Monday, September 30, 2019

A Step Back From Impeachment

It's not above the fold and there is no special section today.

As promised help for DCF lags, top lawmaker launches unusual oversight

Five months later and nothing has changed:

For the Children

Well, some, anyway.

Deja Vu at the DCF

It's like that every day when you read a Globe, and the answers are obviously more school funding and family leaves (maybe the kids could stay at the Peabody). Legi$looture to the re$cue, yaaaaay!

Boston’s zoning board is rife with conflicts

Conflicts is a polite word for corruption, as the Globe says their review of cases illustrates the incestuous mechanics of a permitting system that is now enmeshed in an influence-peddling scandal (time to take a backseat and rezone).

Elizabeth Warren loves selfies

It's the ‘heart of democracy, right?’

Well, not if it is in Austria.

[flip to below fold]

"Intelligence panel has deal to hear whistle-blower’s testimony" by Felicia Sonmez and Mike DeBonis Washington Post, September 29, 2019

WASHINGTON — House Intelligence Committee chairman Adam Schiff said Sunday that his panel has reached an agreement to secure testimony from the anonymous whistle-blower whose detailed complaint launched an impeachment investigation into President Trump.

The announcement from Schiff came on the same day that Tom Bossert, a former Trump homeland security adviser, delivered a rebuke of the president, saying in an interview on ABC’s ‘‘This Week’’ that he was ‘‘deeply disturbed’’ by the implications of Trump’s recently reported actions.

Oh, another one with the knife out.

Those comments come as members of Congress return to their districts for a two-week recess, during which they will either make the case for Trump’s impeachment or defend him to voters amid mounting questions about his conduct. 

When you think about it, impeachment takes all the attention away from all the other issues. I hope they get an earful regarding their hypocrisy.

In appearances over the weekend, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democrat of California, offered a preview of the Democratic message, casting the impeachment inquiry as a somber task that she chose to endorse only as a last resort.

That's BS, and some are saying they did it to draw attention away from the U.N. Others are saying, and more rightly so, that the sudden announcement is about protecting the Clintons even if you have to sacrifice Biden because Liz is Hillary 2.0. That's why the Globe has latched on to her, and they kill two birds with one stone by using the progressive-left narrative to once again push Bernie aside and dupe their base.

Most Republican lawmakers and White House aides, meanwhile, continued to voice support for the president, even as they faced grilling by hosts on Sunday morning news shows over their efforts to discredit the unidentified whistle-blower and keep the focus on former vice president Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden.

The Trump-hating pre$$ smells blood in the water.

Representative Jim Jordan, Republican of Ohio, pointed to an initial finding by the intelligence community inspector general stating that while the complaint was credible, the whistle-blower had an ‘‘arguable political bias.’’

“He had no firsthand knowledge. . . . And, second, he has a political bias,” Jordan said on CNN’s ‘‘State of the Union.’’ ‘‘That should tell us something about this guy who came forward with this claim.’’

Tells us all we need to know, really. It's a CIA asset that came out and the story was only revealed after Trump started asking about the Clinton servers that were in the hands of Crowdstrike.

White House senior adviser Stephen Miller went even further in an at-times heated interview on ‘‘Fox News Sunday.’’ Miller dodged several questions from Chris Wallace about allegations surrounding the president’s actions, such as Trump’s decision to use not the federal government but rather his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani to obtain information on the Bidens’ activities in Ukraine.

He really doesn't have anyone to trust (except Javanka, right?). Relying on that corrupt clown and saboteur Giuliani was a mistake.

He also declined to answer when asked by Wallace to outline how, in his view, the Bidens broke any laws, and he disputed the use of the word ‘‘whistle-blower’’ to describe the person who sounded the alarm about Trump’s actions, arguing that the complaint was a ‘‘partisan hit job’’ by a ‘‘deep-state operative“; Maguire said in congressional testimony last week that he thinks the whistle-blower ‘‘is operating in good faith and has followed the law.’’ 

I suspect the Deep $tate pre$$ will start screaming conspiracy theory now.

As both sides sparred, Trump largely stayed out of public view. The president spent the weekend playing golf at his club in Sterling, Va. On Sunday morning, he sent more than 20 tweets and retweets slamming Fox News Channel host Ed Henry’s performance during a segment with conservative commentator Mark Levin.

If Fox has turned on him, he's finished.

Later Sunday, Trump tweeted that he wants Schiff ‘‘questioned at the highest level for Fraud & Treason’’ for his remarks at last week’s hearing in which Maguire testified, and Trump demanded to meet the whistle-blower as well as the person’s sources.

‘‘In addition, I want to meet not only my accuser, who presented SECOND & THIRD HAND INFORMATION, but also the person who illegally gave this information, which was largely incorrect, to the ‘Whistleblower,’ ‘‘ Trump tweeted. ‘‘Was this person SPYING on the U.S. President? Big Consequences!’’

On Sunday night, ‘‘60 Minutes’’ tweeted: “ ‘60 Minutes’ has obtained a letter that indicates the government whistleblower who set off the impeachment inquiry of President Trump is under federal protection because they fear for their safety.’’

‘‘60 Minutes’’ will also appear down below, and it is the Clintons (and Bushes) with the body bags. Were it Trump's shtick, the pre$$ would have found them by now. This is nothing more than the protection of a deep state asset and an attempt to draw sympathy.

House Democrats last week began an impeachment inquiry into Trump’s actions after the release of the whistle-blower complaint as well as a rough transcript of a July phone call in which Trump repeatedly urged Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate Biden.

Hunter Biden served for nearly five years on the board of Burisma, Ukraine’s largest private gas company, whose owner came under scrutiny by Ukrainian prosecutors for possible abuse of power and unlawful enrichment. The former vice president’s son was not accused of wrongdoing in the investigation.

As vice president, Biden pressured Ukraine to fire the top prosecutor, who Biden and other Western officials said was not sufficiently pursuing corruption cases. At the time, the investigation into Burisma was dormant, according to former Ukrainian and US officials.

I suppose I'm surprised they even mentioned that much, as twisted and distorted as it is.

Trump’s handling of the matter appears to have alarmed voters. An ABC News-Ipsos poll released Sunday showed that 63 percent of adults say it is a serious problem that Trump pushed Zelensky to look at Hunter Biden.

I'm tired of their push polls that told us he would never be president. The alarm is the blatant double standards and distortions issuing forth from the pre$$ and the Democrats.

Among those expressing concern Sunday was Bossert, a rare official with ties to Trump who has taken on the president.

Bossert said he was ‘‘deeply disturbed’’ by the implications of Trump’s call to Zelensky and strongly criticized the president for seemingly furthering an unfounded theory that cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike played a role in shielding e-mails sent by Trump’s 2016 Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, and circulating allegations of Russian hacking.

First of all, it was a leak, not a hack, and the likely suspect was shot on the street without being robbed (and that is why Assange and Manning rot in prison because there are good whistleblowers and bad whistleblowers).

The US intelligence community has concluded that the Russians did hack Democratic sources in an effort to swing the election to Trump.

This the same US intelligence community that claimed Iraq had WMDs? 

The truth is it was about three agencies with around 20 people making that call, and yet the narrative is the entire collective agrees.

‘‘That conspiracy theory has got to go,’’ Bossert said on ABC News’s ‘‘This Week,’’ explaining that Trump was motivated to spread the ‘‘completely debunked’’ theory because he had ‘‘not gotten his pound of flesh yet’’ over accusations that he had Russian help in winning the 2016 election. ‘‘They have to stop with that. It cannot continue to be repeated in our discourse. . . . If he continues to focus on that white whale, it’s going to bring him down.’’

Oh, someone hit a nerve and what does race have to do with any of this?

--more--"

I'm told the ‘‘polls have changed drastically about this,’’ and one of the whistle-blower’s attorneys said that bipartisan negotiations in both chambers are ongoing ‘‘and we understand all agree that protecting the whistle-blowers’ identity is paramount.’’ 

Yeah, Deep State moles must be protected at all costs, and before you holler conspiracy theorist at me:

New York Times Admits Deep State Exists

New York Times Gets Letter From the Deep State

They never found out who wrote it (if anyone), and are now coming out of the woodwork:

"Federal election commissioner posts foreign interference memo on Twitter" by Neil Vigdor New York Times, September 29, 2019

The Federal Election Commission chairwoman, Ellen L. Weintraub, has taken the dramatic step of using Twitter to release the entire draft of a memo addressing foreign election interference.

Weintraub, a Democrat appointed by President George W. Bush, said she had tried to publish the memo in the commission’s weekly digest, but a Republican commission member, Caroline Hunter, had thwarted it.

Weintraub said Sunday that the six-page memo, which can also be found on the agency’s website, was drafted by the commission’s staff and was meant to provide guidance on rules about prohibited activities involving foreign nationals in elections.

If it can be found on the website what is the big deal? 

This article looks like nothing more than the endless insinuation of wrongdoing in some way as well as supporting the false narrative of Russian interference as AIPAC roams free.

She said it was unusual for another commissioner to object to publishing it in the digest, a weekly account of fines meted out by the agency for campaign finance law violations and other matters.

“I don’t need her permission to put out a statement,” Weintraub said in an interview. “I’m entitled to put something out there.”

It's no surprise that the Jewish whistleblower would feel that way.

Hunter, who served as chairwoman last year and is a former deputy counsel of the Republican National Committee, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. She was also appointed to the commission by Bush.

“Funny story,” Weintraub said in the opening line of her Twitter thread Friday.

Do I look like I'm laughing?

“I always thought these anti-regulatory people liked the First Amendment well enough,” she wrote. “I guess they think it’s just for corporations. I’m not fond of anyone trying to suppress my speech.”

Then she should have common cause with conservatives.

RelatedAhead of 2020 elections, Facebook falls short on anti-disinformation effort

That's strange because just the other day they had all the information regarding Trump's ad blitz.

Related: 


Thankfully, according to the New York Times, the United States and Israel are not one of them. 

You know where the Globe belongs, right?

The act of defiance by Weintraub came amid a deepening impeachment inquiry by Democrats on Capitol Hill and the release of a whistleblower’s complaint that said President Trump pressured Ukraine’s president to look into allegations of corruption against former vice president Joe Biden and his younger son.

What it looks like is part of a concerted and orchestrated effort.

It also amplified the investigation findings of Russian interference into the 2016 presidential election, including the arrest of 26 Russian nationals as part of a 22-month probe by Robert Mueller, the former special counsel.

“Obviously, it deals with a topic that’s been in the news a lot,” Weintraub said of the memo. “I thought it was worth putting it out there so people could see a summary of the law.”

Have you read the transcript of Trump's call? There is no quid pro quo or pressure there, and why shouldn't Biden and Burisma be investigated?

Weintraub said Hunter, who is the only Republican commission member, did not explain her objections to including the memo in the digest. She said digest items are typically reviewed by the commission’s communications committee, which is made up of Weintraub and Hunter.

The commission has been beleaguered by dysfunction; its vice chairman, Matthew S. Petersen, resigned in August, leaving what is supposed to be a six-member body with three commissioners, one short of the quorum required for it to take actions. As a result, Weintraub said, there are not enough members to vote on the rules interpretation memo.

This was not the first time that Weintraub has confronted Republicans. In an open letter to Trump that she shared on Twitter in August, Weintraub challenged the president to provide proof of his claim during a campaign rally that there had been voter fraud in New Hampshire during the 2016 presidential election.

Look who is talking!

“To put it in terms a former casino operator should understand: There comes a time when you need to lay your cards on the table or fold,” Weintraub wrote.

Weintraub said Sunday that the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School had debunked much of the misinformation that had spread about the scope of voter fraud in the United States.

That just confirms it as true, and it is all hands on deck to protect!

--more--"

They are forming a human shield to protect Hillary and the Clinton crime cabal:

"State Dept. investigating e-mail practices of Hillary Clinton’s former staff" by Edward Wong and Maggie Haberman New York Times, September 29, 2019

(Blog editor simply shakes head)

The State Department is continuing an investigation of e-mail use among employees who worked for Hillary Clinton, former secretary of state, asking scores of current and former officials to submit to questioning by the bureau overseeing diplomatic security, former officials said Sunday.

The investigation is examining whether employees used secure channels and the proper classification designations for what appeared to be routine e-mails at the time, former officials said. The e-mails were on subjects that were not considered classified at the time, but that have been or are being retroactively marked as classified.

Like they are out to get her like the pre$$ is Trump, huh?

What is a routine email for a Secretary of State who is selling influence?

The e-mails were sent to Clinton while she was secretary of state from 2009 to 2013, in former president Barack Obama’s administration. They appear to have come to the attention of the diplomatic security bureau during earlier inquiries conducted by the State Department, Congress, and the FBI into Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server.

What inquiries? They handled it like a hot potato.

Although the FBI director at the time, James Comey, said the bureau had found that Clinton did not engage in wrongdoing, those earlier investigations threw a long shadow over the 2016 presidential campaign and are considered by Clinton and many analysts to be a factor in President Trump’s victory. The renewed focus on the e-mails was reported Saturday by The Washington Post.

She has blamed everything but climate change for her defeat, and it looks like the Post scooped ya', NYT!

Sometime soon after Trump took office and appointed Rex Tillerson as his first secretary of state, the department’s diplomatic security bureau carried out the first stages of an investigation into e-mail use by employees under Clinton, former officials said.

Most of the people being investigated were political appointees who were leaving or had already left the department. The inquiry focused on the years when Clinton was leading the State Department, even though many of the employees continued to work under her successor, John Kerry, former officials said.

A lot of them got rich in Ukraine, and the implication is that once you leave government the corruption should be forgotten!

The investigators appeared to want to finish the inquiry quickly and move on, former officials said. At some point during Tillerson’s tenure, people who had heard of the investigation thought it had ended because the diplomatic security bureau no longer appeared to be actively pursuing the question, officials said.

Mike Pompeo took over as secretary of state in April 2018, and in recent months the diplomatic security bureau has been interviewing current and former employees again about their e-mail use under Clinton, former officials said.

Before joining the Trump administration, Pompeo was a Republican member of the House, and served on the committee investigating the deadly raid on the US diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya. Pompeo was among those who aggressively questioned Clinton.

The Justice Department inquiry into her use of a private e-mail server had its roots in that congressional investigation, which brought to light Clinton’s e-mail practices.

Former officials who described the current inquiry Sunday did so on the condition of anonymity, given the sensitivity of the matter. The State Department did not reply to a request for comment on the current investigation.

Look at the brave whistleblowers!

Looking to future prospects of the inquiry, the diplomatic security bureau could decide to make a formal note in a person’s file saying he or she had mishandled classified information, according to former officials. That could lead to that person being unable to get proper security clearances in the future, or the applicant might have to wait a long time for those clearances to be approved.

Clinton still has them?

Former officials said scrutinizing employees over their handling of information that was not classified at the time, and only retroactively classified, was unusual.

So is impeachment.

Also, many of those e-mails summarize conversations with foreign officials who themselves have no security clearance in the US government, yet are engaged in discussions about topics of interest to US counterparts. In many cases, e-mails that went to Clinton were part of a long e-mail chain created by officials forwarding e-mails to one another.

Yeah, no big deal, she just like you and me, and did the Times ever sanitized them for you! Nothing about private servers in her basement being destroyed or missing, nothing about destroyed documents and mobile devices, nothing about the cc file Huma sent, had the stuff running through a private email server, or the Clinton shakedown racket (that was Obama's price to pay for her agreeing to stand down)! #BillClintonMeToo

--more--"

That will be a one-day wonder, and Trump better be careful or he may end up dead (by Gal Tziperman Lotan of the Globe Staff with the witness David Cohen of Brooklyn, N.Y., who was staying at the bed-and-breakfast with his family. No one else was injured, and authorities are not releasing any details).

Related:

"Joe Biden’s presidential campaign contacted top television anchors and networks Sunday to “demand” that Rudy Giuliani, President Trump’s personal lawyer, be kept off the air because of what they called his misleading comments about the Biden family and Ukraine. “We are writing today with grave concern that you continue to book Rudy Giuliani on your air to spread false, debunked conspiracy theories on behalf of Donald Trump,” wrote a pair of top Biden campaign advisers, Anita Dunn and Kate Bedingfield, in the letter. “Giving Rudy Giuliani valuable time on your air to push these lies in the first place is a disservice to your audience and a disservice to journalism,” the advisers wrote. A copy of the letter was obtained by The New York Times. The note was sent to executives and top political anchors at ABC, CBS, CNN, Fox News, and NBC, including interviewers like Jake Tapper, Chuck Todd, and Chris Wallace. Giuliani could not immediately be reached Sunday for comment. Giuliani has been a ubiquitous presence on television news in recent days, including several appearances on Sunday. Advocating on Trump’s behalf, Giuliani has repeatedly alleged that Biden, while serving as vice president, intervened in Ukraine to assist his son Hunter’s business interests. No evidence has surfaced that Biden intentionally tried to help his son in Ukraine (New York Times)."

Working on his behalf is apparently not enough, as just asks the pre$$ to censor free speech.

His campaign must be in real trouble, so much so that he is not worried about the hypocritical contradictions.

"Under fire for peddling a debunked conspiracy theory, Giuliani said Sunday he would cooperate with the House’s impeachment inquiry only if Trump gave him permission. ‘‘If he decides that he wants me to testify, of course I’ll testify,’’ Giuliani said during a series of television appearances where impeachment dominated the discussions, but it’s not clear whether Representative Adam Schiff, whose House Intelligence Committee is taking the lead on the impeachment investigation, wants to hear sworn testimony from Giuliani. For now, Schiff, a California Democrat, is working to strike a deal with the anonymous whistleblower whose complaint forms the heart of the proceedings against the 45th president (Associated Press)." 

Hitting a nerve of truth then.

"The vast majority of Americans are not surprised that President Trump encouraged the Ukrainian president to investigate former vice president Joe Biden’s son, and fewer than half see it as a ‘‘very serious’’ problem, an ABC News-Ipsos poll released Sunday indicates. Just about half of Americans said they are ‘‘not surprised at all’’ to hear of Trump’s actions. An additional 32 percent said they are ‘‘not surprised.’’ The national poll, conducted Friday and Saturday, also finds that 63 percent of adults say it is a serious problem that Trump pushed the president of Ukraine to investigate the son of his potential 2020 opponent Joe Biden in a July call that has sparked an extraordinary whistleblower complaint and led Democrats to launch an impeachment inquiry. Less than half of the public, 43 percent, said Trump’s action was ‘‘very serious.’’ The survey did not ask whether Trump should be impeached or about accusations that White House officials tried to keep the July phone call secret, a claim laid out by an unidentified whistleblower in a seven-page complaint released Thursday. Several reaction polls released in the past week found an increase in the percentage of Americans in favor of impeachment. An NPR-PBS NewsHour-Marist survey found 49 percent approval for impeachment and 46 percent against. After the release of former special counsel Robert Mueller III’s report on Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidential election and throughout the summer, most polls showed majorities opposing impeachment. House Democrats are gambling that more of the public will support their decision to move ahead with a formal impeachment inquiry as the investigation progresses. Until this week, about half of Democratic caucus members wanted to launch impeachment proceedings. By Friday, all but 11 were on board. Despite the Ukraine story’s domination of headlines, just about one-quarter of adults say they have followed the news ‘‘very closely.’’ More than 6 in 10 say they are following the issue at least ‘‘somewhat closely.’’ The survey was conducted Sept. 27-28 using Ipsos’ Knowledge Panel, an ongoing survey panel recruited through random sampling of US households. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4.8 percentage points (Washington Post)."

Well, they have completely lost me, and that comes from a person whose sole qualification for president was will he/she stand up to Israel.

In no way does that mean I want Obama 2.0:

"Cory Booker said he could end his presidential campaign by Tuesday unless he is able to reach his goal of $1.7 million in donations within the next 36 hours. Speaking on CNN’s ‘‘State of the Union’’ on Sunday, the New Jersey senator said that despite an ‘‘avalanche of support,’’ his campaign needed ‘‘some more help’’ from contributors. His campaign website shows he’s about $150,000 short of the amount he targeted on Sept. 21 to have a viable path to victory. Although he has languished at 2% or 3% in most polls and is struggling in fund-raising, Booker has qualified for the October debate of Democratic presidential candidates. In the CNN interview, Booker said he has also met the threshold of 165,000 unique donors required to participate in the November debate. Booker also rose to the defense of fellow candidate Joe Biden, saying the accusations from President Trump that the former vice president acted improperly to benefit his son Hunter’s business interests in Ukraine are unfounded. ‘‘I wouldn’t be running if I didn’t think I should be president, not him,’’ Booker said of Biden, with whom he has clashed on the campaign trail and at debates. Yet the allegations from Trump ‘‘should in no way affect the vice president in his pursuit of the nomination,’’ he said. ‘‘This can in no way besmirch his character, his honor, and his incredible service to this country over decades.’’ Instead, Booker said the focus should be on the actions of Trump and his family, and said he would tighten the rules if elected president. ‘‘I’m watching what’s going on with the Trump family right now and Trump properties, and I just find that deeply offensive to just any kind of independent sense of what’s honorable, ethical, not to mention consistent with the emoluments clause,’’ he said, referring to a clause in the Constitution that forbids accepting payments from foreign governments. ‘‘I just don’t think children of president and vice presidents during an administration should be out there doing that.’’ (Bloomberg News)." 

Those are fighting words (where are those emails anyway?), and need I remind you that this is a guy who defended Bain and Romney?

Beyond that, one wonders what the real reason is for ending his campaign. What was reported above doesn't pass the smell test. He's dropping out because he's a lousy $150k short after an avalanche of support?

Also see:

"A man accused of driving an SUV through a suburban Chicago shopping mall was charged Sunday with terrorism and ordered held without bond. Police in Schaumburg said the Cook County state’s attorney had authorized the charge against Javier Garcia, 22, of Palatine, Ill. Garcia also was charged with felony criminal damage to property. Assistant Cook County State’s Attorney Annalee McGlone said during the bond hearing that on Sept. 20, Garcia drove his SUV through a Sears entrance into the common area of Woodfield Mall, weaving in and out of kiosks as shoppers ran for cover. No one was struck by the vehicle. ‘‘Chaos ensued among the patrons of the mall,’’ McGlone said. Under Illinois law, the Class X felony of terrorism can apply if the suspect is believed to have caused more than $100,000 in damage to any building containing five or more businesses, according to a statement issued by Schaumburg Police Sergeant Karen McCarthy. Investigators said in a statement that they believed Garcia acted alone, and that no motive has been determined. He was released to police custody on Friday from the AMITA Health Behavioral Institute.  Defense attorney Amil Alkass said Garcia has no criminal history. He also noted his client takes psychiatric medications and is being treated for bipolar disorder and paranoid schizophrenia....."

‘‘He’s definitely not a terrorist’’ because ‘‘nobody targeted.’’ 

Gotta take away their licenses or ban cars, right?

"Police reports describe concerns eight years ago that the gunman who killed seven and wounded 25 last month in West Texas might have been planning an attack. Officers in Amarillo, Texas, went to the home of Seth Ator’s mother in February 2011 after she told them he had refused to take his mental-health medication and had threatened to end his own life in a shootout with police, CNN reported . They found a machete hidden in her son’s bed and an underground shelter he had dug in the backyard. In a recording the mother shared with police, her son declared, ‘‘911 will bow down before me.’’ Police interpreted what they found as preparations for an attack and were so troubled that they recorded floor plans of the property and shared the information with the city’s SWAT team, according to incident reports. Officers believed Ator was volatile and might hurt somebody someday. The police incident reports raise new questions about whether more could have been done to prevent Ator’s shooting spree in the cities of Midland and Odessa, Texas. It’s unclear how Ator, who once failed a background check for an attempted firearm purchase, acquired the AR-15-style rifle he used in the attack. Officers killed Ator outside a busy Odessa movie theater after the shooting rampage that lasted more than an hour. ‘‘There seemed to be some indication of some planned standoff with police,’’ one of the responding officers wrote in a report following the 2011 encounter. After inspecting the home, officers transported Ator to a hospital and he was medicated and admitted to a mental health treatment facility, according to the report. Police reports note that while in that facility Ator told security: ‘‘The police can’t be everywhere.’’ An officer stated: ‘‘I took this as a threat against the public.’’ 

All I can advise is avoid the movie theater lest something abominable happen.

Funeral, Sikh ceremony scheduled for slain Texas deputy

New York City police officer shot, killed

So that is the beat the New York Times now has Ali Watkins walking (now you know who leaked and how she got her scoops). #BlueLivesMatterMost

40 inches of snow in Montana 

‘It’s a February storm in September,’ and never mind that it has only just turned to fall because the timing couldn't have been worse after last week at the U.N.! Sorry, Greta!

I guess there is nothing going on in the world today so..... oh, wait:

Tropical storm drenches Mexican Pacific resorts

Btw, climate change also causes cancer so hop on your bike and start peddling (what's the carbon footprint on getting that lobster to China anyway?).

Have fun at the fair!

Major clashes erupt in Hong Kong before China’s national day

I stopped reading as soon as I say the New York Times byline, sorry.

About 20,000 rally in Moscow to demand protesters’ release

The Associated Press tells me that "amid the wave of opposition and public outrage, the authorities dropped charges against some of the protesters, but several people have been sentenced to prison terms of up to four years and a few others are in still custody."

As opposed to the controlled opposition protests here at home as the peace activists are slowly dying off and the movement, as such, is on fumes.

"A prominent bodyguard to Saudi Arabia’s King Salman was shot and killed in what authorities described as a personal dispute, state TV reported Sunday, offering few details on an incident that shocked the kingdom. Tributes poured in across social media for Major General Abdulaziz al-Fagham, with many including images of the bodyguard at work. One included him bending down to apparently help tie the shoes of King Salman, the 83-year-old ruler of the oil-rich kingdom. Others show al-Fagham in the background of events with both King Salman and his predecessor, the late King Abdullah. Details remained vague. While officials posted condolences for al-Fagham, the first official word of his death came in a single tweet by Saudi state television....." 

That is called a failed assassination attempt, people.

Saudi crown prince denies ordering Jamal Khashoggi’s murder  

Prince Mohammed also addressed the Sept. 14 missile and drone attack on Saudi oil facilities, and while Yemen’s Iranian-allied Houthi rebels claimed the assault, Saudi Arabia has said it was ‘‘unquestionably sponsored by Iran.’’ 

Related: 

"The average price of regular-grade gasoline has spiked 10 cents per gallon over the past two weeks. Industry analyst Trilby Lundberg of the Lundberg Survey said Sunday that the jump results mostly from a drone attack this month on Saudi Arabia’s key oil facility, which briefly slashed the nation’s crude production in half. Still, the price at the pump is 18 cents lower than it was a year ago....." 

Yeah, CUI BONO? 

One also wonders why the price has gone up over the incident. Because of fracking, the U.S. is now the largest oil producer and exporter in the world. Gas should be cheap, if not free (just don't drink the water in Newark, Flint, the schools, or anywhere else), as the wealth inequality yawns 

Did ‘‘60 Minutes’’ ask the butcher of Yemen about the war next door, or did the AP just not bother reporting it? I wouldn't know because I don't watch that agenda-pushing crap anymore.

"Yemeni rebels on Sunday said they carried out a major assault on forces of a Saudi Arabian-led coalition near the two nations’ border, releasing footage they say shows hundreds of captured troops, including Saudi officers, and destroyed Saudi military vehicles. The rebels also said they killed or wounded 500 coalition soldiers. The Saudi-led coalition has yet to respond to the rebels’ claims. If confirmed, the assault would represent one of the most significant victories for the Iranian-aligned rebels, known as Houthis, in the nearly five-year civil war gripping the Middle East’s poorest nation. The Houthi-owned Al-Masirah television network on Sunday broadcast footage showing a long, snaking line of what the rebels said were captured troops walking in rugged terrain. Many of the men, who apparently surrendered to the rebels, were dressed in flip flops and the traditional sarong-like clothing worn in Yemen and parts of Saudi Arabia. A handful wore tan camouflage uniforms. At least two of the men said on camera that they were citizens of Saudi Arabia. Other images showed burning armored vehicles with Saudi markings and weapons that the Houthis said they seized. Houthi fighters are also shown apparently launching attacks on coalition troops, clashes that left what appears to be corpses in Saudi military uniforms. If claims about the attack are found to be credible, it is certain to fuel more concerns in Washington and Riyadh that Iran is behind the rebels’ growing military capabilities, which in recent months have included numerous drone and cruise missile attacks on Saudi soil (Washington Post)."

What does US intelligence (ha-ha-ha-ha) have too say?

Yeah, the Saudis are really ready for a war with Iran!

Maybe we can start getting our oil from Equatorial Guinea:

"A fleet of supercars said to have been seized by Swiss authorities in a money laundering investigation involving the son of the leader of Equatorial Guinea was auctioned Sunday in Switzerland. The State of Geneva offered the collection for sale. The proceeds were expected to be donated to a charity in Equatorial Guinea, an oil-rich but impoverished West African country....."

I'm so happy the $wi$$ are looking out for their best interests, although I do wonder about the carbon footprint of the cars.

"US businesswoman admitted affair with Boris Johnson, UK report says" by Benjamin Mueller New York Times, September 29, 2019

LONDON — The new revelations were published as Boris Johnson arrived with his girlfriend, Carrie Symonds, in Manchester this weekend for the opening of the Conservative Party conference. The conference has been overshadowed by a Supreme Court ruling Tuesday that Johnson’s suspension of Parliament at the height of the Brexit crisis was “unlawful.” 

They obviously don't care and are not sensitive to her feelings.

The Sunday Times of London article this weekend fills in some details of an episode that has hounded Johnson during what has been a wobbly start to his leadership. The newspaper quotes as one of its sources David Enrich, who was an employee of The Wall Street Journal in 2013 when, he said, he interviewed US businesswoman Jennifer Arcuri, now 34, for an article about her business partner. He said he had been told by her friends about the alleged relationship between her and Johnson. Enrich is now a business editor at The New York Times.

Are you flipping kidding me?

How about asking Mark Thompson about Jimmy Saville!  

The New York Times has become nothing but smut that protects pedophiles and rapists like Epstein and Clinton by whitewashing it all.

The Globe's web version couldn't resist the titillation:

Earlier, The Sunday Times reported that Johnson often paid afternoon visits to the apartment where Arcuri lived in East London while on breaks from his duties as mayor. The article was illustrated with a photograph of Arcuri using a dancing pole fitted in her home.

What was Prince Andrew doing on Epstein's plane?

Johnson gave Arcuri’s first venture a major lift by appearing at four networking events for entrepreneurs and policymakers that her company had organized, the newspaper said. She received 11,500 pounds (around $14,000) in sponsorship money from an organization that was overseen by Johnson as mayor, and she was given coveted spots on trade missions with the mayor to Malaysia, New York, Singapore, and Tel Aviv. In some instances, Johnson’s office intervened to add her to the roster even though she did not meet the criteria for trade delegates, the report said.

That's not much money, and I see they made it to Israel.

Another business later set up by Arcuri, Hacker House, was awarded a central government grant of 100,000 pounds (about $120,000) in February, before Johnson became prime minister. An unnamed Conservative Party activist told the newspaper that Arcuri had acknowledged the affair and that, even when other people were around, played along with jokes about their status. After initially declining to discuss the accusations, Johnson told a reporter from the broadcaster ITV, “Absolutely everything was done with full propriety and in accordance with proper procedures.”

As long as he didn't abuse any kids.

Johnson was also accused this weekend of squeezing the thighs of two women seated on either side of him at a private lunch in 1999 at the headquarters of The Spectator, a right-wing magazine where he was editor at the time.

He's getting the Kavanaugh treatment!

Charlotte Edwardes, a columnist for The Sunday Times, said that Johnson had grabbed high on her thigh, touching “enough inner flesh beneath his fingers” to make her “sit suddenly upright.” She said the woman sitting on the other side of Johnson later told her that he did the same to her. The prime minister’s office denied the allegation, saying it was “untrue.”

Johnson’s serial philandering has frequently made headlines in Britain. Earlier in his career, he was fired from the Conservative Party’s leadership team after falsely denying reports of an extramarital affair, but the new accusations have put Johnson under a level of scrutiny that he has rarely received during his turbulent career.....

Wow, are they ever desperate to dredge this up!

--more--"

Don't worry. Soon he and Trump will be deposited in the dustbin of history.

Speaking of which, here's the graveyard of them all:

"Dismal turnout in Afghan election could leave government in even weaker position" by Susannah George and Pamela Constable Washington Post, September 29, 2019

Then we just have to stay to prop it up, right? 

Mission accomplished!

KABUL — The extent of the low turnout in Afghanistan’s fourth presidential election was becoming clear Sunday as officials began to tally the votes.

With just over half of all votes counted, Afghanistan’s Independent Election Commission said Sunday that only 2.2 million out of 9 million registered voters are estimated to have cast ballots. Those numbers put turnout at less than half of what it was in 2014, the last presidential election.

That is not only low, it's pitiful (only the Bo$ton City Council sees lower turnout).

The diminished showing at the polls could put Afghanistan’s government in an even weaker position no matter who is declared winner.

‘‘The turnout was the lowest than any other election in the past 18 years,’’ said Sughra Saadat, program manager of Transparent Election Foundation of Afghanistan, an independent watchdog group. ‘‘The turnout was low even in secure areas where more people voted in the past.’’

A combination of security concerns, fear of fraud, and voting irregularities kept many people away, according to officials monitoring the electoral process. The two front-runners in the race are President Ashraf Ghani, who is a seeking a second term, and Abdullah Abdullah, the country’s chief executive.

‘‘The low turnout underscores two of Afghanistan’s greatest challenges, which have haunted Afghanistan for years: the relentless threat of violence and popular mistrust of political leaders,’’ said Michael Kugelman, a researcher with the Wilson Center.

It's pandemic, people!

What exactly is the Wilson Center anyway?

Low levels of voter participation were especially glaring among women. Saadat said the low female turnout can be partly attributed to the new requirement that all voters be photographed at the polling sites, including women. Female voters in some conservative rural areas, as well as their male relatives, objected to this provision, which was added recently as a way to prevent identity fraud.

AAAAAHH! 

Yeah, blame the women. 

Isn't it amazing how AmeriKa brings one type of "democracy" to those it subjugates while you need not even show ID here (have to for just about everything else, that's how sacred is the vote). I suppose that would hinder Democratic fraud, so.....

Tribal and religious customs in such areas, especially among ethnic Pashtuns, forbid exposing women to unrelated men or to the public, and they may leave home only if covered in full-face burqas.

How insane is that? 

It's the Taliban that is standing up to the global police state.

Scott Worden, a visiting specialist from the US Institute for Peace, said the low turnout showed that ‘‘while the day was not as violent as people feared and there were few casualties, the Taliban were successful in suppressing the vote through threats and restricting access to the polls.’’

They must be Republicans, right?

Btw, the US Institute for Peace is a government creation that overlaps with the Wilson Center -- as if the US government was interested in peace!

Five people were killed on election day on Saturday and 76 wounded in attacks across the country, according to the Defense Ministry.

Worden described the low turnout as a ‘‘mixed blessing.’’ On one hand, it means that ‘‘only a small number of Afghans will have a say in who the next president is,’’ but on the other, ‘‘there was not the massive chance for fraud’’ that has ruined previous elections here. ‘‘There was a smaller total but a potentially more legitimate result,’’ he said.

It's like looking for a kernel of corn in a turd, and would be laughable were not such death and misery being doled out over the lies.

The top priority for whoever is pronounced the winner will be to secure a peace deal with the Taliban, but the low turnout could undercut the next president’s claim to a seat at the table. As Ghani pushed elections forward, he argued that the vote was necessary to give the government a mandate to negotiate directly with the Taliban, which has long dismissed officials in Kabul as American puppets.

When the war-promoting pre$$ starts talking peace I reach for the slat shaker, sorry.

The web version kept counting the votes:

Instead, the Taliban has insisted on negotiating with the United States, and the latest round of talks appeared to be inching toward a peace deal before collapsing suddenly earlier this month.

‘‘Assuming there are no credible complaints about fraud and a clear winner comes through either on the first or the second round, it would be good if the new president understood that his mandate is partial,’’ said Kate Clark, a researcher with the Afghan Analysts Network, noting that a large number of Afghans did not vote either because they live in Taliban-controlled areas or because they were apathetic about the candidates running.

I imagine the Afghans feel the same way Americans do regarding the gaseous spew that comes from the politicians as living conditions deteriorate.

The head of the Afghan Independent Election Commission, Hawa Alam Nuristani, said Saturday night that this had been ‘‘the healthiest and fairest election in comparison to the previous elections.’’ Afghanistan has held four presidential elections and two for parliament since civilian rule was restored in 2001.

Yeah, that's great news!

With the voting complete, many in Afghanistan fear a drawn-out political wrangling. After the 2014 presidential election, in which Ghani and Abdullah were the front-runners, the country was thrown into a months-long political crisis amid allegations of fraud. A European Union report later raised fraud concerns related to about a quarter of all votes cast in that election.

When do their impeach hearing begin?

In an interview with The Washington Post, Abdullah said that his supporters would not be willing to ‘‘sacrifice’’ victory this time and that a fraud-marred result ‘‘will be contested.’’

According to the Afghan constitution, a presidential candidate needs more than 50 percent of the vote to be declared the winner. If no candidate meets that threshold, the constitution mandates that a second round of voting be held within two weeks of the release of the official results.....

Another vote?

They will start to resemble Israel!

--more--"

Related:

"In 2001, under threat of US military strikes, Afghanistan’s hard-line Taliban rulers said explicitly for the first time that Osama bin Laden was still in the country and that they knew his hideout."

They said they would turn him over if presented with evidence and Bush gave em the finger because he didn't have any.

"In 2014, US and Afghan officials signed a long-delayed security pact to keep nearly 10,000 American forces in Afghanistan beyond the planned final withdrawal of US and international combat forces at the end of the year."

Five fucking years later and still no end in sight!

Yeah, nothing going on in the world other than the same old agenda-pushing propaganda from the Globe.

UPDATERebel group attacks US military base in Somalia

It's al-CIA-Bob (pronounced al-Sha-Bob) as the wars and occupations begin to ferment.

"In 1938, after co-signing the Munich Agreement allowing Nazi annexation of Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland, British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain said, "I believe it is peace for our time."

For some reason the web version edited that out because it was in print, and there would have been had it not been for Churchill and FDR (I'll let you piece it together for yourself).

Sunday, September 29, 2019

Sunday Globe Special: A Paranoid President

He very well may be; however, that doesn't mean they are not out to get him.

The front page lead, natch:

"Trump’s fixation on revenge for Mueller probe leads him back into impeachment zone" by Jess Bidgood and Liz Goodwin Globe Staff, September 28, 2019

WASHINGTON — When he emerged from the special counsel’s two-year investigation unscathed by criminal charges, President Trump yelled from the rooftops of Twitter and cable news: TOTAL EXONERATION!

But he was not ready to move on.

It wasn’t enough that Trump avoided charges of obstruction of justice, or that Robert Mueller failed to establish a conspiracy between his presidential campaign and the Russian operatives working to boost his candidacy. Trump appeared determined to prove that Russia never helped his campaign at all, which would establish that his unexpected victory over Hillary Clinton was his and his alone.

That's not the pre$$ narrative though.

And so, in the explosive whistle-blower complaint and the White House’s own record of the call revealed last week, a picture emerged of a president seeking to deputize Ukraine to help him, violating diplomatic norms and, possibly,

TRUMP, Page A13

I'm going to put aside the rest of the article, the bad grammar (you never start a sentence with an and or a but), and the sloppy journali$m and get back to it upon the turn-in.

At the edge of a warming world

It's the Globe's Special Report with its own Section. Supposedly details the effects on Cape Cod, and yet the rich and powerful are still buying and building on beachfront property. I'm kind of tired of the "¢limate ¢hange" $¢am at this point.

Now I suggest you take a deep breath before flipping below the fold:

Still a field of schemes in Dominican baseball

Yeah, all those murdered trees have nothing to do with climate change -- which is nothing more than a polite way of saying carbon tax, for a carbon tax engenders resistance and outrage while climate change engenders fear and obedience.

I suppose the owner of the paper owning a ball team has nothing to do with the disconnect, huh? Or the placement of the article on the Sunday Globe front page (his wife is managing director of the paper).

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

"Fraud, misconduct threaten Afghan presidential election" by Rahim Faiez and Kathy Gannon Associated Press, September 28, 2019

KABUL — Accusations of fraud and misconduct — more so than scores of Taliban attacks — threatened to overwhelm the results of Saturday’s vote for the next president of Afghanistan, denying the winner legitimacy and frustrating efforts to restart peace talks to end 18 years of war.

When polls closed Saturday, Afghanistan’s Interior Minister Massoud Andarabi said there had been 68 Taliban attacks across the country, most of them rockets fired from distant outposts. At least five people were killed, including one police officer, and scores more were injured.

A surge in violence in the run-up to the elections, which followed the collapse of US-Taliban talks to end America’s longest war, had already rattled Afghanistan in recent weeks. Yet on Saturday, for those who went to vote, it was the process itself that drew the greatest criticism, threatening the country’s fragile battle against chaos.

Many Afghans found incomplete voters’ lists, unworkable biometric identification systems aimed at curbing fraud, and, in some cases, hostile election workers.

Very interesting contrast with the "democracy" we are bringing to the Afghans as opposed to the nasty fight regarding voter ID laws here at home.

Ruhollah Nawroz, a representative of the Independent Complaints Commission tasked with monitoring the process, said the problems were countrywide. Whether they were the fault of the government or the Independent Election Commission, Nawroz said Afghans will have trouble seeing the vote as free and fair.

Well, we are like the Afghans in that regard no matter which party, if any, you identify.

The government’s push to hold the vote was in itself controversial. In an interview with the Associated Press last week, former Afghan president Hamid Karzai, who still wields heavy influence, warned that the vote could be destabilizing for the country at a time of deep political uncertainty, and could hinder restarting the peace process with the Taliban, but on Saturday, Hamdullah Mohib, Afghanistan’s national security adviser, said he believed that nothing would be acceptable to the Taliban except a complete return to power.

Yeah, Karzai was the oil company executive the Bush regime tapped as the first proconsul of Afghanistan. Still wields influence, huh?

‘‘The elections were a way for us to show, for the people of Afghanistan to show, we are committed to democracy and self-determination and that is how we want to see Afghanistan ruled and that was the most important message and I think that was delivered.’’

I'm tired of boilerplate pablum and symbolic messages being delivered, sorry. It's nothing but more war propaganda, and 13 years here is enough. 

On Saturday, tens of thousands of police, intelligence officials, and Afghan National Army personnel were deployed throughout the country to protect the 4,942 election centers. Still, 63-year old Ahmad Khan urged people to vote. ‘‘It is the only way to show the Taliban we are not afraid of them,” he said, though he also said he was worried about the apparent glitches in the process.

Yeah, U.S.-sponsored election just contain glitches. Any results anywhere else in the world, like Venezuela, are illegitimate if the wrong person or party wins.

You know, if you are part of the elite cla$$ of Bo$ton for whom this is written, it reads right. It's comforting. It's reassuring.

Campaigning for Saturday’s elections was subdued and went into high gear barely two weeks ahead of the polls as most of the 18 presidential candidates expected a peace deal between the United States and the Taliban to delay the vote, but on Sept. 7, President Trump declared a deal that had seemed imminent was now “dead’’ after violent attacks in Kabul killed 12 people, including two US-led coalition soldiers, one of whom was American.

Was the PNAC-er Khalilzad that was in charge of the "peace" efforts.

At least Trump tried to get us out of there before he backed down.

While many of the presidential candidates withdrew from the election, none formally did so, leaving all 18 candidates on the ballot.

Think Democrats running for president.

Elections in Afghanistan are notoriously flawed and in the last presidential polls in 2014, allegations of widespread corruption were so massive that the United States intervened to prevent violence. No winner was declared and the United States cobbled together the unity government in which Ghani and Abdullah shared equal power — Ghani as president and Abdullah as chief executive, a newly created position.....

That highlighted statement is so ass-backward and absurd it's beyond comment. 

--more--"

RelatedU.S. drone strike kills 30 pine nut farm workers in Afghanistan

It was an innocent error and mistake, sorry.

If only the English were still in charge, 'eh?

"Boris Johnson is referred to watchdog over scandal" by Peter Robins New York Times, September 28, 2019

LONDON — A monitor at London’s City Hall has referred Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain to a police watchdog for a possible investigation of claims that he unduly favored an US entrepreneur while mayor of the city, intensifying a politically risky scandal as he faces a hostile Parliament and a looming Brexit deadline.

The official said the claims about Johnson’s ties to the entrepreneur, Jennifer Arcuri, who joined several of the mayor’s international trade missions and whose businesses were awarded tens of thousands of pounds in government money.

The government’s response was fierce and dismissive: A Cabinet minister from Johnson’s Conservative Party, Theresa Villiers, told the BBC on Saturday that it was “an obviously politicized complaint.”

Rub-a-dub-dub.

Several British news outlets earlier quoted an unnamed government source as calling the referral “a nakedly political put-up job,” one done without warning to Johnson and without following due process.

Both Johnson and Arcuri have denied any wrongdoing.

The referral does not necessarily mean the prime minister will be investigated, but..... 

So New York Times is sooooo hoping and pushing!

--more--"

Also see:

Gilded coffin is returned to Egypt

For Sissi?

Conservatives target LGBT pride march

Dumb Polacks.

Protesters decry jailing of Catalans

Regime change chaos?

A Chim Chiminey Parade Honors Sweeps and Recalls Past Horrors

It's the New York Times literally sweeping out shit of of the Italian chimney.

"Favorite in Austria’s election seems open to reunion with the far right" by Katrin Bennhold New York Times, September 28, 2019

VIENNA — When Sebastian Kurz became Austria’s youngest-ever chancellor two years ago, he made a pact to govern with the far right. He would in effect housebreak them, he suggested, checking their worst instincts.

In the 18 months that followed, Kurz, a conservative, had plenty of opportunity to try to do so: One official of the far-right Freedom Party that he had partnered with was found to use a fraternity songbook that celebrated the Holocaust. Another published a poem calling immigrants rats. A third put child refugees behind barbed wire and demanded that people who buy kosher meat register their names first.

Then in May, an old video surfaced showing the most senior government minister of the Freedom Party fantasizing about restricting press freedom and promising government contracts to a would-be investor close to President Vladimir Putin of Russia.

“Enough is enough,” Kurz declared and called for a snap election, but that was then. On Sunday, Kurz is up for reelection, and all indications are that he will not only win again — but that he also may be open to another coalition with the same far-right Freedom Party.

How Kurz, Austria’s fresh-faced, 33-year-old political wunderkind, could finesse a reunion is part of the political gymnastics of an election that follows one of the country’s biggest political scandals in its recent history.

At a time of rising nationalism and populism in Europe, Austria has become an important test case. With centrist parties shrinking and former far-right fringe parties becoming entrenched in the political landscape, mainstream politicians across the Continent have scrambled for a response.

I haven't commented until now because I am simply tired of the New York Times spin and spew, as well as the endless advocacy journali$m and elitist insult.

Beyond that, you can almost see a shrill desperation and hysteria surrounding their reporting. They are scared. They are losing the "information war" on all levels. Completely discredited and all their own doing.

When Kurz first bounded onto the political scene, he offered one: seizing on issues like limits to immigration and the threat posed to Austrian identity to give a youthful and more elegant repackaging to much of the agenda of the Freedom Party — and then inviting them into the government.

Under Kurz, a former conservative youth leader who once distributed branded condoms as a campaign gag, the traditionally staid People’s Party was refashioned into a social-media-savvy political movement that attracted hundreds of thousands of new supporters.

His fans see him as one of the most gifted politicians in Europe, who turned around the fortunes of his conservative party and put his small country on the map, a role model for center-right leaders in these disruptive political times.

They are turning him into Hitler!


“Everyone wants to meet Sebastian Kurz,” said Martin Eichtinger, a former Austrian ambassador to Britain and fellow conservative. “He is a star.”

Kurz’s critics retort that he is a political shape-shifter of little conviction, and that by bringing the far right into government he has mainstreamed its hateful messaging.

I'm told dozens of adoring fans lined up to take selfies with him.

What stands out most from their short-lived time in office are measures the coalition took that were aimed at making life uncomfortable for immigrants. Benefits were sharply cut for families with more than two children and for those who do not speak German or English. Wearing headscarves in primary schools and kindergartens was banned, and recently arrived asylum-seekers, who have no work permit and can only do auxiliary jobs in public institutions, saw their pay curbed.

Oh, the pre$$ pushing the interests of migrants, what a shock.

Still, the campaign has not been entirely smooth for Kurz. The dust had barely settled on the outrage over the coalition-busting video — which secretly filmed Heinz-Christian Strache on the Spanish island of Ibiza in July 2017, a few months before he would become vice chancellor in the Kurz government — when Austrian papers began reporting that Kurz’s office had ordered several hard drives shredded before he left office. Later, financial records showing questionable financing for his conservative People’s Party surfaced in the media.

As if someone was sitting on it and waiting for just the right time to leak it.

I'm sorry, readers, but it is clear that the Sunday Globe is no longer serious and that the Globe has become a joke.

Earlier this month, the former chancellor became the butt of jokes and memes, as reviewers panned the latest of three biographies documenting his rise to power as more akin to fan fiction or a steamy romance novel than a serious account of the life of Austria’s youngest, and shortest-serving, leader.

Known for his tightly controlled social media image, being cast as the dashing hero under the mocking hashtag #50ShadesOfKurz was not necessarily how the former chancellor intended to dominate Twitter during his campaign.

The book’s fawning prose was quickly skewered by influential politicians, journalists, and intellectuals, but it does not appear to have hurt Kurz’s standing.

Polls show his party enjoying 33 to 35 percent support — well ahead of its next-closest rivals in the Freedom Party and the center-left Socialists, at around 20 percent each. More than 40 percent would elect him outright.

They will have a hard time frauding and rigging that vote, but I wouldn't put it past them (see Afghanistan above). 

There is no certainty that Kurz will return to his old coalition partner. When it comes to coalitions, he may have his pick, analysts predicted, and the young chancellor may be wary that a reunion would look unprincipled, even unseemly, but if it happens, a replay of a partnership with the Freedom Party threatens to chip away at Austria’s democratic foundation, some observers fear.....

Yes, “often you don’t know how precious it is what you have.”

--more--"

[FULL PAGE TOTAL WINE AD, A7]

Hong Kong pro-democracy rally ends early as violence erupts

The continuing destabilization and regime change effort is at the every least meant to spoil their holiday:

Beijing parade to glorify Communist Party, and Xi’s power

I'm tired of reading New York Times swill. Sorry. 

Dutch railroad reckons with Holocaust shame, decades later

Same goes for the Jew York Times, which is apparently more book promotion than anything else these days.

Zimbabwe’s Mugabe is buried

Good thing, too because he died weeks ago and the corpse was starting to stink.

[The first part of the A section ended on page A10 with a full-page ad for Sandals resorts]

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

The second part began on page A11:

Lawmakers see a broken system and little common ground at the border,

It's New York Times. 

Next!

Diversion of funds for wall puts Guam projects on hold

China and the entire Pacific Rim just breathed a sigh of relief.

Better hold yours:

"Amateur pro-Trump sleuths scramble to unmask whistle-blower" by Craig Timberg and Drew Harwell Washington Post, September 28, 2019

The looming battle over President Trump’s potential impeachment has sparked an online hunt in the far-right corners of the Web as self-styled Internet sleuths race to identify the anonymous person Trump has likened to a treasonous spy.

Now the CIA's newspaper is going to run cover for their Deep State asset by tossing out insults.

At least the Web bloggers are not pretending to be truth-telling journali$ts that shovel $hit. They are instead doing what the pre$$ should be doing, except it's the pre$$.

Their guesses have been scattershot, conspiratorial, and often untethered from reality, spanning a wide range of such unlikely contenders as presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner and Vice President Mike Pence.

Oh, that's rich coming from a paper that promoted such things as the Gulf of Tonkin, babies being thrown out of Kuwaiti incubators, and Iraq's possession of WMDs.

At least we finally got to see the name Kushner in the pre$$, huh?

The quest to identify the person who crafted the politically explosive complaint against Trump has become a fixation across the most extreme corners of such platforms as Twitter, Reddit, and Gab — and has spread onto conservative news sites, radio shows, and TV broadcasts.

On the contrary, it is the pre$$ that is obsessedWe don't need to know the name because we know what he is and what he represents.

The president’s scornful portrayal of the whistle-blower shaped and stoked the online conversation throughout the week, as it descended into a case study of the Internet at its worst — frenetic, fueled by rumor, and frequently racist, misogynistic, and crude.

What that paragraph tells you is the web bloggers have hit close to the mark and the paid pre$$titues are scrambling as they project their own conduct on to us out here in the nether regions. 

The hunt for the whistle-blower revealed a glimpse of how polarized partisan media and the Internet have become, in which every news event becomes an opportunity for online brawlers to steer mainstream conversations and defeat the other side. ‘‘We’re seeing all the elements of information warfare play out online during this episode,’’ said Peter Singer, a senior fellow at the think tank New America.

Yeah, and the target of the pre$$ is public perception and they are losing it!

At least the $tink tank makes one think!

After the complaint was made public Thursday morning, pro-Trump commenters guessed the whistle-blower is Hispanic or Jewish or Arab or African-American and, many were sure, a woman — though rarely did the commenters use such delicate terms. A top choice soon became Susan Gordan, a former deputy director of national intelligence, though others thought a more probable candidate is CIA Director Gina Haspel.

Those last two names are blatant disinformation since the Times outed them as a he (unless that was a deception), or made to make the independent investigators look stupid.

Some commenters offered names or rough demographic characteristics, while others posted photos of potential suspects. One 4chan commenter focused on former national security adviser John Bolton as a contender, posting a close-up image of his trademark bristly mustache with the words ‘‘Operation Infinite Walrus!’’

YUP! It's pretty obvious now that he is the one leaking to the pre$$, and I hate to say I told you so, but I told you so!

So the WaComPo tossed out a couple of rabbit red herrings for you to chases, then slyly tells you who is the real source.

The speculation gained energy at several key moments, beginning with the release of the transcript of a July 25 call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. The frenzy accelerated with the release of the complaint itself.

The guessing game took another twist after The New York Times reported the complaint was made by a CIA officer detailed to the White House. A conservative writer, Stu Cvrk, tweeted out his guess a few hours later.

‘‘Is This Guy The Ukraine Phone Call Whistleblower?’’ Cvrk tweeted, linking to a post he wrote on RedState, a conservative news and commentary site.

‘‘A source known to me at the State Department, who will remain anonymous, tells me that everyone is pointing to Edward ‘Ned’ Price as the whistleblower who came forward with the accusation that President Trump ‘abused his office’ during a phone conversation with the Ukrainian president,’’ wrote Cvrk. Price is a former CIA officer who retired in 2017 and is now a political analyst for NBC News.

Can you hear that Mockingbird sing?

Price, who was more amused than upset at the claim, said it made him concerned about the development of ‘‘discourse that is just divorced from the facts.’’

‘‘It’s part of the political atmosphere that we live in now,’’ Price said. ‘‘People are looking for anything on which to hang their tinfoil hats.’’

Oh, we are all ‘‘tinfoil hat guys’’ out here, I get it. 

Those parlor game paragraphs would be funny and the charge laughable were we not told just last week that UFOs are REAL!

Who is wearing the tinfoil hat now?

On Friday, the Washington Examiner spread word of a $50,000 reward offered by two pro-Trump political activists known for smear campaigns, who called the scandal a ‘‘national disgrace’’ and said they hoped identifying the whistle-blower would help put ‘‘this dark chapter behind us.’’

A post on the conservative Washington Sentinel suggested the whistle-blower complaint was written by a ‘‘very organized’’ team of individuals, based on what they called ‘‘document analysis (grammatic profiling) software.’’ Breitbart News said the ‘‘so-called whistleblower’’ marched to the orders of a vast operation bankrolled by George Soros, a longtime target of conservative conspiracy theories. 

Yeah, Clinton lawyers wrote it while Soros was bankrolling Greta.

The whistle-blower has remained anonymous, but should his or her name be publicized through the efforts of internet sleuths, journalists, or others, the consequences probably will be serious given the intensity of the fixation online.

Yeah, but people like Manning are not entitled to such things. The only "whistleblowers" worth protecting are the Deep State assets that leak to the pre$$.

Many people in such spotlights have had their personal information — such as their home addresses, family affiliations, and Social Security numbers — published through online ‘‘doxing’’ harassment campaigns. It’s not unusual for figures identified in this way to be confronted in person at their homes or workplaces.

Yeah, it's okay when they show up at McConnell's house when he is inside with a broken shoulder, or show up outside Tucker Carlson's house, or confronts people at restaurants.

The Globe not only ignores that conduct, but encourages and approves of it!

‘‘It’s very disruptive,’’ said Joan Donovan, research director at Harvard University’s Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy. ‘‘The president has already branded this person as a snitch and a spy, and that’s a problem.’’

The whistle-blower’s lawyer has publicly called for respect for the person’s privacy, but many in conservative media have shown no interest in standing down.

In response to this request, the Trump-boosting talk-radio host Mark Levin said on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show Thursday night, ‘‘Too bad, pal. Too late. You want to impeach our president, using this BS? We want to know all about your guy.’’

I saw that, and can't help but note that he is Jewish.

--more--"

TRUMP, continued from Page A1

as Democrats are now trying to determine, his oath of office in the process.

Now, it appears Trump’s fixation with settling scores over the Russia investigation — as well as his desire to win reelection and penchant for conspiracy theories — have landed him right back where he started: in the crosshairs of a congressional investigation into whether he solicited aid from a foreign nation for his own political gain.

OMG! 

Yeah, he brought this all upon himself, uh-huh.

The Globe girls then turned to Fernando Cutz, who was an adviser to General H.R. McMaster, the president’s former national security adviser, for expert analysis.

The whistle-blower’s complaint, as well as a White House reconstruction of the phone call between Trump and Ukranian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky, has become the road map for a Democratic impeachment inquiry five months after it seemed that the biggest shadow over Trump’s presidency — the Mueller investigation — had passed, but the two documents made public last week also offer a remarkable window into the mind-set of a president consumed with a conspiracy theory about the origins of the investigation into his 2016 campaign, and willing to bend the rules to validate that victory and secure the next one, and this is all taking place inside a West Wing missing many of the tempering influences who were present at the outset of Trump’s presidency.

The hurling of the word conspiracy theory tells me they are scared! You have hit too close to the mark and must be shouted down as a kook.

“He struggles to trust others, and keeps his own counsel, obviously at his peril,” said Michael D’Antonio, a Trump biographer.

I don't blame him. He is like Caesar, surrounded by enemies without a face.

The White House’s reconstruction of the call with Zelensky shows Trump at his backslapping, cajoling best, in full control of a conversation with a weaker ally. Yet as he assumed the role of the superior power in position to protect Ukraine, he was also careful to portray himself and the United States as victims, too.

“I would like you to do us a favor though, because our country has been through a lot,” Trump said, according to the memo, “and Ukraine knows a lot about it.”

One big ask seemed to reference a baseless conspiracy theory that challenges the US intelligence community’s conclusion that Russian operatives hacked into the Democratic National Committee’s servers during the 2016 election, and suggests Ukranian interests framed Russia. Elements of that theory have been promoted by right-wing websites and Russian media.

Then it's probably the truth then, given that my pre$$ and the US intelligence community (proven liars if there ever were) are on the other side. That's what we have come to in AmeriKa.

“The server, they say Ukraine has it,” Trump said, and then mentioned the cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike, which was hired by the DNC to investigate the hack, and which concluded the Russians were involved.

Oooooh, that explains the political and pre$$ reaction and the sudden impeachment furry! The pre$$ is trying to protect the Clintons at all costs.

It's been floated out in the nether worlds of true investigation that the Ukraine oligarch that was the majority shareholder and investor in CrowdStrike has the servers. Crowdstrike ran cover for the Clintons, and never turned the servers over to the FBI (which never really wanted them). If Trump were ever able to get his hands on those.....

“As you saw yesterday, that whole nonsense ended with a very poor performance by a man named Robert Mueller, an incompetent performance,” Trump said on the call, which took place one day after Mueller testified before Congress. “But they say a lot of it started with Ukraine. Whatever you can do, it’s very important that you do it if that’s possible.”

That's because he is suffering from dementia, and the reported conversations so far are nowhere near the level of impeachment. 

WTF?

This is the best they got?

Trump then asked Zelensky to “look into” former vice president Joe Biden — the Democratic challenger who has been polling well ahead of Trump in a 2020 matchup — and his son Hunter Biden over unfounded allegations of corruption.

“Whatever you can do with the attorney general would be great,” he said to Zelensky.

I'm starting to think this isn't about Biden at all. He is going to be collateral damage in the effort to protect the Clintons!

Mueller’s report had detailed Trump’s anger and fear that the special counsel investigation would cast doubt over the legitimacy of his win, a frustration he has shared with multiple aides. That fear appears to have lingered, preventing Trump from simply moving on from the political reprieve he was handed by the report’s release last spring.

“I think when presidents are being accused, like anyone else, they can get a little bit conspiratorial,” said Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard law professor who has advised Trump in the past. “I do think the Ukraine connection is a bit stretched, but he’s very focused on trying to demonstrate he didn’t do anything wrong.”

Now that Epstein is gone, Dersh no longer has to worry. 

Trump has long derided the Russia investigation as a “hoax” and a “witch hunt,” and in recent months has embraced fringe theories about its origin.

“The power of conspiracy theories at the highest levels of power is pretty striking,” said Julian Zelizer, a history professor at Princeton University. “He and many of his advisers see the world through arguments — without evidence — of persons who are out to get them.”

When asked during a news conference Wednesday to explain why it was appropriate for the US president to ask a foreign leader for information on a political rival, Trump’s answer was right from the fever swamps: “The witch hunt,” he asserted, started with President Obama asking a foreign leader for damaging information on him.

“There have been some fantastic books that just came out recently and so many other books,” Trump said, citing a book by a Fox News analyst called “The Russia Hoax” that defended his campaign. “A lot of books are coming out. When you start reading those books, you see what they did to us.”

Yeah, the information is out there. The Globe just chooses to omit and obfuscate it from their readers.

Then he again cited his victory in 2016, listing his Electoral College totals. “We won an election convincingly, convincingly,” he said.

Last week’s revelations also offer new insights into the inner workings of the White House as it enters an impeachment battle and reelection fight. According to the whistle-blower, administration officials hid the official transcript of the president’s call with Zelensky by putting it into in a highly classified computer system reserved for national security matters.

Richard Ben-Veniste, a special prosecutor during Watergate, said that move bore an “eerie similarity” to the scandal that eventually brought down President Richard M. Nixon.

OMG, they turned to a Clinton lawyer and member of the 9/11 Commission!

“There’s a recognition immediately by those surrounding the president that he has done something bad,” Ben-Veniste said. “We have an allegation that there was an immediate effort by the White House to sequester the evidence of the conversation the president had with Mr. Zelensky by . . . making an essentially bogus claim of national security that put the material under very highly classified protection.”

And, as the complaint suggests, Trump does not face the same pushback from top staffers and advisers that he used to, further insulating him in an echo chamber that is often filled with misinformation. Mueller’s report, for example, revealed that several former aides, including confidant Corey Lewandowski and White House counsel Don McGahn, refused to carry out Trump’s orders to attempt to interfere in the investigation, likely protecting Trump from additional accusations of obstruction.

That's my morning paper!

Related: 


Thankfully, according to the New York Times, the United States and Israel are not one of them. 

This time around, the president’s close friend Rudy Giuliani has himself been raising questions about the Bidens’ activities in Ukraine for months, and Trump appeared confident that Attorney General William Barr would also come to his aid, by speaking with Zelensky about the matter. The Department of Justice has denied Barr spoke with Trump about having Ukraine look into the Bidens.

“The initial White House that we had was designed by the Republican National Committee,” said former Trump campaign adviser Michael Caputo. “This one is designed by President Donald Trump.”

--more--"

His day of reckoning may be here, or it may be just another sugar high. It will be up to the ‘people’ as GlobeDocs features films about hope and healing.

Related:

Ideas | David Scharfenberg
The hidden danger of impeachment

Scharfenberg, 'eh?

Also see:

State Department takes closer look at Hillary Clinton’s e-mail server
By Greg Miller, Greg Jaffe and Karoun Demirjian Washington Post

Didn't make print, to no one's surprise. 

So who has it, and why did FBI not seize it?

The Globe put out that fire quickly while lighting these:

"More populated, wealthier counties have adapted their emergency plans to respond to the new reality of thousands of residents losing power for an undetermined amount of time, but the preventive outages are proving to be a burden to smaller, poorer counties without resources to set up places for people to cool off or mobilize staff to deal with emergencies if outages stretch past two days......"

The weather is the cover story for the Third-Worldization of the USA and California, using the fire that killed 85 people and nearly destroyed the Butte County town of Paradise as the rationale. I'm told the outages lasted less than a day, and no major problems were reported as California lawmakers this year set aside $75 million to prepare local governments for the outages, but officials have yet to decide how to distribute the money. 

At least the homeless and poop-stained streets have disappeared.

So who lights the fires this time?

"Human lookouts are becoming a remnant of the past. The Forest Service manages 153 lookout posts these days in Washington and Oregon, but only about 50 of them are staffed full or part time. The use of aerial surveillance in the 1960s accelerated their demise....."

And now they have drones that don't have to be piloted.

Exam doesn’t find cause of boat fire

Feds crack Medicare gene test fraud that peddled cheek swabs

They are just ‘‘bad actors trying to take advantage of good medicine,’’ and believe it or not, it's the exact same article that was in print yesterday, save for the final four paragraphs. 

Try to think of it as a double in a pack of ball cards, right? I suppose the story is so important it needed to be printed twice. Either that or it was functioning as filler.

Page A19-A25 are filled with obituaries as the first section concludes on page A26:

"Researchers question Census Bureau’s new approach to privacy" by Jennifer McDermott and Mike Schneider Associated Press, September 28, 2019

PROVIDENCE — In an age of rapidly advancing computer power, the US Census Bureau recently undertook an experiment to see if census answers could threaten the privacy of the people who fill out the questionnaires.

The fear is that advertisers, market researchers, or anybody with know-how and curiosity could use data to reconstruct the identities of census respondents.

No need to fear the government, though, with this ‘‘brand new, radically more conservative definition of privacy.’’

Historians have found evidence that census data helped identify Japanese-Americans who were rounded up and confined to camps during World War II. That revelation led to an apology from then-Census Bureau Director Kenneth Prewitt in 2000.

That was before 9/11, and given the way this country is going and its views on dissent, I wouldn't be surprised if the Deep State already has plans in place. All the empty malls should do nicely.

Jewish groups and some liberal organizations had concerns about privacy when the bureau was lobbied to ask about religion for the 1960 census. Some noted that Nazis had used government and church records to identify and round up Jews. The idea never went anywhere..... 

Yeah, you Jews don't have to worry here. Not as long as Zionists control this government.

--more--"

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

The B-section:

Families displaced by Lawrence gas leak return home

Harvard president apologizes for reference to freeing of slaves in discussing fund-raising effort

He should have learned by now.

Protesters denounce police sweep that rounded up addicts, homeless

The Globe has taken the side of the shoplifting addicts over that of residents.

Danvers mall vape shop sues state over temporary ban

They were given a court date in February 2020.

You are better off shooting up, anyway. That seems to be the message.

Ed Markey, Joe Kennedy III appear at rally to support striking union workers

I had already stopped reading and marking the pos at that point, sorry.

{@@##$$%%^^&&}

Well, I'm out of Ideas:

Ideas | Tatiana Schlossberg
Buying jeans, eating burgers, watching Netflix

Schlossberg, huh?

Ideas | Tatiana Schlossberg
Combating climate change can feel like a daunting task, but we’re not powerless

Ideas | Amitha Kalaichandran
Climate change is making us sick

PFFFT!

Yeah, forget the 5G radiation, the GMOs, the chemtrails visible in the sky, the chemicals in the food and water, fracking, Fukushima, the vaccines, etc. We are sick because of climate change.

Ironically, it was the Globe editorial regarding the carbon footprint of a cup of coffee that made me rethink my whole routine and get on board.

Time to stop making that morning coffee run that leads to the purchase of a Bo$ton Globe -- for the sake of the planet!