From: Gatestone Institute <list@gatestoneinstitute.org>
Date: Wed, May 23, 2018, 10:21 AM
Subject: Palestinians: Americans Now Legitimate Targets
To: <faigerayzel@gmail.com>
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Shemittah, the Jewish Sabbatical year, brings security and blessing. The Torah says keeping this Mitzvah will prevent disaster and exile. Shemittah is Shabbat LaHashem. A taste of the World to Come. Learn about one womens quest for knowledge and rediscovery of this long lost Mitzvah according to the simple Torah reading of the text found in the beginning posts of this blog.
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Today's Commentary: So much FBI/special counsel news, I saved the best for last --- Putin's new missile has problems -- Earth cooling under Trump?!? -- Nielsen ratings -- Survey Results x 3 -- Evening Edition - May 22 - Daily Verse
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Robin,
Tuesday was so full of breaking news on problems with the "Trump/Russia" investigation that it's hard to know where to start. But I'll save the potentially most monumental for last.
Over a dozen House Republicans are calling for a second special counsel to look into the FBI's investigations of both Hillary and Trump and the apparent spying on the Trump campaign –- in particular, how and why the investigation was initiated. It's understandable that they would want this; the Justice Department really can't be trusted to investigate itself, and the Mueller probe is tainted in ways we all know. Also, the IG is limited; he can't indict anybody, convene a grand jury or deal with anyone currently outside the DOJ/FBI. Considering that practically the whole top tier of Obama's FBI is gone now, plus Loretta Lynch, plus Hillary, plus Obama, who is the IG going to talk to? BUT, there are problems with a special counsel as well: for example, who would be supervising this special counsel and deciding the scope of the investigation? If it's Rod Rosenstein, how would this be an improvement?
In more news, a meeting has been set for Thursday to include Devin Nunes, Trey Gowdy, FBI Director Christopher Wray, Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats, and Edward O'Callaghan (Rod Rosenstein's deputy) to discuss information directly related to "informants" (spies) in the Trump campaign who reported back to the FBI. Rod Rosenstein –- acting in place of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who may as well be playing golf in Palm Springs --- agreed to cooperate in this, but it's hard to predict what shape such "cooperation" will take. Will members of Congressional committees actually be able to see documents, or will they only be briefed? Will Democrats be included, as Chuck Schumer is demanding, and will the meeting be plagued with leaks as a result?
And here's more: One-time Trump campaign advisor Michael Caputo –- remember the man who was pretty well bankrupted just from the legal costs associated with testifying to the special counsel? –- says there must have been more than one "informant" (spy) because he was approached, repeatedly, by someone himself. This person claimed to have been talking with a former government official who said he had Hillary-related emails that he wanted to get to the Trump campaign. The timeline fits, but this person claims to have been doing nothing more than engaging in cocktail chatter. One interesting side note: Caputo says he told all this to Mueller's team but that they didn't seem interested and didn't even appear to be taking notes.
Another campaign associate, Sam Clovis, who worked on Trump's foreign policy team, is now sure he was approached during the campaign because the man who initiated contact was Stefan Halper. As he said in an interview with Tucker Carlson, Halper told him he knew Carter Page, and he thinks Halper was using their meeting to help him get a meeting with George Papadopoulos. They talked mostly about China, not Russia. At the time, Clovis thought nothing of it, but recent reporting caused him to suspect Halper's real intent was to create a link between Hillary's emails and the Trump campaign. "This clearly was an effort to build something that did not exist," he said.
Oh, and there's more news. If you missed former CIA Director James Clapper's appearance on THE VIEW, agreeing with Joy Behar that the Trump campaign should be GLAD his campaign was being infiltrated by spies to root out Russians, well...consider yourself lucky.
I saved the most interesting news for last. By far the most significant story of the day is the case made by Northwestern University law professor Steven Calabresi that the appointment of Robert Mueller is flatly unconstitutional. As explained by Mark Levin on his Tuesday radio show, the Appointments Clause of the Constitution makes the distinction between "inferior" officers (such as administrative assistants, chiefs of staff, etc.) and "principal" officers (such as cabinet secretaries and U.S. attorneys), who must be nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The argument goes that Mueller was given such massive power –- far more expansive than that of past special counsels/prosecutors, with no real oversight or limit –- that he is, in effect, a "roving U.S. attorney." In fact, four members of his team, including Andrew Weissmann, appearing in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, in the Paul Manafort case were also appointed as special assistant U.S. attorneys. And if officials of that status are reporting to Robert Mueller, that definitely means he is at least the equivalent of a U.S. attorney. The special counsel, if he's to be given such power, MUST be appointed by the President –- NOT by Rod Rosenstein, who usurped the President's power –- and then he MUST be confirmed by the Senate. So Mueller's appointment as special counsel was a big fat mistake (in that way, and in every other way I can think of).
Incidentally, this is the court presided over by Judge T. S. Ellis III, the one who had plenty to say about Mueller's "squeeze" tactics in the Manafort case. Wonder what he might say about this!
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Mike Huckabee
By Mike Huckabee
In March, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared that Russia had developed an invincible nuclear missile that could not be intercepted and that could fly for an unlimited amount of time over an unlimited range. But according to U.S. intelligence sources, it's still in development; and despite Russia's claim that it has unlimited range, the furthest it's managed to travel is 22 miles before it lost control and crashed.
You've heard of the Trident Missile? This sounds like the Trabant Missile.
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POLL: Do you support the return of prayer to our schools? VOTE HERE
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By Mike Huckabee
According to NASA satellite data, since Donald Trump was elected President, even the climate has defied expectations. The average temperature of the Earth has cooled by over 1 degree F., the fastest 20-month cooling period since 1916.
No, I don't know how Trump managed to do it. Maybe he made a deal with God. Or maybe we've entered a new Ice Age, but the media have been off-setting the cooling with so much hot air and overheated rhetoric that we just haven't been able to tell.
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By Mike Huckabee
The latest Nielsen ratings for cable TV are out, and there's good and bad news. It's good news for Fox News, which is the most-watched cable network for the 18th week in a row. "Hannity" marked its 8th week as the most-watched cable news show, pulling in about 2 million more viewers than "Anderson Cooper Live" on CNN. Speaking of CNN, they got the bad news: the former cable news leader came in 7th, behind HGTV and the children's channel, Nickelodeon.
I'm guessing that someone from CNN is on the phone right now, begging Spongebob Squarepants to come on CNN and say something bad about Donald Trump.
On the bright side, CNN did come in ahead of the History Channel, marking the first time since the 2016 election that CNN has been on the right side of History.
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By Mike Huckabee
Question: Do you support President Trump's call for an investigation into whether or not the DOJ/FBI were politically motivated to investigate the Trump campaign?
With over 2,000 votes cast: 81% YES, 8% NO and 11% UNDECIDED
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Question: Do you support President Trump's decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal?
With over 27,000 votes cast: 92% YES, 3% NO and 5% UNDECIDED
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Question: Do you think it is time for President Trump to fire Robert Mueller?
With over 19,000 votes cast: 68% YES, 11% NO and 21% UNDECIDED
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POLL: Do you support the return of prayer to our schools? VOTE HERE
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By Mike Huckabee
A wrap-up of all the news you might have missed yesterday!
"Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them." - Mark 11:24
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Robin,
President Trump announced on Sunday (in a tweet, naturally) that he would be calling for the DOJ to investigate the alleged infiltration of his 2016 campaign for political purposes --- he's talking about the spying here --- and to find out if the Obama administration had anything to do with it.
On Monday, he made good on that, and top officials at the Department of Justice have agreed to put the Inspector General on a review of the FISA application process to see "whether there was any impropriety or political motivation in how the FBI conducted its counterintelligence operation of persons suspected of Russian involvement with the Russian agents who interfered in the 2016 presidential election." According to the DOJ's statement, the IG will "consult with the appropriate U.S. attorney" if any evidence of potential criminal conduct is found.
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein had this to say: "If anyone did infiltrate or surveil participants in a presidential campaign for inappropriate purposes, we need to know about it and take action." Is it just me, or is this a really tepid response, considering the stunning nature of these allegations?
But once again, Attorney General Jeff Sessions is sitting on the sidelines. (No wonder the President is furious.) Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz has spoken with Sessions about this, and says the AG told him he is completely unwilling to step in. This is just getting ridiculous. Yes, Sessions recused himself from the investigation into the campaign's alleged ties with Russia (that move actually made some sense, because he personally was involved in Trump's campaign), but this is something else: an "investigation of the investigation," and he's supposed to be our top law enforcement official. Instead, we have a vacuum that's had to be filled by the second-in-command, Rosenstein, who, unbelievably, is still directing the scope of the Mueller investigation despite YUUUUUGE conflicts of interest. Sessions should have fired him long ago. And if Trump can't fire Sessions because of the political fallout, Sessions should realize he can't adequately perform his duties as AG and resign, too.
Something about this is very wrong. And the DOJ investigating itself isn't going to fix it.
https://www.westernjournal.com/doj-to-review-fbi-role-inside-trump-campaign/
That's why it may still come down to Congressional oversight to get to the bottom of it. They've been pushing for many months to get the FBI and DOJ to let them see unredacted documents that they have the security clearance and the right to see, but recent revelations about 'infiltration" (spying) seem to have energized House Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes, who suspects there were other government "informants" (spies) at work within the campaign besides the one we know about.
Both Nunes and House Majority Whip Steve Scalise had tough words for the FBI on Sunday. They know the stakes are high and that this is not the time for backing down.
https://www.westernjournal.com/nunes-possibly-more-than-1-fbi-informant-in-trump-campaign/
If the DOJ under Rod Rosenstein continues to stonewall ("Sorry, we can't release that, because it's part of an ongoing investigation..."), Trump needs to play hardball and just declassify all the documents in question. BOOM, like that! He's the President, after all; he gets to do it. Also, former FBI agents can speak up and offer valuable insight into how the investigation might have gotten started. Case in point: Clarice Feldman at AMERICAN THINKER has an update that outlines a very interesting possible scenario suggested by former agent Mark Wauck. He says the Democrats may have used the cover of a "preliminary investigation" to gain access to all the NSA data they wanted on political opponents –- at least until Mike Rogers at NSA clamped down, at which point they had to do whatever was necessary to obtain FISA warrants. (He did the timeline, and it works.) You have to get pretty deep into Feldman's article to find this, but it's enlightening.
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2018/05/halper_spells_game_up_for_obamas_spies.html
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