Going To The Mattresses.
“How bad do you think it’s gonna be?”
“How bad do you think it’s gonna be?”
Meanwhile, Sanders was in full damage control mode, parroting the line that this is not about Trump, a contention that is akin to saying the grass isn’t green.
So this is where the wagons get circled. It’s time to go to the mattresses for Trump and his associates. Meanwhile, it’s time for the blogs, Breitbart, and Fox to implement a full-court press to try and deflect from this.
“The lady doth protest too much, methinks”
“At this stage, only one thing seems really safe to say: this development means that Mueller’s investigation isn’t going away anytime soon.”
We’re gonna need more uranium conspiracy theories.
“In the scenario outlined above, in which Trump faces, at the very worst, impeachment without removal, he won’t have completely undone the norms, but he will have eroded them. His tenure will have moved the line of the conceivable.”
In case it wasn’t clear to you that the walls are closing in on this administration, The New York Times is out reporting that Robert Mueller has now asked the White House to produce documents related to the actions Trump has taken as President.
“Either way, Trump may soon learn that the “states’ rights†ostensibly represented by the monuments and flags he reveres includes the power to bring his campaign team — and even him — to justice.”
“The May letter had been met with opposition from Donald F. McGahn II, the White House counsel, who believed that some of its contents were problematic.”
Trump’s legal team might want to start burning the candle at both ends…
Wow. Talk about convenient timing. Thanks, Harvey.
“When I was bleeding to death in my Black Hawk”…
“It seems he is just always focused on Russia.”
“There are, however, legal implications in both instances, and beyond that, in the connection between the two.”
In what has become an American tradition, Donald Trump is kicking off the weekend with some inspirational tweets that are aimed at uniting a divided nation around a set of noble principles and a shared vision of hope.
Just kidding.
Just when you thought it couldn’t possibly get any more absurd…
“President Trump yesterday issued a stunning vote of no-confidence in basically everyone currently in a leadership position in the Justice Department, the FBI, or the special counsel’s office—in other words, not just some federal law enforcement, but all of it.”
“As a former FBI counterintelligence agent, I’d start with Rinat Akhmetshin, the Russian émigré and naturalized U.S. citizen of over ten years, who may offer the lowest-hanging fruit in the next phase of the investigation.”
“They have created the appearance of a conspiracy that on the evidence Don Jr. lacks the wit to concoct. And they handed their opponents another of the swords that by now could arm a Roman legion.”
“No. It. Isn’t.”
“The Russia scandal has entered a new phase, and there’s no going back”…
“The deeper question is whether members of Trump’s administration can uphold the trust that has been placed in them as stewards of the government they have been chosen to lead.”
“It is obvious to all except the willfully blind that we now have a president who observes none of the norms, rules or expectations of his office and will pressure anyone at any time if doing so serves his personal interests.”
“The unraveling mystery of whether Donald Trump’s presidential campaign colluded with Russia just produced a smoking gun: those emails from Donald Trump Jr. welcoming an offer from Moscow to supply dirt on Hillary Clinton.”
“The problem with dwelling too much on the covert forms of collaboration, which we have come to call “collusion,†is that doing so risks letting Trump at least a little bit off the hook for what is not meaningfully disputed: that the president publicly, knowingly, and repeatedly (if only tacitly) collaborated with a foreign power’s intelligence effort to interfere in the presidential election of the country he now leads.”
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