Visit Counter

Monday, January 23, 2017

And Trump can't be trusted with the nuclear codes?




President Clinton lost nuclear codes while in office, new book claims









Former U.S. President Bill Clinton lost the card bearing the codes needed to launch a nuclear attack while in office, according to a former top military officer.

Gen. Hugh Shelton, who served under Clinton as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the “biscuit” — as it is known — was missing for months, ABC News reported.

Shelton tells the story in his memoir, “Without Hesitation: The Odyssey of an American Warrior,” although Ret. Air Force Lt. Col Robert Patterson previously told a similar story in his book

“He thought he just placed them upstairs,” Patterson wrote. “We called upstairs, we started a search around the White House for the codes, and he finally confessed that he in fact misplaced them. He couldn’t recall when he had last seen them.” 

Patterson said Clinton lost the biscuit in 1998, but Shelton recalls it going missing in 2000.

“At one point during the Clinton administration,” Shelton wrote, “the codes were actually missing for months. That’s a big deal — a gargantuan deal.” 

White House spokesman Joe Lockhart confessed in 1999 that Clinton had once left a NATO summit in such haste that he left behind his briefcase which contained the codes.

There have long been rumors that former President Jimmy Carter left the card in a suit which was sent to the dry cleaners. That story has never been confirmed or denied.




Share/Bookmark

Sunday, January 22, 2017

It doesn't get any better than this




Now I know how Chris Matthews felt!

Watch and enjoy. The only thing better would be a Lemming-like mass suicide.





Go for it
Think of all the additional damage you can do to a police car from this height!













This is so true on more levels than we realize.










Share/Bookmark

230 protesters arrested on Inauguration Day will face 10 years in prison and $25k fine as US attorney says they will be charged with felony rioting





So much for..."Trump won't accept the election results!"




Finally, something is being done about these out of control foaming rabid dogs! If Barry was still in charge no action would have been taken just like all the other riots. I can hear him now...They're exercising their right to protest after the Cujos destroyed millions of dollars of private property belonging to law-abiding people.



You worthless waste-of-skin scumbags!

This is what separates conservatives from liberals. I, like many, hate Obama. I hated it, even more, when he was elected the 2nd time. However, what is transpiring now never happened then! What you see presently is the full fomentation of the Obama legacy: 

$20 trillion in debt and millennials living in their parents 'whine cellar'.


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






Most of the 230 rioters arrested after violent protests erupted in Washington D.C. following Donald Trump's inauguration will be charged with felony rioting, federal prosecutors said on Saturday.

The charge carries a punishment of up to ten years in jail and a $25,000 fine.

Thousands of protesters launched a violent rampage just blocks away from the White House as anti-Trump demonstrators smashed store windows, set fire to cars and threw bricks at police.



More than 95 people have been arrested so far during the riots. Hundreds of protesters dressed in black marched through the streets of D.C. breaking windows and hurling projectiles



A Washington D.C. Metro Police Officer arrests an anti-Trump protester, after a confrontation that led to several dozen protesters being cornered and then arrested for vandalism

A young male rioter kicked in a car's windshield as fellow protesters watched on

Many of those arrested are due to appear in court on Saturday, according to WUSA 9

Heated clashes broke out in McPherson Square and along K Street as hundreds of riot police fired tear gas and drew their nightsticks to contain the masked mob.

As the rioting unfolded, Trump and his family were arriving at a review stand at the White House to see the end of the inaugural parade.

Militant anti-Trump protesters gave a foretaste of what could follow during the violent outbreaks, which has so far seen 217 people arrested and at least six police officers injured. 


A nurse rinses pepper spray out of the eyes of a young anti-Trump protester who got sprayed during a clash with D.C. Metropolitan Police



A limo was set on fire after masked protesters wearing all black threw a flare into the vehicle. They had reportedly run up to the car and smashed its windows in D.C. following Trump's inauguration



Riot police have arrested nearly a hundred people for the explosive protests in the streets of D.C. Washington police said numerous individuals were charged with rioting



Police use pepper spray on the mob of protesters in McPherson Square. A violent rampage started just two blocks from the White House in the square and along K Street

Rioters set off multiple fires as they confronted police as protests over Trump turned ugly



Rioters set fire to a limousine and scrawled 'We the people' on the side of the vehicle 



Police have arrested nearly 100 anti-Trump protesters on Friday. Rioters hurled rocks and other debris at a Starbucks Cafe window as they ran through the streets on in protest of President Trump

Just before the parade started, clashes broke out between more than 400 stone-throwing protesters and riot police in McPherson Square - just blocks from the parade in honor of the newly sworn-in president.

As Trump's motorcade wound its way up Pennsylvania Avenue in the parade to the White House, protesters also descended on Franklin Square Park where they graffitied a stretch limo before setting the vehicle ablaze right outside the Washington Post building.

'Groups of people started gathering around the limo. There was a sense of something going to happen. People were shouting 'it's going to blow'. We tried to move them back,' DailyMail.com columnist Katie Hopkins, who witnessed the ordeal, said. 

'The inauguration parade for the president is just blocks away from where all this is happening.'

Hopkins said the anarchists set things ablaze and started throwing bricks, stones, and rocks.

'These people are here for this purpose - these guys are here for the fight,' she said. 



A protester burns one of Trump's Make America Great t-shirt just hours after he was sworn in as president

SWAT team police in full riot gear moved in spraying pepper spray in a bid to disperse the rioters. Among those hit were Hawk Newsome, leader of Black Lives Matter in New York. 

City police chief Peter Newsham said at least 217 people were arrested and would be held overnight before appearing in front of a judge.

'The charge is rioting,' he told reporters. 'Our intention going into this event was to make zero arrests, and unfortunately, they forced our hand.'

Meanwhile, prominent white supremacist Richard Spencer was sucker-punched by a masked protester in the street while giving an interview to journalists.


Anti-Trump demonstrator set a 'Make America Great Again' hat on fire as masked, black-clad protesters carrying anarchist flags smashed windows and scuffled with riot police in D.C.


A Trump supporter was seen trying to pull an American flag out of a fire lit by a protester just hours after the inauguration


Protesters swarmed the streets in Washington as they set fire to multiple trash cans

Rioter boasts he will force Trump from the White House

Most of the noisy protests - including an array of anti-racist, anti-war, feminist, LGBT, pro-immigration and marijuana legalization groups - were peaceful.

But some protesters had earlier dragged trash cans into the road before setting them on fire. Vendors selling Trump T-shirts suddenly started offering them as 'fire fuel', and set them alight. 

One police van retreated quickly, reversing a whole city block at high speed after a rock smashed through its window but within minutes reinforcements arrived as a SWAT team in full riot gear blocked K Street and threatened to pepper spray yelling demonstrators.

A rock also hit a Secret Service vehicle forcing it to beat a hasty retreat.

Thugs dressed head-to-toe in black with their faces completely hidden urged the mob to gather pieces of paving stone to use as missiles.

Vandals set the limo afire after totally trashing it smashing its windows and scrawling graffiti on its side, leaving its horn constantly blaring.

Broadcaster Larry King said that while he was in a studio, the windows of his SUV were smashed by protesters.

'Protestors in DC smashed the windows of my hired SUV & many other cars. I was working in-studio & am ok, but my driver is a bit rattled,' he tweeted. 



Police in riot gear deployed pepper spray and made arrests after protesters smashed the windows of downtown D.C. businesses



A rioter wrapped in a rainbow flag walks very close to the police line as protests turned violent in Washington



An angry protester faces off with a line of riot police during a demonstration in D.C. 

A TV truck was also smashed as the mob ignored calls to stop from one section of the crowd who said the new administration wanted them to riot.

'Please stop. This is not ok,' pleaded one young woman. 'This is what they want. They will eat this up.'

The protesters shouted 'F... Trump,' calling his new administration 'fascist' and 'illegitimate.' They brandished placards variously denouncing the new president as racist, homophobic and anti-women. 

Police blasted them with tear gas and stun grenades and several women claimed they had been maced as they struggled with tears seeping from their eyes.

Riot police chased the group, some openly promoting anarchy, down 10th and E streets, about a mile from the Mall.

More than 500 people, many wearing masks, and handkerchiefs over their faces, marched through the center of DC.

They attacked cars and shop windows, smashing glass panes at a Bank of America branch, a McDonald's outlet, and a Starbucks shop.

Luis Villarroel from Virginia dropped passengers off near the corner of 13th and K Streets NW then parked in front of the Washington Post building.

He got out of his Lincoln MKT limo when he heard loud noises and 'hundreds of masked men' coming his way. He said the protesters 'threw food at him' and started beating his limo. They threw a flare inside the limo, which is still visible on the seat.



Activists leave the site of a limousine which was set ablaze during a protest against Trump. Someone wrote on the side of the burning limo: 'We the People' 



Unruly protesters were pursued by riot police who used flash-bang grenades and pepper spray to subdue the crowd. Several windows were broken including a McDonald's restaurant's

Police managed to funnel the protesters away, but security was stepped up for this afternoon's Presidential parade.

D.C. police reported that two uniformed officers sustained minor injuries and police vehicles were damaged in the riots. 

President Trump began his reign at the White House today greeted by rain and vast empty spaces at his inauguration.

Unlike the inauguration ceremonies for former President Obama where crowds filled the Mall past the Washington Monument, Trump's acceptance speech was greeted by far fewer spectators.

As he spoke areas at the back of the Mall were empty and the three-second delay in his words reaching those at the back only added to the low-key atmosphere.

There were muted cheers and very little chanting to greet the President among the spectators that stood with space to walk freely behind them.



A police officer falls to the ground as another shoots pepper spray at protesters demonstrating against U.S. President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the inauguration 



Riot police used flash-bang grenades and pepper spray to subdue the destructive crowd 
Rioters smash storefront windows on Trump's inauguration day



Activists run after being hit by a stun grenade while protesting against Trump on the sidelines of the inauguration



The riots in D.C. in response to Trump's inauguration have led to nearly a hundred arrests. Several windows were broken including a McDonald's restaurant's 




Past inaugurations saw higher attendance numbers. According to D.C. Metro's ridership statistics, only 193,000 trips were taken by 11am on Friday morning, compared to 2013 when 317,000 people had used the public transportation 

As anti-Trump demonstrators attempted to block the way to the parade walk and smashed up shop windows, supporters and protesters alike flocked to Washington D.C. for inauguration day. 

Attendance was not as expected and the National Mall sat half-empty compared to Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration turn out, which saw an estimated 1.8million people on the below freezing day.

The half-empty ceremony, which expected a turn out of 900,000 people, saw temperatures in the 40s and some rain was expected. 

Past inaugurations saw higher attendance numbers. According to D.C. Metro's ridership statistics, only 193,000 trips were taken by 11 am on Friday morning, compared to 2013 when 317,000 people had used the public transportation. 

In 2009, numbers reached 513,000 and Bush's 2005 ceremony had 197,000 rides. 

Demonstrators came from across the US to voice their objection to President Donald Trump - despite being a tiny minority compared to vast crowds there to hail him. Some said they would also have protested Hillary Clinton. 

Protests became violent and destructive as shop windows were smashed out in retaliation to Trump being sworn in on the steps of Capitol Hill. 

Several thousand inauguration-goers were held up for an extra hour by just a handful of animal rights protesters who blocked an entry point at 7th Street and D600nw and were met by soldiers and police with dogs. 



Protesters demonstrated near the parade route where Trump will walk after taking the oath of office

Those who had come to voice their anti-Trump views repeatedly shouted 'Let us in' as the rain came down and senior police officials gathered to examine how best to solve the situation. 

One protester who held up the lines brandished a placard which read : 'Queers for human and animal rights.'

Alena Chavez, 20, a student who had traveled from San Francisco, California, said: 'Trump needs to learn how to respect women, all races, and religions and understand that we know he will not make a great President.' 

Due to the expected downpour, the National Park Service has revised its policy on umbrellas. 

It eased up on the 'no umbrella' rule, allowing collapsible 'totes'-style umbrellas along the parade route and on the National Mall. 

On the Capitol grounds, regular umbrellas are still prohibited in any ticketed area. 

The nation's soon-to-be president joked about the chance of a downpour. 'That's OK,' Trump told campaign donors at an event Thursday night, 'because people will realize it's my real hair.'

'Might be a mess, but they're going to see that it's my real hair,' he said. 

As historic numbers turned out to express their dissent towards the Trump Administration, another group came forward to assert their support of the 45th President.

Bikers For Trump, a self-explanatory organization who aim to 'promote and coordinate peaceful rallies and events nationwide' held their own celebration on Saturday while the millions of women marched nearby.

As a counteractive event, the group set up along the inaugural route in Washington, D.C. to rally for their beliefs.



As historic numbers turned out to express their dissent towards the Trump Administration, another group came forward to assert their support of the 45th President



Bikers For Trump, a self-explanatory organization who aim to 'promote and coordinate peaceful rallies and events nationwide' held their own celebration while the millions of women marched nearby



As a counteractive event, the group set up along the inaugural route in Washington, D.C. to rally for their beliefs



Share/Bookmark

Saturday, January 21, 2017

March of the 'nasty women': Hundreds of thousands of women demonstrate against Trump across the globe as Hillary's celebrity pals arrive in DC to lead protests there




'Nasty' is correct! Liberals usual home (when they're not protesting) is under the rim of a toilet.



Before Donald Trump's first full day as President of the United States even began, women across the world woke up early in preparation to protest against him.

Hundreds of thousands of women are marching everywhere from Washington DC to London, Berlin, Madrid, and Sydney in demonstrations against America's 45th president.

Massive numbers of American women in pink 'p***yhats' began posting photos of themselves headed to march on the capital in protest of the new president on Saturday morning.




The first batch of protesters were up bright and early in DC awaiting the Women's March on Washington to begin Saturday



More than 200,000 people are expected to take part in the march in the nation's capital on Saturday 



The march is expected to be largest inauguration-related protest in US history and comes the day after Donald Trump was sworn in as President of the United States



Three times as many bus parking permits were requested for the Women's March than Trump's own inauguration



Many Canadians have crossed the border to show their support and solidarity with American women in the march 



A huge crowd of people could be seen in front of the National Museum of the American Indian hours before the march began



The Shady Grove metro stop in DC was completely packed with protesters at 8.30am on Saturday morning 



Actress Jessica Chastain is just one of the celebrities who will be at the star-studded event 



The Zero Dark Thirty star posted a number of snaps as she headed to the event on Saturday

Jessica Chastain and Chloë Grace Moretz at the march in D.C.

The pink knitted beanies with cat ears have become the unofficial accessory of the march, and were spotted everywhere from buses to trains and planes as women headed to Washington DC. 

One Southwest crew even lit up their plane cabin in pink on Friday night in honor of the protesters heading to DC, while others noted that some planes were 90 percent filled with women on their way to the demonstration.

Bags and bags of the p***yhats - a reference to Trump's infamous 'grab her by the p***y' quote from the 2005 Access Hollywood leak - were also being handed out to protesters in Washington DC on Saturday morning. 

More than 200,000 people are participating in the Women's March on Washington, which is expected to be the largest inauguration-related demonstration in US history.

Protesters chanted 'Thank you Obama!' before the rally kicked off at 10am with a rousing speech from actress America Ferrera.

‘The president is not America, his cabinet is not America,' Ferrera began. ‘We are America, and we are here to stay. We march for our families, for our neighbors, for our futures.’

‘We march today for the moral core of this nation, against which our president is waging a war’

‘We are gathered here across the country and the world to say Mr Trump we refuse,' Ferrera continued. 

'We reject the demonization of our Muslim brothers and sisters, we demand an end to the system murder and incarceration of our black brothers and sisters, we will not give our rights to safe and legal abortions, we will not ask our LGBTQ families to go backwards, we will not go from being a nation of immigrants to a nation of ignorance.’

'We won’t build walls and we won't see the worst in each other and we won’t turn our backs on the more than 750,000 young immigrants in this country.' 

'Together we, all of us, will fight, resist and oppose every action that threatens the lives and dignity of any and all of our communities.' 

'Marchers, make no mistake. We are, every single one of us, on attack. Our safety and freedom are on the chopping block and we are the only ones who can protect one another.'

'If we do not fight together…we will lose together.' 

One women excitedly holds her sign, in reference to Trump's infamous 'grab her by the p***y' quote, in Washington, DC 

Protesters of all ages were spotted gearing up for the protest, including this adorable girl in Washington, DC 

Protesters could also be seen gathering for the Women's March on Philadelphia, one of the 600 sister marches 

Three times more bus parking permits were requested for the Women's March than Trump's own inauguration.

One person traveling to attend the march revealed Saturday morning that all the rest stops had been packed with buses heading to DC. 

'Our driver said he's never seen anything like this before,' they added. 

Lines to buy metro tickets in DC stretched past blocks as protesters flooded the stations and trains as they made their way to the march. 

The sheer popularity of the marches was evident throughout the country's office supplies stores as people scrambled to buy materials to make protest signs. 

Stores from New York to Maryland to Colorado had sold out of poster board, with numerous protesters sharing photos on social media of empty shelves. 

One shop worker at a DC Office Max said protesters for the Women's March 'bought up everything'. 
Women gather in D.C. ahead of the Million Women March

Massive numbers of American women in pink 'p***yhats' began posting photos of themselves headed to march on the capital in protest of the new president on Friday and Saturday morning

The Pussyhat Project brought in bags of their knitted creations to hand out to protesters who hadn't already made their own

Women lined up at the Port Authority in New York as they waited for buses to take them to DC as early as 3am Saturday 



One woman could be seen making her sign as this bus headed from Brooklyn to Washington DC 

The march's organizers said more than 600 sister marches have also been planned, stretching as far and wide as London, Sydney, Auckland, Berlin, and Cape Town in South Africa.

There are more than two million registered marchers, according to the official Women's March website. 

Despite its massive popularity, the march has angered some of Hillary Clinton's most ardent supporters. 

On Thursday the organizers of the Women's March on Washington released a list that included 27 names of revolutionary women they wrote had 'paved the way' for Saturday's protests. 

The list included the likes of Gloria Steinem, Angela Davis, Harriet Tubman and Malala Yousafzai, but Clinton - the first female presidential candidate for a major political party - was notably left off the list. 

Clinton's supporters created a petition - which has been signed by 7,500 people - to have her name included on the list and tried to spearhead their movement on Twitter with the hashtag #AddHerName. 

The former Secretary of State has no plans to attend the march herself. 
MASSIVE line mobs the train station for Women's March in DC

Massive numbers of women in pink 'p***yhats' posted photos of themselves headed to march on the capital on Friday as well



Some photos show women wearing the hats, many also donning Hillary Clinton and 'Nasty Woman' shirts



Padma Lakshmi shared this photo of her and her daughter heading to DC for the march. Her caption read: 'Nasty women making some noise for their rights!'



Actresses Amber Rose Tamblyn and Ellen Page took a selfie together as they prepared for the Women's March in DC 

The Women's March On Washington will kick off in Washington DC with a rally at 10am and the march will begin at 1.15pm. 

And while Trump struggled to rally celebrity support for the inauguration, his new neighborhood will be flooded with stars ready to protest against him. 

Actresses Ashley Judd, America Ferrera and Scarlett Johansson are among the speakers at the event, which will also be attended by Cher, Katy Perry, and Amy Schumer. 

Ferrera, who is charing a group called the 'Artist's Table' for the event, said Julianne Moore, Olivia Wilde, Debra Messing, Uzo Aduba have also planned to take part in rallies across the country.

Comedian Chelsea Handler will lead a march in Park City, Utah, where the Sundance Festival is currently taking place. 

'As artists, women, and most importantly dedicated Americans, it is critical that we stand together in solidarity for the protection, dignity and rights of our communities,' she said in a statement. 

The movement has inspired the globe, and marches will also be taking place in London, Sydney, Auckland, Berlin, Brussels and Madrid (pictured), among others 



Activist Sarah Williamson holds a placard during the Women's March rally in Kolkata, India



Protesters attend a demonstration in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany



Hundreds of people walk through Bristol in a Women's March, to protest against Trump 

'Immigrant rights, worker rights, reproductive rights, LGBTQIA rights, racial justice and environmental rights are not special interests, they affect us all and should be every American’s concern.' 

Among the performers for the event will be R&B singers Janelle Monae and Maxwell, as well as DJ Samantha Ronson, Angelique Kidjo and the Indigo Girls, among others. 

'I am honored to join this critical movement to bring justice and equality to all,' Monae said in a statement. 

'Music has always been a powerful tool for galvanizing unity and I believe that singing and standing together, our voices will be stronger than any force that tries to repress us.' 




Share/Bookmark