Hannity just said there will be big news tomorrow with a big smile on his face
HarryBJatm33 said:
Hannity just said there will be big news tomorrow with a big smile on his face
valvemonkey91 said:HarryBJatm33 said:
Hannity just said there will be big news tomorrow with a big smile on his face
Man this is HUGE news....
For the 2,678th time
Wake me when there are perp walks.
Exactly right.drcrinum said:
And yet, less than 9 months ago, there was a Democrat led impeachment of the President over a Ukrainian phone call. Typical pattern: Whenever the Dems are guilty of "something", they preemptively accuse the Reps of that "something" in order to confuse & distort reality from the public's eye...and the MSM goes along with the Dem narrative.
As they say in AA/12 step programs: You spot it, you got it.Tailgate88 said:Exactly right.drcrinum said:
And yet, less than 9 months ago, there was a Democrat led impeachment of the President over a Ukrainian phone call. Typical pattern: Whenever the Dems are guilty of "something", they preemptively accuse the Reps of that "something" in order to confuse & distort reality from the public's eye...and the MSM goes along with the Dem narrative.
Quote:
The two officials said Brennan, who openly supported Clinton during the campaign, excluded conflicting evidence about Putin's motives from the report, despite objections from some intelligence analysts who argued Putin counted on Clinton winning the election and viewed Trump as a "wild card."
The dissenting analysts found that Moscow preferred Clinton because it judged she would work with its leaders, whereas it worried Trump would be too unpredictable. As secretary of state, Clinton tried to "reset" relations with Moscow to move them to a more positive and cooperative stage, while Trump campaigned on expanding the U.S. military, which Moscow perceived as a threat.
These same analysts argued the Kremlin was generally trying to sow discord and disrupt the American democratic process during the 2016 election cycle. They also noted that Russia tried to interfere in the 2008 and 2012 races, many years before Trump threw his hat in the ring.
"They complained Brennan took a thesis [that Putin supported Trump] and decided he was going to ignore dissenting data and exaggerate the importance of that conclusion, even though they said it didn't have any real substance behind it," said a senior U.S intelligence official who participated in a 2018 review of the spycraft behind the assessment, which President Obama ordered after the 2016 election.
He elaborated that the analysts said they also came under political pressure to back Brennan's judgment that Putin personally ordered "active measures" against the Clinton campaign to throw the election to Trump, even though the underlying intelligence was "weak."
No Input From CIA's 'Russia House'
The senior official who identified Kendall-Taylor said Brennan did not seek input from experts from CIA's so-called Russia House, a department within Langley officially called the Center for Europe and Eurasia, before arriving at the conclusion that Putin meddled in the election to benefit Trump.
"It was not an intelligence assessment. It was not coordinated in the [intelligence] community or even with experts in Russia House," the official said. "It was just a small group of people selected and driven by Brennan himself and Brennan did the editing."
The official noted that National Security Agency analysts also dissented from the conclusion that Putin personally sought to tilt the scale for Trump. One of only three agencies from the 17-agency intelligence community invited to participate in the ICA, the NSA had a lower level of confidence than the CIA and FBI, specifically on that bombshell conclusion.
The official said the NSA's departure was significant because the agency monitors the communications of Russian officials overseas. Yet it could not corroborate Brennan's preferred conclusion through its signals intelligence. Former NSA Director Michael Rogers, who has testified that the conclusion about Putin and Trump "didn't have the same level of sourcing and the same level of multiple sources," reportedly has been cooperating with Durham's probe.
The second senior intelligence official, who has read a draft of the still-classified House Intelligence Committee review, confirmed that career intelligence analysts complained that the ICA was tightly controlled and manipulated by Brennan, who previously worked in the Obama White House.
"It wasn't 17 agencies and it wasn't even a dozen analysts from the three agencies who wrote the assessment," as has been widely reported in the media, he said. "It was just five officers of the CIA who wrote it, and Brennan hand-picked all five. And the lead writer was a good friend of Brennan's."
Brennan's tight control over the process of drafting the ICA belies public claims the assessment reflected the "consensus of the entire intelligence community." His unilateral role also raises doubts about the objectivity of the intelligence.
I mean, he was a legit registered commie at one point....even if not explicitly a sip he was never far off.who?mikejones said:
Isnt brennan a sip?
LOL, yes he got a masters degree from that crappy school.who?mikejones said:
Isnt brennan a sip?
Quote:
Mr. Durham, the U.S. attorney in Connecticut assigned by Mr. Barr to review the Russia inquiry, has sought documents and interviews about how federal law enforcement officials handled an investigation around the same time into allegations of political corruption at the Clinton Foundation, according to people familiar with the matter.
Mr. Durham's team members have suggested to others that they are comparing the two investigations as well as examining whether investigators in the Russia inquiry flouted laws or policies. It was not clear whether Mr. Durham's investigators were similarly looking for violations in the Clinton Foundation investigation, nor whether the comparison would be included or play a major role in the outcome of Mr. Durham's inquiry.
The approach is highly unusual, according to people briefed on the investigation. Though the suspected crimes themselves are not comparable one involves a possible conspiracy between a presidential campaign and a foreign adversary to interfere in an election, and the other involves potential bribery and corruption and largely included different teams of investigators and prosecutors, Mr. Durham's efforts suggest the scope of his review is broader than previously known.
tremble said:
It was a coup attempt. How people are still blind to this fact greatly bothers me.
Some of the allegations may have exceeded SoL, and there may also be sealed indictments sitting our there that extend them...we can't know that.TurkeyBaconLeg said:
I really think that Trump has the election in the bag. So, I don't expect any big revelations or indictments until after he wins. There is no reason to galvanize any Dem votes over what THEY will portray as abuse of power.
Too many on "our" side don't have spines, so......SeMgCo87 said:
Although I still hold out hope that someone is gonna get flayed and have their spine removed...