government lawyers I spoke with recently explained why it could get a whole lot bigger:

The leaks clearly came from someone in the president's inner circle. As The Post explains, "Knowledge of the virus was likely to have been highly compartmentalized and limited to a small set of Americans and Israelis." Moreover, whoever leaked the information was present when the president discussed this covert action program in the Situation Room. There is a tiny universe of individuals who could have shared the details of President Obama's personal deliberations on the covert program with the press.

This means there are essentially two possibilities for how the information got out.

Possibility No. 1: A senior administration or White House official disclosed the information to the press without the president's personal approval.

That would be a potential crime and certainly a violation of the official's oath of office — and in the case of a White House official, a violation of their contractual commitment to the Executive Office of the President. As one former senior Justice Department official told me, "It would be grounds for firing and likely prosecution, and it would definitely call into question the competency and security of the president's supervision of his White House staff." 

Possibility No. 2: The president personally authorized a senior official to disclose classified and sensitive national security information regarding ongoing intelligence or counterterrorism operations. 

This is potentially an even bigger scandal. Since the president has ultimate declassification authority, this would mean no crime was likely committed. But it is hard to imagine a credible argument that such a disclosure was made to advance the national security interests of the United States. 

Quite the opposite, the Stuxnet leak was incredibly damaging. It exposed intelligence sources and methods, including the top secret codename for the program ("Olympic Games"). And it exposed the involvement of a U.S. ally, Israel. At one point in the New York Times story, a source says the Israelis were responsible for an error in the code who allowed it to replicate itself all around the world. The Times directly quotes one of the president's briefers telling him "We think there was a modification done by the Israelis," adding that "Mr. Obama, according to officials in the room, asked a series of questions, fearful that the code could do damage outside the plant. The answers came back in hedged terms. Mr. Biden fumed. 'It's got to be the Israelis,' he said. 'They went too far'" (emphasis added).

So a person who was "in the room" when the president and vice president were briefed publicly confirmed Israeli involvement in a covert action against Iran. The damage this did — both to the operation and the trust between our two countries — is incalculable. 

There are no credible national security grounds for such a disclosure. The only person whose interests could possibly be served by such a disclosure was Obama. The leak appeared six months before the president stood for reelection and was clearly intended to make Obama appear strong on foreign policy and counterterrorism. (One anonymous senior official is quoted by the Times as saying "From his first days in office, he was deep into every step in slowing the Iranian program — the diplomacy, the sanctions, every major decision.") 

If the president authorized the disclosure of national security secrets that exposed a covert action and undermined a U.S. ally in an effort to gain a political advantage in his reelection campaign, that would be a scandal of gigantic proportions. As one former top Justice Department official told me "if done for political gain, rather than for a bona fide purpose advancing the public interests of the United States, it could be grounds for impeachment." 

In other words, at best ObamaLeaks may be a crime; at worst, they could be an impeachable offense. So the question is: What are those senior Obama administration officials telling investigators when confronted "with evidence of contact with journalists"? Were the leaks unauthorized? Or are they defending their disclosures by invoking the President's personal authority to declassify national security information without formal process? 

If the former, then we could see senior Obama administration officials put on trial. If the latter, then it is the president who should be on trial — in the chamber of the United States Senate.





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Monday, February 4, 2013

Updated Proverb



On a tip from my brother Gary.




Old Proverb: 



Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day. Teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime. 



2012 Updated Revision: 



Give a man a welfare check, a free cell phone with unlimited minutes, free internet, cash for clunkers, food stamps, section 8 housing, free contraceptives, Medicaid, ninety-nine weeks of unemployment, free medicine, and he will vote Democratic the rest of his life; even after he's dead. 





Threw this in for good measure. You won't here much about this from the MSM. Barry's latest push is Immigration Reform... a politically correct way of saying amnesty. He can't even reform his own family. 

Coincidence.

Barry's aunt living in the US illegally and on welfare and Section 8 was granted legal citizenship in 2010 after being denied asylum in 2004.

His uncle is also here living off the "fat of the land". Last time I heard about him he hit a cop car and was arrested for DWI.



They came here illegally, we pay them to do it, and soon they'll all be granted amnesty.

Is it any wonder why illegals come here!





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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Only a Democrat could have thought of this!



As if we are not taxed enough this liberal chowderhead in Minnesota is trying to impose a "snowbird tax" on its residents!  


 Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton (D)

(This should be taking place in short order) 





Then again Minnesota is the fine state that sent Stuart Smalley to the Senate.







The one tract mind definition:

 A focus on one issue or topic, to the exclusion of all else; an obsession with one thing.

As in increasing taxes. Cutting spending never enters their mind because increasing taxes is the only solution to any difficulty. What did you expect? Most states with a Democratic governor are in the red. This is the reason they are known as the tax and spend party.

A new low even for them.




Florida Rep. Radel rips Minnesota governor's 'snowbird' tax plan, welcomes refugees

A Florida Republican congressman is welcoming to his home state Minnesota residents who migrate south to escape the Midwest's notoriously cold, harsh winters -- now that their governor is trying to impose a so-called "snowbird tax" on them.

"Dear Governor Mark Dayton," Rep. Trey Radel wrote Friday. "I'm writing today to thank you. As a Floridian, I am overjoyed to hear about your plan to raise taxes on Minnesotans, most especially the so-called 'snowbirds.' Your proposal gives us a chance to shine here in the Sunshine State."

Dayton, a Democrat, proposed the idea last week when announcing key parts of his proposed $37.9 billion budget. He made a similar proposal last year that was defeated by the then-Republican-controlled legislature.

The plan would purportedly raise no more than $30 million over two years from all Minnesota residents who live 60 days to just under six months in Minnesota by taxing their capital gains and dividends as well as income from stocks and bonds.

However, the prorated income tax would largely hit older residents and retirees, known as "snowbirds" because they leave northern states to establish residency in such warmer places as Arizona and Florida.

Dalton said it's unfair that somebody can live six months and a day outside of Minnesota and pay no state personal income taxes, then come back and take advantage of "all the state has to offer for five months and 29 days."

"There is a snowbird tax -- absolutely," he told reporters.

The purportedly first-of-its-kind tax would be difficult to enforce and is already facing opposing from state Republicans.

"I don't even think that's constitutional," Senate Minority Leader David Hann told the MinnPost.com. "I don't even know how you'd do that. (And) as far as I can see, there's not a lot of money attached to it."

Radel, argues in the letter, which appear written with pointed sarcasm to skewer higher taxes, that southwest Florida would welcome more entrepreneurs and philanthropists investing in the region. And he cited such incentives as no income taxes, investment incentives for big and small businesses and "great" public, charter and private schools.

"It's my sincere hope your plan has just driven many Minnesotans to become year-round residents of our great state," he wrote. "I thank you for your policy. It draws the contrast of what is happening not only in United States today, but the world."











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Saturday, February 2, 2013

The problems bestowed upon us started the day Barry took office




I just watched this dork on FOX.





The new unemployment numbers just came out at 7.9% along with negative growth GDP this last quarter. Incredibly Barry's puppet wrote it off again using their go to line "The problems we inherited." Here we have a president entering his 5th year in office still blaming his predecessor! This same president promised unemployment would be at 5% by the end of his first term. The fact is it has virtually remained unchanged since the day he took office.

Remember this:

"If I don't have this done in three years, then there's going to be a one-term proposition."


In this quote, from a February 2009 interview on NBC's "Today" show. Barry was referring to the pace of economic recovery. He spent $787 billion on the stimulus package but the words haunt him because they were a reminder of how profoundly he and his economic team botched the crisis. Christina Romer, then the West Wing's economist, forecast in January 2009 that the unemployment rate would be around 5.5 percent by the third quarter of 2012 if a large stimulus package passed. It did and nothing changed; we have been around 8% unemployment since he came to the throne.



The panel had a good laugh following his cavalier answer to the question after pissing away $787 billion of our money. 

(If video wont load click post title)

Video 6





Here's an example of why he seldom holds a press conference and perfers "softball shows" like The View.

(If video wont load click post title)


Video 7






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Friday, February 1, 2013

The Walls Are Starting To Crumble








Story by The Daily Caller

A check that Democratic New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez wrote to his longtime campaign donor Dr. Salomon Melgen on Jan. 4 to cover private jet travel to the Dominican Republic represented more than one-third of his cash-on-hand — and perhaps as much as 90 percent — according to an analysis of his most recent U.S. Senate financial disclosure report.

Dan O'Brien, Menendez's chief of staff, told WNBC-TV4 in New York on Tuesday that the senator reimbursed Melgen $58,500 for two trips they took together to the island nation in 2010.




Menendez signed a disclosure statement on May 9, 2012 indicating that he had between $66,003 and $165,000 in three different bank and credit union accounts. His only other asset is a rental property worth between $250,001 and $500,000.

Financial disclosure forms filed by members of the House and Senate typically describe asset values in ranges, not precise numbers.

Menendez earns a $174,000 annual salary as a U.S. senator. Factoring in federal and New Jersey state income taxes, plus Social Security and Medicare withholding, the $58,500 check represents more than 51 percent of his expected take-home pay of about $113,000 during 2013.

His sudden reimbursement of Melgen came more than two years after the travel in question, and barely two months after The Daily Caller first reported the allegations of two prostitutes who said they were paid to have sex with him in the Dominican Republic.




Menendez has forcefully denied the prostitution-related allegations, which have expanded to include the accusation that he had sex with at least one underage girl at a sex party in one of Melgen's Dominican homes.

The senator's willingness to part with such a large amount of his personal funds also underscores the seriousness of charges he might otherwise have faced from the Senate Ethics committee.

Ethics rules require some combination of advance permission and after-the-fact reporting whenever senators accept significant job-related perks or gifts from friends, including free travel. But since Menendez elected to pay for the trips himself, he's not obligated to report the transactions officially, and any investigative trail into other similar trips will likely run cold.

Meanwhile, federal investigators raided Melgen's flagship eye clinic in south Florida Tuesday night in an operation that an FBI source told TheDC was related to Menendez in some way. (RELATED: Dominican prostitute wrote that Menendez "likes the youngest and newest girls")

Melgen also owes the federal government more than $11 million in back taxes, and the Miami Herald has reported that he may be under investigation for Medicare fraud.



If I remember rightly Charlie Rangel was also quite enthralled with the Dominican Republic.


I wonder what he was up to?






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