Totally agree. Certain posters are paid shills.
Research indicates that paid shills are compensated $0.03 per post.
Research indicates that paid shills are compensated $0.03 per post.
What is a bit disturbing about it is that the initial meddling in an election was our meddling in the Ukraine election. In a real way, some of the downturn in relations from Russia traces from 2014 and that.bmks270 said:
Is it a coincidence that all of the Trump smear efforts originate in Ukraine?
aggiehawg said:The Republican House A-Team, no doubt.will25u said:
Now, if Jordan. Ratcliffe, Stephanikl et.al. have crossX abilities, Dems will have to think twice about any live witnesses. Would be a disaster for them.
Pinche Abogado said:
Totally agree. Certain posters are paid shills.
Research indicates that paid shills are compensated $0.03 per post.
Pinche Abogado said:
Totally agree. Certain posters are paid shills.
Research indicates that paid shills are compensated $0.03 per post.
You obviously haven't listened to any of his interviews or you wouldn't post this drivel.Chance Chase McMasters said:
Huge if true.Quote:
It certainly doesn't have to be a crime if you have somebody who completely corrupts the office... it doesn't have to be a technical crime.
- Alan Dershowitz 1998
Chance Chase McMasters said:
Huge if true.Quote:
It certainly doesn't have to be a crime if you have somebody who completely corrupts the office... it doesn't have to be a technical crime.
- Alan Dershowitz 1998
Quote:
On Nov. 4, 2010, according to White House visitors' logs, Justice visited the White House and met with Biden adviser Michele Smith in the Office of the Vice President.
Less than three weeks later, HillStone announced that James Biden would be joining the firm as an executive vice president. James appeared to have little or no background in housing construction, but that did not seem to matter to HillStone.
So James Biden's expertise isn't in construction, it's in being Joe Biden's little brother. SInce Joining HillStone International, the company has expanded 400%.
Six months later HillStone gets a 1.5 billion dollar contract for housing in Iraq, the first of two. The contracts, each for a period of three years, have an estimated value to Hill of approximately $200 million and to HillStone of approximately $1.3 billion.
These two contracts nearly triple Hill's backlog, from less than $800 million to approximately $2.3
billion.
My memory is a bit fuzzy but I seem to recall an entire season arc on Arrested Development that was eerily similar. Of course the title of the series aptly describes most dems.nortex97 said:
More Biden scams revealed (Schweitzer book related, but for fun MF Barns discusses):
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1219580115581054982.html
Also Frank Biden and Ashley Biden stories in there.Quote:
On Nov. 4, 2010, according to White House visitors' logs, Justice visited the White House and met with Biden adviser Michele Smith in the Office of the Vice President.
Less than three weeks later, HillStone announced that James Biden would be joining the firm as an executive vice president. James appeared to have little or no background in housing construction, but that did not seem to matter to HillStone.
So James Biden's expertise isn't in construction, it's in being Joe Biden's little brother. SInce Joining HillStone International, the company has expanded 400%.
Six months later HillStone gets a 1.5 billion dollar contract for housing in Iraq, the first of two. The contracts, each for a period of three years, have an estimated value to Hill of approximately $200 million and to HillStone of approximately $1.3 billion.
These two contracts nearly triple Hill's backlog, from less than $800 million to approximately $2.3
billion.
Also from the article:nortex97 said:
More Biden scams revealed (Schweitzer book related, but for fun MF Barns discusses):
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1219580115581054982.html
Also Frank Biden and Ashley Biden stories in there.Quote:
On Nov. 4, 2010, according to White House visitors' logs, Justice visited the White House and met with Biden adviser Michele Smith in the Office of the Vice President.
Less than three weeks later, HillStone announced that James Biden would be joining the firm as an executive vice president. James appeared to have little or no background in housing construction, but that did not seem to matter to HillStone.
So James Biden's expertise isn't in construction, it's in being Joe Biden's little brother. SInce Joining HillStone International, the company has expanded 400%.
Six months later HillStone gets a 1.5 billion dollar contract for housing in Iraq, the first of two. The contracts, each for a period of three years, have an estimated value to Hill of approximately $200 million and to HillStone of approximately $1.3 billion.
These two contracts nearly triple Hill's backlog, from less than $800 million to approximately $2.3
billion.
Quote:
Biden remained with Hill International until December 2016, but between 2010 & 2016 Hill accumulated contracts from the federal government for dozens of projects, including projects in Puerto Rico, Mozambique, Haiti, China, Mexico, Brazil, Romania & all over the Middle East.
I wonder why his tenure ended in December of 2016? Did his expertise in international housing construction end? What happen that suddenly made all that change, and is it a coincidence that the then president of HillStone Kevin Justice, left as well?
Quote:
...
That was the easy part. What's the hard part?
The hard part is that the Sixth Amendment talks about the rights of the accused in criminal prosecutions at trial. The plain fact of the matter is that Article 1, Section 2 of the Constitution only states that "[t]he House of Representatives shall have the sole Power of Impeachment." There is no intent here to characterize impeachment proceedings as a trial. In fact, the issue of trial comes up in Section 3, where the language is "[t]he Senate shall have the sole Power to try all Impeachments."
So, what Constitutional justification is there for claiming, as Sekulow and Cipollone do in their response, that House impeachment proceedings violated rights that President Trump has according to the Sixth Amendment when the amendment evidently applies to trials, which impeachment proceedings are not?
The answer is a version of the principle I stated in a previous article as Proposition III:
Proposition III*: If legal proceedings A and B are sufficiently similar in relevant legal respects and Sixth Amendment rights are retained during A, then they are retained during B.
Here "A" denotes criminal trials and "B" denotes impeachment proceedings. Armed with Proposition III*, Sekulow and Cipollone can close a loophole that Democrat lawyers might try to jump through. Anyone who thinks I'm being excessively legalistic should keep in mind how Democrats operate.
Of course, one would have to explain why criminal trials and impeachment proceedings are "sufficiently similar in relevant legal respects." A defense of Proposition III* belongs in a law journal, which I may write later.
TurkeyBaconLeg said:Holy crap! This is huge. Not they will definitely get 67 Senators to vote for conviction!Chance Chase McMasters said:
Huge if true.Quote:
It certainly doesn't have to be a crime if you have somebody who completely corrupts the office... it doesn't have to be a technical crime.
- Alan Dershowitz 1998
More massive than huge.Chance Chase McMasters said:TurkeyBaconLeg said:Holy crap! This is huge. Not they will definitely get 67 Senators to vote for conviction!Chance Chase McMasters said:
Huge if true.Quote:
It certainly doesn't have to be a crime if you have somebody who completely corrupts the office... it doesn't have to be a technical crime.
- Alan Dershowitz 1998
Huge if true.
RGLAG85 said:You obviously haven't listened to any of his interviews or you wouldn't post this drivel.Chance Chase McMasters said:
Huge if true.Quote:
It certainly doesn't have to be a crime if you have somebody who completely corrupts the office... it doesn't have to be a technical crime.
- Alan Dershowitz 1998
Ok, yes you would because you're a leftist loonie.
Quote:
"He who can does; he who cannot, teaches."
Its not that hard to understand if people will just get the image of Law & Order or anything in the civil sector out of their mind.BMX Bandit said:
Dershowitz says he didn't do the research then. He's "more correct" now, but wasn't wrong then, even though he won't say he was right back then.
He came across very poorly trying to explain this change of heart.
But really doesn't matter. Dershowitz was correct in 98 and the evidence presented against Trump doesn't meet that standard. Really it's not even close.
Quote:
The subjects of its jurisdiction are those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust. They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.
But that wouldn't matter if it was a Democratic majority Senate. They would just craft something that fits their tastes and go from there.aTmAg said:
In that other thread, there was a recent interview with Deshowitz where he also said that it didn't have crime. I'm not sure what the "gotcha" moment is.
His point is that "abuse of power" is not impeachable, that the founding fathers considered making it so, but reject it because it is a vague assertion that can mean anything.
Please provide specific examples, including citations, evidencing Trump's "abuse of office."Chance Chase McMasters said:
The founders intended "high crimes" to mean abuse of the office, betrayal of public trust. There have been many impeachment articles over the years that charged no statutory crime.
Jefferson said of impeachment:Quote:
The subjects of its jurisdiction are those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust. They are of a nature which may with peculiar propriety be denominated POLITICAL, as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.
Trump broke statutory laws as well, in service of his corrupt scheme, but violating the Impoundment Act by itself is not impeachable.