Donald Trump Private Citizen

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Stephen Miller Insists Trump Would Already Have a Omicron Variant Vaccine If He Were Still President
Miller appeared on Fox News’ “Hannity” Friday, joining guest host, Tammy Bruce, in a conversation about vaccinations and the latest variant, Omicron. Miller wasted no time jumping on the Trump train to Saywhat? Ville.

“COVID is becoming endemic. It is going to continue to mutate; it’s going to continue to evolve; it’s all around planet Earth,” he said. “If President Trump was still in office, by the way, we’d already have modified vaccines to deal with the new variants.”

He added, “President Trump brought us vaccines in record times, which he made voluntary — not mandatory — and he’d have updates too.”

Without citing facts or any specific sources, Miller went on to say that Trump “emphasized therapeutics and treatment that’s completely off the table now.”

“As you’re seeing variant after variant and new strain after new strain, at some point, you have to put serious scientific effort into treating the illness both with serious medications like antibodies, as well as more common over-the-counter medications that may be shown in clinical studies to have a positive, provable statistically-significant effect,” he said
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Stephen Miller Insists Trump Would Already Have a Omicron Variant Vaccine If He Were Still President
Miller appeared on Fox News’ “Hannity” Friday, joining guest host, Tammy Bruce, in a conversation about vaccinations and the latest variant, Omicron. Miller wasted no time jumping on the Trump train to Saywhat? Ville.

“COVID is becoming endemic. It is going to continue to mutate; it’s going to continue to evolve; it’s all around planet Earth,” he said. “If President Trump was still in office, by the way, we’d already have modified vaccines to deal with the new variants.”

He added, “President Trump brought us vaccines in record times, which he made voluntary — not mandatory — and he’d have updates too.”

Without citing facts or any specific sources, Miller went on to say that Trump “emphasized therapeutics and treatment that’s completely off the table now.”

“As you’re seeing variant after variant and new strain after new strain, at some point, you have to put serious scientific effort into treating the illness both with serious medications like antibodies, as well as more common over-the-counter medications that may be shown in clinical studies to have a positive, provable statistically-significant effect,” he said
I guess he's confused about that word at the end of the title on his diploma. Bachelors degree in Political Science.

Sees himself as some sort of Buckaroo Banzai, I guess. Rock star, brain surgeon, race car driver, savior of the world and virologist. After all, "wherever you go, there you are".
 

captainmorgan

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Lin Wood and Michael Flynn are on opposite sides in a Qtard civil war. Nothing surprises me anymore, the human race is barreling towards extinction with it's stupidity on full display.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Lin Wood and Michael Flynn are on opposite sides in a Qtard civil war. Nothing surprises me anymore, the human race is barreling towards extinction with it's stupidity on full display.
The US isn't the whole world but, yeah, we are acting like a society that has broken down and can't function any more. I guess prosperity was getting boring.
 

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Potential Biden Supreme Court pick joins fray over Trump Jan. 6 subpoena

Ketanji Brown Jackson, seen by Democrats as a top contender for a future Supreme Court vacancy, is one of three judges assigned the weighty task of reviewing former President Trump's bid to block a congressional subpoena for records related to the Jan. 6 attack.
For Jackson, who has served on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit for just six months, her vote in the potentially landmark constitutional case would likely figure as the most distinguishing feature of her judicial record if she ultimately runs the gauntlet of a polarized Supreme Court confirmation process.

“Judge Jackson’s role in the executive privilege fight will no doubt play a prominent spot in a nomination hearing if, as anticipated, she is ultimately selected as the next nominee for the Supreme Court by President Biden,” said Bradley Moss, a national security law expert and partner in the Law Office of Mark S. Zaid.

Jackson is widely considered a leading prospect to replace Justice Stephen Breyer, 83, should he choose to retire during Biden’s presidency. On the 2020 campaign trail, Biden vowed to nominate the first Black female Supreme Court justice, and many court watchers see Jackson, a former Breyer clerk, as a fitting successor to the court’s oldest justice.

Court watchers who spoke to The Hill said the battle lines over her potential nomination would likely reflect her handling of the clash over Trump administration records.

The upcoming dispute that will be heard by Jackson and two other appellate judges is freighted with political significance: The first-of-its-kind court fight pits congressional Jan. 6 investigators against Trump, a former president and de facto leader of the Republican Party, and could create a key precedent for delineating the political branches of government.

The case, which the court will hear Tuesday, has enormous implications both legally and politically.

“If the courts allow Trump to undermine that investigation, they will have sharply curtailed congressional authority to investigate an effort to thwart one of the most important functions in our constitutional system, and, in that way, they will have effectively put the presidency above and outside the Constitution itself,” said Steven D. Schwinn, a professor at the University of Illinois Chicago Law School.

As a federal district judge in Washington, D.C., she presided over a dispute concerning a congressional subpoena to compel the testimony of Trump’s former White House counsel Don McGahn.

In what was the most consequential opinion of her career up to that point, then-U.S. District Judge Jackson sided with the Democratic-led House committee pursuing McGahn, ruling that Trump could not bar his testimony on the basis of absolute testimonial immunity.

“Stated simply, the primary takeaway from the past 250 years of recorded American history is that Presidents are not kings,” Jackson wrote in her November 2019 ruling in a circuitous case that would eventually lead to McGahn testifying last June.
 

DIY-HP-LED

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Full Michael Cohen: ‘They Committed Crimes’ in the Trump Organization

Michael Cohen, former personal attorney to former President Donald Trump and author, “Disloyal: A Memoir,” discusses his experience working with the Trump organization, during an exclusive interview with Meet the Press.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Stinky is under 6', look at all his shoes, they all have extra thick soles and heals, he also puts lifts inside his shoes, that's the reason he looks like he's leaning forward. He's a pathetic insecure little man in every way.
It's also why he has trouble walking down ramps. Bare foot, he's probably 5'10" or shorter.
 

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US intelligence community 'struggled' to brief Trump in 2016, CIA review shows
John Helgerson, a retired intelligence officer who wrote the chapter on Trump's transition in the CIA’s book on briefing presidents, wrote that Trump’s transition to the White House in late 2016 and early 2017 was “far and away the most difficult” experience the intelligence community (IC) had briefing new presidents.

The new information on Trump’s relationship with the intelligence company comes from Helgerson’s 40-page history of the former president’s time in office, which is part of the CIA’s book “Getting to Know the President,” which documents the presidents’ relationships with intelligence community dating back to 1952.

Helgerson wrote that Trump, similar to former President Nixon, was “suspicious and insecure about the intelligence process,” but the two differed in how they acted. Nixon shut the intelligence community out as president, while Trump “engaged with it” but also “attacked it publicly,” according to Helgerson.

He said the intelligence community’s system “worked” but “struggled” in achieving its two main goals for Trump: assisting the president-elect in becoming familiar with threats affecting the U.S. and its interests and establishing a relationship to show the incoming commander in chief how the intelligence community could help him carry out the responsibilities of the office.

Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper agreed with that assessment, telling Helgerson that “Trump doesn’t read much; he likes bullets.”

“Trump’s style was to listen to the key points, discuss them with some care, then lead the discussion to related issues and others further afield. This turned out to be the general model for PDB [presidential daily briefings] sessions,” Helgerson wrote.

Helgerson also write in the report that while Trump’s daily briefings were set to resume on Jan. 6 of this year, no meetings took place after the deadly attack on the U.S. Capitol.
 

Budzbuddha

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Get your naughty list recipients their piece of shit ( coal ) gifts together ……


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During the livestream, Lindell also fundraised for a "legal offense fund," saying he'll send a copy of his memoir to anyone who contributes to it.

"It's actually the Lindell Legal Offense Fund, because remember, we're always on the offense," Lindell said.

"If you donate anything, even if it's $10, I'm gonna send you a free book," Lindell said, referring to his memoir, titled "What Are the Odds? From Crack Addict to CEO." During the stream, Lindell also described what one could look forward to in his memoir, including a chapter in which he writes about digging through a carpet for crack cocaine.
 
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