• beat it

    From jewedus@1:229/2 to All on Monday, September 03, 2018 11:32:53
    From: allreadydun@gmail.com

    such a gasbag response.
    no cigar. you're out.
    fuck off forever. how's
    that character disorder been
    workin' for ya for the last 50 years?
    gets lots of friends falling for
    your bullshit do ya? no sale here.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Donovan@1:229/2 to jewedus on Monday, September 03, 2018 12:13:07
    From: jeremyhdonovan@gmail.com

    On Monday, September 3, 2018 at 11:32:53 AM UTC-7, jewedus wrote:
    such a gasbag response.
    no cigar. you're out.
    fuck off forever. how's
    that character disorder been
    workin' for ya for the last 50 years?
    gets lots of friends falling for
    your bullshit do ya? no sale here.

    Ha. So you're gaslighting me then. :) Do you not realize that?
    Since I know better it can't work. You're just plain full of crap.

    But what made you so MAD? I wonder... was it just losing a few
    arguments, or is it... alcoholism? Notice, I'm only asking.
    If I was gaslighting you, I'd simply insist that it IS. Is that it?


    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From thang ornerythinchus@1:229/2 to jeremyhdonovan@gmail.com on Thursday, September 06, 2018 10:36:36
    From: thangolossus@gmail.com

    On Mon, 3 Sep 2018 12:13:07 -0700 (PDT), "Jeremy H. Donovan" <jeremyhdonovan@gmail.com> wrote:

    On Monday, September 3, 2018 at 11:32:53 AM UTC-7, jewedus wrote:
    such a gasbag response.
    no cigar. you're out.
    fuck off forever. how's
    that character disorder been
    workin' for ya for the last 50 years?
    gets lots of friends falling for
    your bullshit do ya? no sale here.

    Ha. So you're gaslighting me then. :) Do you not realize that?
    Since I know better it can't work. You're just plain full of crap.

    But what made you so MAD? I wonder... was it just losing a few
    arguments, or is it... alcoholism? Notice, I'm only asking.
    If I was gaslighting you, I'd simply insist that it IS. Is that it?

    Oh. Shit.

    You do NOT accuse people of dependency, what the fuck is wrong with
    you? Make peace, not war, you idiot...



    .

    ---
    This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Donovan@1:229/2 to All on Thursday, September 06, 2018 15:24:37
    From: jeremyhdonovan@gmail.com

    I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration

    I work for the president but like-minded colleagues and I have vowed
    to thwart parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations.

    Anonymous
    Sept. 5, 2018

    (The Times is taking the rare step of publishing an anonymous Op-Ed essay. We have done so at the request of the author, a senior official in the Trump administration whose identity is known to us and whose job would be jeopardized
    by its disclosure. We
    believe publishing this essay anonymously is the only way to deliver an important perspective to our readers.)


    Excerpts:


    The root of the problem is the president’s amorality. Anyone who works with him knows he is not moored to any discernible first principles that guide his decision making.

    Although he was elected as a Republican, the president shows little affinity for ideals long espoused by conservatives: free minds, free markets and free people. At best, he has invoked these ideals in scripted settings. At worst, he
    has attacked them
    outright.

    In addition to his mass-marketing of the notion that the press is the “enemy of the people,” President Trump’s impulses are generally anti-trade and anti-democratic.

    From the White House to executive branch departments and agencies, senior officials will privately admit their daily disbelief at the commander in chief’s comments and actions. Most are working to insulate their operations from his whims.

    Meetings with him veer off topic and off the rails, he engages in repetitive rants, and his impulsiveness results in half-baked, ill-informed and occasionally reckless decisions that have to be walked back.

    “There is literally no telling whether he might change his mind from one minute to the next,” a top official complained to me recently, exasperated by
    an Oval Office meeting at which the president flip-flopped on a major policy decision he’d made
    only a week earlier.

    Take foreign policy: In public and in private, President Trump shows a preference for autocrats and dictators, such as President Vladimir Putin of Russia and North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, and displays little genuine appreciation for the ties that
    bind us to allied, like-minded nations.

    Astute observers have noted, though, that the rest of the administration is operating on another track, one where countries like Russia are called out for meddling and punished accordingly, and where allies around the world are engaged as peers rather
    than ridiculed as rivals.

    On Russia, for instance, the president was reluctant to expel so many of Mr. Putin’s spies as punishment for the poisoning of a former Russian spy in Britain. He complained for weeks about senior staff members letting him get boxed into further
    confrontation with Russia, and he expressed frustration that the United States continued to impose sanctions on the country for its malign behavior. But his national security team knew better — such actions had to be taken, to hold Moscow accountable.

    This isn’t the work of the so-called deep state. It’s the work of the steady state.

    ***

    His own people are saying these things.

    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From slider@1:229/2 to All on Friday, September 07, 2018 00:35:02
    From: slider@anashram.com

    thang wrote...

    such a gasbag response.
    no cigar. you're out.
    fuck off forever. how's
    that character disorder been
    workin' for ya for the last 50 years?
    gets lots of friends falling for
    your bullshit do ya? no sale here.

    Ha. So you're gaslighting me then. :) Do you not realize that?
    Since I know better it can't work. You're just plain full of crap.

    But what made you so MAD? I wonder... was it just losing a few
    arguments, or is it... alcoholism? Notice, I'm only asking.
    If I was gaslighting you, I'd simply insist that it IS. Is that it?

    Oh. Shit.

    You do NOT accuse people of dependency, what the fuck is wrong with
    you? Make peace, not war, you idiot...

    ### - not a chance... the man's a warmonger not a peacemaker

    like the scorpion: it's not in his 'nature' to make peace...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Donovan@1:229/2 to All on Friday, September 07, 2018 17:45:00
    From: jeremyhdonovan@gmail.com

    Confirmed: Brett Kavanaugh Can’t Be Trusted

    A perfect nominee for a president with no clear relation to the truth.

    Sept. 7, 2018

    In a more virtuous world, Judge Brett Kavanaugh would be deeply embarrassed by the manner in which he has arrived at the doorstep of a lifetime appointment to
    the Supreme Court.

    He was nominated by a president who undermines daily the nation’s democratic order and mocks the constitutional values that Judge Kavanaugh purports to hold
    dear.

    Now he’s being rammed through his confirmation process with an unprecedented degree of secrecy and partisan maneuvering by Republican senators who, despite their overflowing praise for his legal acumen and sterling credentials, appear terrified for the
    American people to find out much of anything about him beyond his penchant for coaching girls’ basketball.

    Perhaps most concerning, Judge Kavanaugh seems to have trouble remembering certain important facts about his years of service to Republican administrations. More than once this week, he testified in a way that appeared to directly contradict evidence in
    the record.

    For example, he testified that Roe v. Wade is “settled as a precedent of the Supreme Court.” But he said essentially the opposite in a 2003 email leaked to The Times. “I am not sure that all legal scholars refer to Roe as the settled law of the
    land at the Supreme Court level since Court can always overrule its precedent, and three current Justices on the Court would do so,” he wrote then.

    Judge Kavanaugh’s backers in the Senate brushed this off by pointing out that
    his 2003 statement was factually correct. They’re right, which means that his
    testimony this week was both disingenuous and meaningless.

    As we’ve learned with each new trickle of previously withheld documents, Judge Kavanaugh didn’t start misleading senators just this week.

    At his 2004 confirmation hearing before the Judiciary Committee, he denied any involvement in the vetting of a controversial judicial nominee while serving as
    one of President George W. Bush’s White House lawyers. The nominee, William Pryor Jr., had
    among other things called Roe v. Wade “the worst abomination of constitutional law in our history.” In fact, Mr. Kavanaugh was more than a little involved, as emails from that period — which Senate Republicans had withheld until early Thursday
    morning — made clear.

    In that 2004 hearing and again in 2006, when he was being considered for a seat
    on the federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., Mr. Kavanaugh told Congress, under oath, that he knew nothing about the extensive theft of secret strategy documents from
    Democratic senators’ computers by Republican staffers. As it turns out, he did in fact receive those documents or summaries of them. But he now claims that he had no reason to believe that they had been stolen, even though one email he got had the
    subject line “spying” and began, “I have a friend who is a mole for us on
    the left.”

    Why Are Republicans Covering Up Brett Kavanaugh’s Past? http://tinyurl.com/y74dhj5a

    The Supreme Court Confirmation Charade
    http://tinyurl.com/yafpgfm4

    Then there are the persistent doubts about his truthfulness in telling senators
    in 2006 that he had no knowledge of Mr. Bush’s warrantless wiretapping program or his detainee treatment policy — claims that have been called into question by yet more
    emails, which showed he knew about both of those things years before they became public.

    As Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois told Judge Kavanaugh on Thursday, “You say
    that words matter. You claim to be a textualist when you interpret other people’s words, but you don’t want to be held accountable for the plain meaning of your own words.


    Judge Kavanaugh was quick to provide lawyerly explanations for all of these discrepancies, but they paint a pattern that’s hard to ignore: He misstates facts under oath, and Republicans cover for him by making it hard, if not impossible, to get the
    documents proving it. With the help of the White House and a personal lawyer for Mr. Bush, Senator Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has subverted a long-established, nonpartisan process and hidden more than 90 percent of the
    material pertaining to Judge Kavanaugh’s time in government.

    It’s only thanks to Senate Democrats and others that we’ve been able to see
    important pieces of the judge’s lengthy paper trail. There is far more that was never even requested. Far from being embarrassed by all this, Judge Kavanaugh is acting like
    someone who knows there is virtually nothing he can do to imperil his nomination.

    Instead, he’s followed his own cynical advice to a 2002 judicial nominee: “She should not talk about her views on specific policy or legal issues,” he wrote in an email then. “She should say that she has a commitment to follow Supreme Court
    precedent, that she understands and appreciates the role of a circuit judge, that she will adhere to statutory text, that she has no ideological agenda.”

    That is more or less how Judge Kavanaugh got through his hearings. But his ideological agenda is well known, which is precisely why he’s been on Republican Supreme Court shortlists for the last decade. That agenda includes, for starters, a well-
    established hostility to women’s reproductive rights and a stunningly expansive view of presidential power and impunity.

    Republicans defend their steamrollering by saying that most Democrats have already made up their minds to oppose Judge Kavanaugh. That’s rich: In the months before the 2016 election, multiple high-ranking Republican senators openly vowed to block any
    and all Supreme Court picks by Hillary Clinton, period. It’s also irrelevant.
    The people deserve to know everything possible about nominees to a lifetime seat on the highest court in the land, and they depend on their senators to seek out that
    information and share it.

    The Constitution calls this process advice and consent. Until the last few years, Republicans claimed to take that responsibility seriously. Now they are making a mockery of what is meant to be a careful and deliberative process by playing three-card
    monte with the American people. They did the same with last year’s tax bill, rushing it through in the dead of night with virtually no debate or review.

    The Republicans engage in this sort of subterfuge for an obvious reason: While they hold unified power in Washington, most of their agenda is hugely unpopular. So they hide as much of it as possible out of a fear that if more of
    it came to light, they
    will pay at the polls. Come November, voters can make that fear come true.

    ***

    They have: "subverted a long-established, nonpartisan process and hidden more than 90 percent of the material pertaining to Judge Kavanaugh’s time in government."

    They are "making a mockery of what is meant to be a careful and deliberative process"

    Takeaway: "While they hold unified power in Washington, most of their agenda is
    hugely unpopular. So they hide as much of it as possible out of a fear that if more of it came to light, they will pay at the polls. Come November, voters can
    make that fear
    come true."

    Kavanaugh, a man after Trump's own heart,
    simply in how he lies, lies, lies, and lies (even under oath).

    A certain part of these lyrics is most descriptive right now: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=The+Boxer

    Lie la lie, lie la la la lie lie
    Lie la lie, lie la la la la lie la la lie
    Lie la lie, lie la la la lie lie
    Lie la lie, lie la la la la lie la la lie
    Lie la lie, lie la la la lie lie
    Lie la lie, lie la la la la lie la la lie

    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)
  • From Jeremy H. Donovan@1:229/2 to All on Wednesday, September 12, 2018 15:03:13
    From: jeremyhdonovan@gmail.com

    Bob Woodward on Colbert (shouldn't miss that):

    https://youtu.be/pVuxYZusRh0?t=84
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BQKxBslsO-M https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lAoAJixDYn8

    "Imagine your lawyer telling you you're disabled...
    and you can't testify because you can't tell the truth.
    You just make things up."

    .

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)